The Myth of the Voluntary Military - Jeffrey A. Tucker - Mises Daily: "To leave once the war begins would amount to what the government calls desertion. This word sounds ominous, but in fact it merely describes what everyone in a civilized society takes for granted: the right to quit.
Deuteronomy's exhortation to encourage the Israelites into battle includes an invitation to freely leave: 'What man is there that is fearful and fainthearted? Let him go and return unto his house.'[1] But there is no such right in the modern US military. If you try to leave, you face coercion, particularly if you try to leave in wartime. In this way, the military differs from the police and the ranks of prison guards, jobs from which people are free to walk away without penalty."
"Both North and South claimed they were fighting in order to abolish a form of captivity — the right to self-government in one case, and the right to not be employed against one's will in the other — but the ability of the military to imprison and kill fleeing soldiers was never questioned. It is not often questioned today."
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