All,
As near as I can tell, no one in this discussion has opposed the fact that the draft amounts to the government compelling men to dispose of their lives against their will under threat of force. Instead, I have seen exactly three arguments why this fact should be acceptable.
1. It's acceptable because the government does, in fact, do this.
~It should be obvious what this sort of reasoning is capable of justifying, and why it fails logically.
2. It's acceptable because those drafted might survive whatever war they've been drafted into.
~While this is true, it does not address the very basic situation: a man has had his right to life suspended by the government, an entity formed specifically to protect his inalienable rights. This amounts to a contradiction based on the shaky ground of probabilities and chances.
3. It's acceptable because sometimes, individual parts of the whole must be sacrificed for the sake of the whole.
~This is an especially vile argument because it denies that inalienable, individual rights exist in the first place. "The whole" is nothing more than a group of individuals. If one individual can be sacrificed for the good of the whole, then that one individual has "less" right to life than the other individuals in that whole. Since the right to life is binary - you either have it or you don't - the individual being drafted has no right to life. If you want to make that argument, fine, but don't pretend you're doing anything but arguing in favor of statism. That you would qualify it by saying, "only in times of war," is meaningless. Remember, you either have an inalienable right or you don't.
As to the idea that I'm arguing against self-defense, or patriotism, or defense of loved ones, or serving your country:
You are basing these accusations on the fact that I'm arguing vehemently in defense of the inalienable right to life, and that the government cannot force you to dispose of your right to life against your will. I believe that all of the above are good, moral actions, and I've said as much throughout this discussion. I do not believe that I have the right to compel any man to dispose of his right to life for any reason, even if I believe the reason is a good, moral thing. I can attempt to sway him to my point of view, but I cannot simply pick up a gun, point it at his head, and force him to act as I see fit. I would hope you would agree with me on this.
Also, tacitly, you're performing the very appropriate actions necessary to help goad men to war. In times of great need and mortal threat, men must be shown that fighting that threat is just and righteous, as just and righteous as defending your loved ones or yourself from a mugger with a gun. You are appealing in many different ways to a man's sensibilities and intellect. What you are not doing, very conspicuously, is simply saying, "you have no right to life anyway. Line up." So why, then, are you arguing in defense of the draft?