From Draft NOtices, April-June 2022
-- Rick Jahnkow
This summer will mark the 40th anniversary of an event that began a life-changing period for many members of activist communities around the country. It started with a phone call received by a young person in San Diego County on June 30, 1982, the results of which soon triggered a whirlwind of intense reactions around the U.S.
Before saying more about the phone call, some backstory is needed: In 1980, then-President Carter ordered young men to begin registering with Selective Service for a possible future military draft. He intended registration to be a symbolic threat to the Soviet Union following its invasion of Afghanistan. It proved to have no effect on the Soviets; what it did do, however, was trigger a renewed movement of war resistance in the U.S. that had not been seen since the end of the Vietnam War.
During the summer of 1980, the implementation of draft registration was begun with separate deadlines for two age groups, starting with males born in 1960 and followed by those born in 1961. At the end of the two deadlines, news media were reporting statistics that indicated a significantly low rate of compliance in many places. In San Diego County, for example, the total number of registrations was less than half the number of men in the two age groups. Nationwide, the estimated number of non-registrants was in the hundreds of thousands. The statistics looked so bad for Selective Service that, by 1981, there was a growing assumption that the government would soon feel compelled to begin prosecuting at least some non-registrants.