Fear is back.
With global tensions exploding, secret strike operations, and nuclear threats creeping into everyday headlines,
Americans are asking a question once thought buried with Vietnam: will there be a draft?
Parents are whispering. Teenagers are calculating birthdays.
And with new laws making registration automatic, millions could be swept into a system they barely underst… Continues…
If the United States ever reinstated the draft, it would not begin with chaos, but with a cold, bureaucratic order.
The Selective Service System would quietly move from database to deployment,
starting with 20-year-olds whose birthdays fall in the year of the lottery,
then working outward through older and finally younger men. A simple number drawn in a televised lottery could decide who stays home and who is sent to war.
Yet the system is also built on exceptions, judgments and painful gray areas.
Medical histories would be scrutinized, moral objections tested, family hardships weighed. Students might be deferred; critical workers diverted into support roles far from the front. Women, for now, remain outside the law’s reach. Officially, no draft is planned. Unofficially, the machinery sits ready—silent, waiting, and closer to activation than many dare to admit.