SOMETHING TO CONSIDER ON MEMORIAL DAY!
Draft dodging must have been a plus in selecting vice presidents. Joe Biden went through so many obscene machinations to dodge the Vietnam draft it was breathtaking. After his fifth deferment ran out he actually received his Induction Notice and was unfortunate enough to pass his draft physical. Undeterred by that small setback, Joe shopped around for a sympathetic doctor who successfully "discovered" an undetected childhood disqualification so Joe could send a less qualified (and definitely poorer and less educated) replacement in his stead. I remember how Senator (and Medal of Honor recipient) Bob Kerrey put it in 1992 when he said about the Draft “as I remember it, at that time if you could walk and chew gum, the military would take you.” I was drafted in Biden’s hometown of Scranton Pennsylvania and my first hand experience was that unless you had a disqualifying condition that a doctor could visually detect like missing an arm or a leg, you were going to pass your draft physical.
Now Presidential Candidate Mitt Romney was really creative. Romney started out with two Student Deferments and then left the U.S. for a thirty-month stay in France as a Mormon missionary for which he received a “ministerial deferment.” When he returned he received another two student deferments. Like Clinton, Mitt just needed to delay his induction long enough for the lottery to go into effect in hopes he would draw a high number. He did and his unethical behavior also resulted in someone less eligible and definitely less educated serving in his place. Unlike Clinton, Mitt supported the War and even Nixon's Cambodian Incursion so he and Dick Cheney qualify as Chicken-Hawks; politicians that fully support wars, just so long as they don’t have to fight in them.
Seems revisionist historians have fallen victim to what the Washington Post dubbed in their 1986 in depth examination of who actually fought the Vietnam War "The Myth of the Vietnam Vet." The article stated: "The man who fought in Vietnam is typically depicted as a draftee, unwilling and probably black. In fact, 73 percent of those who died were volunteers and 12.5 percent were black (out of an age group that comprised 13.5 percent of the male population)." It goes on to point out that the average “name on the Vietnam Memorial Wall” was a kid from a middle class Zip Code.
Despite the efforts of these revisionist historians and Hollywood producers to ascribe only the highest of moral ideals to draft resisters while assigning the most sinister of motives to those of us who served, the truth is that the vast majority of draft avoiders were just plain "chicken." So when you ask your Vietnam generation politicians “What did you do during the War?” these are the only three truthful responses they can give you:
- When called, I responded and served. Sometimes reluctantly but I did the right thing.
- I was a quiet Draft Dodger! I kept my head down; applied for all the deferments I could find, legal or illegal; and if my draft board finally found me, I did everything I could to make myself ineligible. As a last resort if I just couldn’t beat the draft and my family was politically connected, I secured one of the coveted spots in the Reserves or National Guard so at least it was guaranteed that I would never be in danger of seeing Vietnam.
- I was an obnoxious Draft Dodger! I spent my time with flowers in my hair protesting the war and burning my draft while smoking pot and doing other drugs. Unlike the quite Draft Dodgers, if my draft board caught up with me I went underground and often fled the country for Canada or Sweden.















