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In reply to the discussion: Conscientious Objection...do you approve or not? and when? [View all]Ken Burch
(50,254 posts)38. I'm 51. I remember being 18.
Like many people, I was far from fully-formed-I'm still not, and hope never to be absolutely fully formed, because at that point you ceast to grow and, ultimately, you cease to live.
You don't get the reaiities of war from video games and movies(as an actual veteran, you of all people should know that).
Does the idea of troops refusing to fight bother you?
It seems to me if the actual troops are saying they don't want to go there, that's a pretty strong case that whatever they're refusing to do shouldn't happen.
We'd have a lot fewer wars if it were accepted that the soldiers, sailors, Marines and airman who said no in a particular situation might possibly have a point.
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I think YES, providing in all of ones life, they refuse to pick up a gun
graham4anything
Nov 2012
#1
My two cents on taking human life is that there are really only two types of killing.
Selatius
Nov 2012
#7
IMHO a drone on Hitler before the escalation would have stopped it then and there
graham4anything
Nov 2012
#52
Without a draft, how is CO at all relevant to anything? I assume that there is some point to
Egalitarian Thug
Nov 2012
#5
What if you joined, saw the reality fo war(after joining voluntarily)and THEN decided
Ken Burch
Nov 2012
#19
The DOD allows for discharges based on conscientious objection even after having been deployed.
Agony
Nov 2012
#45
I wanted to explain what I meant by "Conscientious Objection to particular wars"
Ken Burch
Nov 2012
#20
I knew a couple of guys who were COs and served as combat medics in Vietnam
pinboy3niner
Nov 2012
#50
I have trained in and counseled others in how to establish a legal claim to CO status
quaker bill
Nov 2012
#39