AusGeoff wrote on Dec 11
th, 2022 at 4:45am:
Conscripts names were selected by a ‘birthday ballot’, in which men were
randomly selected for national service by their date of birth. Marbles marked
with a date were drawn out of a Tattersall’s lottery barrel.
The then leader of the opposition, Arthur Calwell, described this system as a
"lottery of death" with the Labor Party being morally opposed to conscription.
Between 1965 and 1972, more than 800,000 men registered. About 63,000
were conscripted and more than 19,000 served in Vietnam.
Between 1965 and 1972, 63,740 young Australians did National Service. Of
those, 15,381 served in Vietnam, where 200 died—45% of Australians KIA
while conscripts were "in country".
I'd suggest everybody read
THIS book by Mark Dapin,
"
The Nashos' War: Australia's National Servicemen and Vietnam".
Thanks, I just ordered that paperback ... should be good reading. I'll know most of it, but it will be a good record to keep in the family for future reference, of how politicians can ruin young lives en masse
It's interesting, that now, the military does the opposite of everything they did in the 60s for us conscripts. Now, they encourage trade skills, have better pay, benefits and support ... it's still lacking, evidenced by the high suicide rate. But there was nothing for us in the 60s, we were broke all the time, we got no opportunities in our trades, no voluntary support from the Army after discharge, no compensation .. we simply got nothing
I should never have filled out the registration form, that was my big mistake. Filling out that form was giving consent to the two years enslavement. The Government's lawyers were laughing in our faces, I reckon
Instead, I should have left the big city and gone fruit picking or something, around the countryside for two years, cash in hand, it's what we all should have done
We also should remember that at the time of conscription, our police forces were as corrupt as any third-world country, taking bribes and with their code of silence. Organized crime was thriving, both in Australia and the US. A President and his brother were assassinated in the US. Mafia bosses in Australia and the US owned politicians. The illicit drug trade was well underway. Politicians visiting prostitutes. And a compulsory voting system to keep it all going
Yet here we were telling ourselves that we were better than any other countries around the world. We needed to look in the mirror before picking on a little South East Asian nation that was desperately fighting to try and not be like us. They taught us a lesson didn't they, because ever since then, we are striving to be like them