In a message dated 11/1/2006 10:10:16 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

Unfortunately, sometimes the penalty for quitting is to have your  co-workers
killed by the enemy. That is why the military contract differs  fundamentally 
from
almost all others.
The penalty is proper as long as  the contract is voluntary and the war is 
constitutionally
declared, is  necessary to protect the American people in the United States 
and not
based  on lies. Of course, the Iraq war fails this test on all  counts.


 
 
What penalty is proper?
 
I am not speaking incidentally of "quitting" when you are already on the  
battle field, necessarily.  But of quitting, for example, when a military  
intervention is announced or troops are deployed abroad.
 
Define a penalty or penalties for specific situations and demonstrate their  
appropriateness.
 
Are you just saying whatever the current governmental systems have as  
penalties are appropriate?
 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]




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