Chaos
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2003
- Messages
- 10,611
Nyarlathotep said:Thoughit doesn't sound as widespread, I know back when we had a draft, one could apply for 'Conscientious Objector' status and (if I recall correctly, it ahs been a long time since I looked into this) and one would then get put to work doing similar tasks. It was never popular, for a variety of reasons, though.
I am curious though, does your draft alternative go by the skills the person already has? I mean if the person has training as a nurse, they get put to work as a nurse, if they are already trained to drive a bus, they get put to work driving disabled children, etc? Or is there some sort of choice as to what you go into (i.e. a person doesn't think they can handle cleaning bedpans but has no problem doing a lot of driving, so he can opt to drive the children rather than be a nurse)? If so I don't think it's quite the same thing, but I see your point regardless.
You can pick your job; that is, you can go check with those who employ civilian servicemen - usually the local churches, schools, hospitals, or non-profit organizations. Then you have to convince them to take you - make like a job interview. IIRC you had half a year or thereabouts to do that, and if you didn´t find anything you´d be assigned a job - usually the ones nobody wanted.
Most draftees don´t have any job training, since the draft usually catches them right after high school. At least it was like that for my brother and me. We did have mechanics to fill two slots for, well, mechanics to maintain the station´s car fleet of twenty-odd vehicles, and a banker to do the accounting, though. I imagine that other specialist job slots are filled with people who have the respective training - IIRC janitor jobs are usually given only to people who are electricians or such in "real life".
You had to meet some minimum requirement for most jobs, like having a valid driver´s license for all jobs that involved driving, but other than that, you´d be taught anything you needed to be able to do in home care. We used to joke that the home care personnel would make very sought-after husbands because we already knew how to do all the stuff like feeding, bathing, changing diapers and such.
When I did civilians service, IIRC about half of all draftees chose civilian over military service - roughly 175,000 out of 360,000 each year. AFAIK now the proportion is more like 60 percent. On paper, military service is the norm, and you have to be conscientious objector (or cite the religious reasons I mentioned) to do civilian service. But that´s only pro forma really, and by now I´d almost say civilian service is becoming the norm.
Service time for civilian service used to be three months longer than for military service, but that´s down to one month by now. I never understodd why that difference exists, though.