Wyndon B Johnson's Essay: The Journey Of Peace

934 Words2 Pages

“Peace is a journey of a thousand miles and it must be taken one step at a time.” This quote from Lyndon B. Johnson accurately describes the pinnacle of what I believe could be the perfect utopia. To united against the common evils of the world and realize what it means to know peace. This cannot and never will be the case if the draft is reinstated into United States’ law. We, simply put, the most powerful country that the world has ever known. Our vast resources and our resolve has allowed us to surpass any countries’ economy, culture and wealth. And of course, an attribute of civility must go along with this marvelous, modernized country, right? I would certainly ascertain as much, but those with smaller mental capacities seem to think that …show more content…

This all goes hand in hand with the face that we are civilized. Humans have never attained the amount of knowledge and experience that we have today; being such that we have discovered the true beauties and monsters of the world. We, as privileged Americans tend to look at, and appreciate the beauties of life. Love, happiness, a full plate at dinner time are among some of the things that have become taken for granted in comfortable American society. We are above war and the issues and wrongness that it presents. Killing people is wrong and time after time, we have observed senseless violence of issues of little importance, such as the start of World War 1. An entire massacre of people danced a beautifully, macabre pirouette around the assassination of Prince Ferdinand. Such folly of people with short tempers. My views on the draft are as such: we as a society, are above war, violence and poverty. In hindsight, we should not even have, in our heightened state of social structure, any military at all. So then obviously, reinstating the draft would be another daft idea of power hungry

Open Document