279 comments

  • legitster 3 hours ago

    > While the law requires men to request the permit, the spokesperson clarified, it also obliges the military career center to issue it, if "no specific military service is expected during the period in question.”

    > "Since military service under current law is based exclusively on voluntary participation, such permissions must generally be granted,” the official added.

    > When asked, the ministry spokesperson pointed out that "the regulation was already in place during the Cold War and had no practical relevance; in particular, there are no penalties for violating it.”

    • machinekob 2 hours ago

      This is only for citizen not refugees/immigrants so both MEA and NA folks can chill.

      • jbm an hour ago

        Dunno how it is in Germany but quite a few of my non white friends wound up in the Canadian Army.

        I don't know why immigration is brought up in this conversation at all.

        • AdrianB1 an hour ago

          It is about citizenship, not race.

        • umanwizard an hour ago

          There are a lot of non-white citizens of Canada (and Germany) whereas the comment you’re replying to is about non-citizens. Also Canada hasn’t had conscription for a long time as far as I know, the friends you refer to were volunteers.

      • mothballed an hour ago

        Yes the US has a more insidious "hidden" law that I'm amazed Trump has not used to his advantage. It's a felony for the younger illegal immigrants males who are eligible to not register for the draft (most visa and legally visa exempt tourists are exempt, but the exemption falls off if you fall out of status). Almost none of them do, meaning almost all undocumented military-age-males are actively committing a serious crime.

        • tasuki an hour ago

          It's either generousness or incompetence.

      • ihsw an hour ago

        Why aren't refugees/immigrants conscripted over citizens?

        • AdrianB1 an hour ago

          Because not only that the immigrants have no allegiance to Germany, most have different culture and sometimes incompatible values.

          I grew up in the Middle East and I can tell that cultural differences and values were more smooth and compatible than what I saw in Germany. Conscription requires a degree of trust in the people you give guns to and expect to fight on your side in case it is needed, that is mostly not true with immigrants in all times and all countries.

          • ndarray 12 minutes ago

            Ten years of "refugees welcome" to fighting age men who we don't trust won't run amok when we go to war with a third party. Very cool.

        • carlosjobim 33 minutes ago

          Because immigrants have the right to be protected, while native men have a duty to die for their rulers.

    • lazide 2 hours ago

      Ah, invasive extra paperwork (enforced by criminal penalties, at least in theory) for something they say on the surface they won’t actually need. So very german (hah)

      • nine_k 2 hours ago

        I suppose it's only a boring piece of extra paperwork until at some moment the permit stops being automatically issued.

        • baxtr 2 hours ago

          You’ve never been to Germany, have you?

          • rvnx 2 hours ago

            Guess what, many jews self-reported themselves to the authorities just to follow the process and that led directly to their death.

            https://www.ushmm.org/online/hsv/source_view.php?SourceId=42...

            Of course, this is old times now, but here is the same, there is no benefit to register, and you increase your risk to die.

            Don't do it.

      • fhdkweig 43 minutes ago

        In the United States, adult males have to sign up for the Selective Service for the same reason even though we haven't had conscription since the Vietnam War in the late 1970s(?).

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selective_Service_System

  • orange_joe 2 hours ago

    How does feminism survive if this becomes the norm? If young men feel like they're expected to give more to their society it's natural to expect renumeration financial, socially or politically. Nordic countries don't seem to have this problem, but their conscription laws are quite relaxed compared to what the future will likely hold. A declining youth population almost certainly means greater youth repression (higher taxes for pensions, conscription, etc.)

    • vidarh 2 hours ago

      Norways conscription law was much stricter until very recently. Military police was looking for me to hand deliver my draft notice up until I moved abroad because doing so allows them to charge you and imprison you if you don't show. At the time women were not called in at all. It didn't stop a rapid move towards more equality. And that eventually moved towards more women in the military. Couple that with a reduced need for recruits, and it was relaxed significantly for men.

      EDIT: I moved in 2000. I finally took a call from the military police the day I landed in London, to gleefully tell them I'd left - the practice was that draft notices would not be delivered abroad, so moving effectively put an end to the matter. Norwegian law also required notifying the military if you left for more than 6 months, and provide evidence. I sent them a letter; they sent me one back demanding evidence. I told them the fact I'd received the letter was evidence and to stop bothering me. They did.

      Basically, for the Americans who find this weird: In the countries in Europe where this is still a thing, this is a cold war holdover most places. When I was growing up air raid sirens were being tested monthly, and my primary schools' basement was a bomb shelter. It took a lot of time before things were relaxed after the fall of the Soviet Union.

    • dataviz1000 2 hours ago

      Most of the feminists I know want conscription for both men and women to be the norm. Being able to serve is something the feminists have been fighting for the hardest over decades. The people who are trying to make young men only doing the killing the norm are the same people trying to end feminism. Therefore, there is some logic in your question.

      When I was in Asia two years ago, as an American, every time I met a young Russian man escaping conscription, drinks were on me as appreciation to their commitment to world peace. I'm in South America now and it is being inundated with young Israeli men running like the Russians were. Nonetheless, I'm on the fence about how I feel buying them drinks.

      • baal80spam 25 minutes ago

        > Being able to serve is something the feminists have been fighting for the hardest over decades.

        If any claim ever required "citation needed", this one is the biggest.

        I've never seen feminists fight for duties, only for privileges.

      • ngruhn an hour ago

        > Being able to serve is something the feminists have been fighting for the hardest over decades

        Not heard anyone fight for that once. The more pressing issues seem to he "mansplaining" and men being shirtless in the summer.

        > Nonetheless, I'm on the fence about how I feel buying them drinks.

        Why?

    • anal_reactor 21 minutes ago

      Feminism survives because it never was about equality, it was about making women the privileged class.

    • pj_mukh 2 hours ago

      How does a government express "anti-feminism". Surely you're not suggesting a reduction in voting power for women. So what else would make it seem "fair" to men in your mind?

      • orange_joe an hour ago

        I'm not being prescriptive, just observing the likely consequences of gendered policy.

    • mikkupikku 2 hours ago

      How can a state survive if this weren't the norm? Why would men fight and die for a government that views their own wives and daughters as cannon fodder? If the government is conscripting men's wives to war, is it really in the interest of men to risk their own lives to protect that government? If the government took my wife and sent her to war, I'd sooner firebomb a government office than join up to fight for the government.

      If a woman wants to fight, that's another story entirely. But conscripting women? That's poison.

      • Caius-Cosades an hour ago

        Why are those women then allowed to have vote in matters if they are not forced to carry responsibility for their voting behaviour?

      • xandrius 2 hours ago

        And what about a government which sends sons? Your point makes absolutely no sense, especially in relation to feminism. Equal rights and equal duties.

        • whynotmaybe 2 hours ago

          Yes, but in 12 month, 1 man and 20 women can produce the 20 kids.

          It's not the case with 1 woman and 20 men.

          • machomaster 13 minutes ago

            There is a birth crisis. Modern, liberal women are not actually reproducing, they are not keeping their end of the evolutionary bargain (men protecting, sacrificing and dying, while women giving birth). Therefore, there is no need to maintain the old-fashioned, patriarchal system with women as a more protected group. Everyone should contribute equally, pull their own weight. Equal rights, equal lefts (responsibilities).

        • mikkupikku 2 hours ago

          We're not having this conversation in a cultural vacuum; men figure out at a young age that if things go to shit, their lives become expendable for the sake of the community. I view conscription as a form of slavery; something that I hope never happens to me or anybody, but could conceivably happen. That's the way the world has worked for thousands of years, and the Bayesian meme asks me to therefore bet on it continuing to be this way. But it doesn't have to be this way for women too. Why should it be, misery loves company? If men are going to be dying, we should draft women to die too? That's not feminism, that's insanity.

          • atmavatar a minute ago

            > That's not feminism, that's insanity.

            No, it's equality.

            Taken to its logical conclusion, you cannot have gender equality without either making the draft cover everyone or abolishing it entirely.

            The fact that women losing their lives is so much larger a risk for the nation only serves to test the resolve of those people claiming to want gender equality, but this is not the only time you'll find a conflict between idealism and reality, even within the scope of gender equality.

          • machomaster 6 minutes ago

            Why should men sacrifice and die for nothing, by not getting anything in return, not even a simple appreciation? Why should only men die when things get tough? I also would much rather see other unknown women die, than to send myself or my son to die for them.

            Women need to pull their weight. And since they aren't doing that from the evolutional POV, neither in practice (birth crisis) nor in theory (not like giving birth is a legal duty, unlike a draft), then they can at least be useful for a society as a cannon fodder. The more women start pulling their weight and contribute, the less weight there will be for men to pull. What not to love about this equality!

      • missedthecue 2 hours ago

        Most young men don't have wives or daughters. It's not 1850 anymore.

        I would rather both genders get drafted than be in a Ukraine situation where millions of women leave for richer countries while I am pulled off the street to go eat FPV drones. What's even the point? Why not surrender? What am I protecting or preserving?

        • nslsm an hour ago

          You are protecting a society who doesn’t care about you. Aren’t you glad?

          • ashleyn 3 minutes ago

            This goes missed a lot in debates about conscription. The Iran war in the US and the Ukraine war in Russia enjoy very little popular support among military aged men. This is in stark contrast to WW2, and even in Vietnam there was still a strain of thinking of draft resisters as cowards. But wars in this day and age enjoy a shockingly tiny public mandate, and it's entirely possible that governments can only do a draft on paper. Putin is practically unable to push further mobilisation because the first round provoked such stiff violence and resistance.

        • Ylpertnodi an hour ago

          > What's even the point? Rich people staying in power is the point.

          > Why not surrender? Surrendering is not always practicable. You will get killed if you're a liability to your captors.

          > What am I protecting or preserving? That's really only yours, and yours alone, to consider.

          • rvnx 29 minutes ago

            There is another option too: cooperate.

            Any ruler wants active units of production (humans extracting money or gold or food), and for that it has to bring some sort of stable life environment and not be too greedy so people don't try to revolt.

            Whether you get such through political negotiation before or after a war, or through a vote, or through a revolution, is the same as the end.

      • ihsw an hour ago

        How does a state survive if refugees/immigrants are imported en masse and then the state becomes so dysfunctional to such a degree that its male citizens must be conscripted to fight and die for it? Surely this is a recipe for disaster.

        I would sooner die for my family and my country but I wouldn't lift a finger to save the lives of refugees/immigrants.

    • peyton 2 hours ago

      It won’t and it never has. It’s not like society post-1945 developed the phenomenon for the first time in human history. Even in this country, New Jersey was the last state to ban women voting in 1807 iirc.

    • dwedge 2 hours ago

      Why would this affect feminism? If they want to fight for equal rights to conscription nobody is stopping them, and if they don't nobody is going to force them to. These gotchas don't really have any reflection on reality.

      • orange_joe 2 hours ago

        I am wondering if the affected men will demand preferential treatment as a consequence of service. Women currently benefit from disproportionate employment in the social safety net, affirmative action in German government hiring, etc. I would imagine that this would be essentially offensive to the men who are required to stay in the country, or face (potential future) conscription. I suspect the demands of European governments will increase as countries continue to age.

      • believme1123e4 2 hours ago

        What would breed more resentment than knowing that Mediocre Mary from high school got a DEI Product Manager job at Google while you get drafted to war because President Don Quixote decided to invade Holland?

      • missedthecue 2 hours ago

        I would define feminism as the belief that on balance and in aggregate, there is a difference in the fairness that society accords to the genders and it's in favor of men.

        The risk to feminism would be that this becomes so blatantly and obviously not true that no one can take it seriously. I don't think the continued draft of men would impact this because it's not a change to the status quo, and it isn't changing opinion in Ukraine.

  • jsiepkes 2 hours ago

    So it's a cold war law which is still in place but not being enforced.

    Same for conscription laws in the Netherlands, which are also still active. They just don't ask anyone to report for conscription. It was even expanded a couple of years before the Ukraine war to also include women.

    • jasonvorhe 2 hours ago

      > The new military service law requires all men under 45 to seek approval from the Bundeswehr to leave the country for longer than three months. It also obliges the military career center to issue it.

      New. Not cold war. This didn't exist before.

      • eigenspace 2 hours ago

        It's a re-instatement of a cold war era law that was suspended in 2011.

        • nine_k 2 hours ago

          The point is not when the law originated, but that it's being reinstated.

          • eigenspace 22 minutes ago

            Okay sure, but I didnt say otherwise. I was just correcting someone who said something untrue.

        • rvnx 2 hours ago

          The main point was that they changed it so instead of being activated during crisis now it applies anytime, including in peacetime. Making it similar to the cold war provisions doesn't make it sounds better.

          • eigenspace 2 hours ago

            No, the one that said it was only activated during crisis was the post 2011 version.

        • petcat 2 hours ago

          Seems like a distinction without a difference to me.

          • dmurray 2 hours ago

            It's an important distinction because it prevents the defence of "oh it's just an old law, there are lots of old laws on the books that everyone knows aren't relevant, they can't be tidied up for political reasons".

            It was suspended for the last 15 years! Surely it was easier to leave it suspended and unsuspending it is a conscious choice.

  • bilsbie 2 hours ago

    “ Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country.”

    - Universal Declaration of Human Rights

    https://www.ohchr.org/en/human-rights/universal-declaration/...

    • roshin 21 minutes ago

      Ukraine has been violating that for young men since the start of its war.

    • qayxc an hour ago

      And this regulation violates this how exactly?

      • Lucasoato an hour ago

        Because if you need a written confirmation that may conditionally not be given, you don’t actually have the right.

        • qayxc an hour ago

          First of all you don't need it. Secondly, the regulation even states that the right is granted automatically anyway. Technically, the rule had been in place for the past 45+ years anyway - even when there was mandatory military service! - so it doesn't make any practical difference.

  • askonomm 3 hours ago

    So are you also not allowed to move away or? I find it pretty messed up that your life as a man is literally owned by the government.

    • victorbjorklund 3 hours ago

      No, it literally says the law says you must seek permission if you wanna leave for more than 3 months and the govt must always grant you this if not in a war. And if you fail to seek permission nothing happens. You can ignore it without consequence.

      • ndarray a minute ago

        At least Germany isn't looking at entering any wars at the moment...

      • coldtea 2 hours ago

        >And if you fail to seek permission nothing happens. You can ignore it without consequence

        The consequence is you violated the law, and they can have you at any time, even retroactively, for that.

        That they don't is merely a detail. If it really has "no consequence" they should remove it.

        • dwedge 2 hours ago

          A lot of laws head this way. Sweeping chances but not enforced so people ignore it, then later there's nothing stopping the government going back 7 years after select individuals. Just because it wasn't ever enforced doesn't mean it isn't illegal. An example is disguised employment laws for contractors in the UK (IR35)

        • wat10000 2 hours ago

          Civilized countries don’t allow retroactively increasing the penalty for breaking a law. Does Germany allow that?

          • gmueckl an hour ago

            No, Germany punishes according to the laws at the time of the crime. It is not possible to retroactively enforce new criminal statutes.

          • ultrarunner 2 hours ago

            The penalty doesn't have to be increased, it just needs to be selectively enforced.

            • seba_dos1 an hour ago

              You'd need to have some unenforced penalty first though.

        • im3w1l 2 hours ago

          I think it's like they want to have it on the books now so they can use it later. If they try to emergency legislate during wartime people will protest and/or flee the country the day before it starts applying.

    • itsyonas 2 hours ago

      All nation states are like that. They monopolise power and violence, and will defend that monopoly by sacrificing their citizens' lives if another state tries to infringe upon it.

      I think it's clear that the interests of citizens and their state typically do not align. Unfortunately, most states have cultivated and propagated a different idea for decades, which is why so many people have a different perception of their state than the reality.

      • HappyPanacea 2 hours ago

        No idea why you single out nation states, all states are similar.

        • carlosjobim 22 minutes ago

          States before nationalism generally used mercenaries to fight their wars. No soldier was dumb enough to think they were protecting their family.

        • logicchains 2 hours ago

          Nation state is just another word for state, no? What state is not a nation state?

    • Krssst 2 hours ago

      Yes you are: the article says that the permission must be granted in general by authorities (I guess no war and not active military) and no penalties for breaching it.

    • mhitza 2 hours ago

      You are, but it's a shit law and surprising to still exist in Germany. Per the article it's not a new law, has been in effect since the 80s, and there have been no repercussions for violating this law.

      Instead, my 2c, should have changed it to a notice you have to send the military, at most.

  • almokhtar 2 hours ago

    IT funny how limited people freewill in this era you can't travel except with permission and you should pay half of salary as taxes some countries you can't visit and if your passport are from 3rd world you can't visit any anyway lol slavery in it finest .

    the irony is those same people when a religion tell them don't drink or kill or still they say they have no freedom

  • SenHeng an hour ago

    Singapore has a similar requirement called an Exit Permit. It may have changed, I don’t really know or care anymore. But the conscription was a huge driver for me to emigrate as soon as I could. I left the country 2 weeks after finishing my military service.

  • jhrmnn 2 hours ago

    It’s interesting to read the discussion here through the lens of obligations vs rights. It would seem the rights are definitely winning.

    • EA-3167 2 hours ago

      Unsurprisingly when people here engage in serious politics beyond a desire to enrich themselves, those politics tend to take on a distinctly libertarian bent. I’m not sure what else people expect though, this is a very sheltered group with relatively limited skills outside of specific technical areas.

      To put it another way this forum skews selfish.

      • wat10000 2 hours ago

        I miss the days when hackerdom reliably skewed selfish instead of fascist.

    • surgical_fire 2 hours ago

      Are you surprised that a forum full of people all-in hustle culture and the whole VC-startup grift is extremely selfish?

      This is not to say that the government should get blind faith, but some notions that the collective good has any value is alien to many people here.

      Libertarianism is a societal disease. "Fuck you got mine".

      • hartator 2 hours ago

        How is refusing to kill your fellow men selfishness? For one organization over one other?

      • lmf4lol 2 hours ago

        over and over again, we see that governments are pretty bad at doing their job. over and over again, they prove to us that they cant handle money, that they are corrupt, that they put the interest of their political class above that of the people.

        so are you surprised?

        id rather be left alone as much as possible in my pursuit of happiness. On my own terms!

        • jhrmnn an hour ago

          Forget the government, what about your fellow humans? Is defending your country an obligation towards your government or towards your neighbor?

      • logicchains 2 hours ago

        "Fuck you got mine" is the attitude of the boomers expecting young people to die for a country that the boomers left economically and demographically ruined. Young Germans have the worst life prospects of any generation in the past fifty years.

        • Ylpertnodi an hour ago

          You're discussing boomers in the context of an awful lot of history.

  • raffael_de a day ago

    I'm surprised this news is stalling at 24 points. Everybody has to understand that even if this law isn't impacting you; this is a signal in the noise. Germany is a major part of the industrial military complex together with the US and still the 3rd largest economy in the world after US and China. This is meaningful as it sets course for war in Europe. And for Germans it means soon to be enforced limitations of civil rights. That fits right in with the surveillance crap that is being attempted to roll out in EU (which is effectively headed and controlled by Germany).

  • cocodill 3 hours ago

    Busification, when?

    • bagels 3 hours ago

      I guess this is a new word basically meaning conscription by force.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Busification

      • ben_w 2 hours ago

        > conscription by force

        Is there any unforced conscription? By definition conscription is compulsory.

        • nick486 an hour ago

          its a question of degree. going to the barracks when you get called up by mail vs getting grabbed off the street, punched in the face and shoved into a bus headed for the training center.

    • lifestyleguru 2 hours ago

      If you ever wonder what is the role of professional army in case of any serious invasion or war. Their role is to hunt for conscripts, kidnap them, and transport them to the army recruitment centers.

      • Ms-J 18 minutes ago

        It is very true. Look at the Ukraine war for a current example.

      • breppp 2 hours ago

        I don't know where you are getting this, but this is very much not the role of professional armies in most invasions historically

        Usually when your country is invaded you don't stay in your silicon valley privileged mindset and you go to conscription willingly

        • rvnx 27 minutes ago

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Busification - the definition of consent is very stretched.

        • carlosjobim 16 minutes ago

          Millions of people enjoy great lives today because at least one of their ancestors were smart enough to not go to the meat grinder. While millions of young men became genetic dead ends dead in a ditch for no reason at all. Even their names forgotten forever.

        • lifestyleguru an hour ago

          Silicon valley privileged mindset in Europe, what are you talking about?! You mean Piotr, Ivan, and Andrei working remotely for American company for equivalent of 60k USD annually?

          Most armies in Europe, especially in post-Communist part of it, are nepotist corrupted structures. People go there for tax and housing benefits and early retirement. They are not even particularly fit, skilled, or trained to fight with an invader. Especially in these countries men aged 18-45 have absolutely nothing to fight for.

  • Ms-J 23 minutes ago

    Owned like a slave to the government.

  • Galanwe 2 hours ago

    I don't think there is any moat here, most European countries have these kind of "deprecated" laws, that are not enforced and just stay there because it's too much of a hassle to remove. In France, I think there are still laws forbidding women to wear jeans, and requiring permission of the husband to work. Still in the text of law, but obviously non enforceable.

    • idiotsecant 2 hours ago

      Such laws are unenforceable until someone comes along who decides that enforcement would be useful to them.

    • tokai 2 hours ago

      US has just as many if not even more. Every state has their own collection of weird laws, like donkeys are not allowed to sleep in bathtubs or dandelions are illegal to grow over a certain height.

  • lokar 2 hours ago

    A tangent, but I’m interested (as an American) what is the German attitude towards laws that have no enforcement or penalty? Do most people feel an obligation to observe them? Is there any social cost for disregarding them?

    • braabe an hour ago

      I think it varies. I suspect in most common cases the lack of enforcement results from the rest of society not having an appetite to punish it. No harm done, no need to punish.

      I believe jaywalking (or crossing a red light as a pedestrian) is prohibited, but you would have to do it in front of a really motivated cop (or cause an accident) to actually get a ticket for it. It is common and no one really cares - but if you were to do it in front of children or a school you will probably get disapproving looks or a somewhat stern talking to from others around you.

      I think the image of the "order-loving german" is a bit of a stereotype. Some people overdo it (Calling the police for noise harassment if you still mow your lawn at 20:01), but they are generally not popular with their neighbors (or the police...)

    • juujian 2 hours ago

      IIRC there is actually a practice of nullifying laws that cannot be enforced (Vollzugsdefizit). One example I remember is that the enforcement of minor drug possession charges was declared unconstitutional because that law was only selectively enforced.

  • diath 2 hours ago

    Why does it exclude women? War is not just physical strength, but also logistics, operating vehicles, operating drones, nursing, and so on. All tasks that women are well capable of.

    • fabian2k 2 hours ago

      Because it would take a change to the constitution to do that while reinstating the old draft laws only takes a regular majority in parliament. The draft is a severe limitation of personal freedom, so you can't just do that by law. The draft for men is already enabled in the constitution, the draft for woman isn't.

      At this moment, changing the constitution is not possible, there is no majority for this. So that pretty much took the option to change the broader parameters out of the discussion entirely.

      • analog31 2 hours ago

        Can it be challenged under the European constitution?

        • lrasinen an hour ago

          If there were one. The closest thing is the Treaty of Lisbon, which in turn was an update on the Treaties of Maastricht and Rome.

          However, the matter has been heard in the European Court of Justice in 2002, and the short version is "Community law does not preclude compulsory military service being reserved to men."

          For more details, feel free to study the legal opinion behind the ruling: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CEL...

        • fabian2k 2 hours ago

          It probably could be challenged under the German constitution, but nobody knows if that would be successful. The draft for men is set up in the constitution, but there is also an explicit equality for men and women in there. In the past any challenge would almost certainly have been denied, but it's a different time now.

          In practice, this draft is not a real draft yet. Nobody is actually drafted, so there are almost no practical consequences. If there was an actual draft, I'd expect to see a challenge to this.

        • PeterStuer 2 hours ago

          Not sure about constitution, but it is clearly discrimination based on sex, which violates plenty of EU laws and regulations.

          • AdrianB1 an hour ago

            Some countries in the EU, like mine, have funny discrimination laws that say a positive discrimination is not considered a discrimination under the law, so it cannot be challenged. It is used as the basis for all women-favoring regulations.

        • rvnx 2 hours ago

          I wouldn't trust the European Union to be the one that will challenge that German mobilization register at all.

          COVID-19 has proven that if anything, the European Union tends to spread national initiatives among other countries (and Germany is often a leader in EU).

          In this specific case, the EU is more likely to be the type of organization that would think about how to create a unified permit

          -> as they did with the EU Digital COVID certificate; some sort of "I am in the register of mobilization" / "have a temporary travel authorization".

          So, EU might be an enemy that pretends to be your friend there.

          • lrasinen an hour ago

            Humbug. Defence policy, especially how the EU member states choose to organize their military forces, is very much in the hands of the individual countries. A majority of the member states don't even have conscription anymore.

            Yes, there is the common security and defence policy, and the Article 42 of Lisbon and all that, but it all still relies on national systems.

          • tokai 2 hours ago

            Don't post made up lies here.

            • rvnx 2 hours ago

              https://defence-industry-space.ec.europa.eu/eu-defence-indus...

              There is a new military Schengen project to make troops and unified military documentation across whole EU.

              Obviously there will need to be a registry of personnel there, so these people can be prevented to leave.

              On the side you have SIS Schengen, where you can (already) have an active arrest warrant for desertion.

              Nothing indicates that European Union is going to fight against such registries. It's even the opposite.

              • fabian2k an hour ago

                Nothing in there is anywhere close to the claim you made.

          • mytailorisrich 2 hours ago

            That's interesting because on the face of it this none of the EU's business... but also typical of the EU and EU governments to expand what is thr EU's business little by little.

            • QuantumNomad_ 2 hours ago

              The whole existence of the EU has its background in the end of WWII.

              > 18 April 1951 – European Coal and Steel Community

              > Based on the Schuman plan, six countries sign a treaty to run their coal and steel industries under a common management. In this way, no single country can make the weapons of war to turn against others, as in the past. The six are Germany, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium and Luxembourg. The European Coal and Steel Community comes into being in 1952.

              https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-histor...

              Why wouldn’t a unified permit to prove you registered for mobilization be relevant to what the EU is for?

              • mytailorisrich an hour ago

                Absolutely not. What you quote is beside the point and irrelevant.

                Defence and the military is a sovereign matter that has nothing to do with the EU... except we are seeing that this is changing without democratic national mandates.

                • QuantumNomad_ an hour ago

                  How can it be irrelevant when the quoted text is from a website about the EU, written by the EU itself?

                  This is the EU describing its own history and beginnings.

                  • mytailorisrich an hour ago

                    How does that make it relevant?

                    I can only repeat that defence is a sovereign matter in which the EU has no power, but there is a trend of changing this by making it happen as "fait accompli", especially since the war in Ukraine, which is used as pretext.

        • mppm 2 hours ago

          Theoretically yes, practically no. The ECJ can order the revision of national laws, but the country in question is responsible for implementation, and can send plaintiffs on a multi-decade merry chase. Several countries have also taken the view that they can refuse changes to their constitutions. This stands on shaky ground legally, but there is no real enforcement mechanism anyway.

        • Krasnol an hour ago

          I wonder why it is so trendy to want that.

          Yeah, the law is unjust but spare even this part of the population this unnecessary risk. It's not like they can't join if they want to but why put force on it? So everybody feels miserable? What's the point?

          And yeah, ich habe treu und tapfer verteidigt...

    • atomicnumber3 2 hours ago

      A lot of draft laws haven't been touched in a long time and aren't updated for modern gender politics. Though I do wonder if they'll actually get updated ever - no politician wants to touch it and it's not like anyone is screaming for the right to be forced to go die in war.

      It's always weird to me how surprised women are that every single man they know has had to specifically, actually physically ink paper to sign up for the draft. It definitely feels weird/spooky when you do it, given the implications and that despite being compulsory it's not automatically done for you.

      • fhdkweig 38 minutes ago

        > and that despite being compulsory it's not automatically done for you.

        I though it was weird that the United States had a requirement for people to physically sign a paper to do it. It looks like only this year they made it automated.

        > Beginning on December 18, 2026, the Selective Service System will be required to identify, locate, and register all male (as assigned at birth) U.S. residents 18 to 26 years old on the basis of other existing federal databases. Men will no longer be required to register themselves or be subject to penalties for failing to do so. This was noted to be the most significant change to Selective Service since the self-registration system began in 1980.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selective_Service_System

      • hallh 2 hours ago

        Denmark made drafts mandatory for women last year.

        • pjmlp an hour ago

          In Portugal as well, both genders get listed when their time comes up.

        • lysace 2 hours ago

          The same in Sweden since 2017.

          To clarify: every young person regardless of gender is legally obliged to go through fitness testing for conscription and if deemed suitable must go through it if selected. I imagine it’s roughly similar in Denmark?

          Up until the fall of the USSR ~all men did go through conscription/basic military training. After the fall only the ones that wanted to and were selected did. Now it’s ramping up massively.

      • dmitrygr an hour ago

        Tie draft registration to voting registration. Equality before law, and all that

    • MrsPeaches 2 hours ago

      > For women, answering the questions is voluntary, as they cannot be required to perform military service under the Constitution.

      Specially article 12a Paragraph 4: https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/englisch_gg/englisch_gg.h...

      Specifically it says:

      If, during a state of defence, the need for civilian services in the civilian health system or in stationary military hospitals cannot be met on a voluntary basis, women between the age of eighteen and fifty-five may be called upon to render such services by or pursuant to a law. Under no circumstances may they be required to render service involving the use of arms.

    • shin_lao 2 hours ago

      Look at the Ukraine war. Who is being drafted against their will?

      • hulitu 2 hours ago

        Everybody. Do you have some statistics ?

        • Argonaut998 5 minutes ago

          I haven’t seen any women be bussed or blown up with a drone yet. Are you sure this is the case?

        • throw_m239339 2 hours ago

          > Everybody. Do you have some statistics ?

          This is false, overwhelmingly MALES. For a time, males couldn't leave Ukraine, while females could. Those who go to die on the front in all wars are mostly males. Doesn't mean that females aren't casualties as well, they are.

    • baxtr 2 hours ago

      Starting 2026, Ukraine at least has restrictions on women leaving the country as well.

      Women in the civil service, law enforcement agencies, or those registered in the military and serving under contract may face restrictions on traveling abroad, particularly for non-official purposes.

      • ashleyn 13 minutes ago

        Right, a lot of the draft law being male-only reflects a combination of the reality that, relatively speaking, not much war has been waged since the end of WW2, and that much of contemporary gender equality is still somewhat new on a historical basis. So they're really just out of date laws with not much of an impetus to update, at least until recently. The worldwide trend is pretty clearly in the direction of making service and conscription, where needed, more gender agnostic. There are still some realities that don't really change here, such as men being most useful for direct combat, so even if women are conscripted it's likely they'll still avoid much of the worst of warfare simply by virtue of not qualifying for stringent standards.

      • AdrianB1 an hour ago

        You mean "some women in specific situations", not women in general. 2 weeks ago my cousin's wife and her 2 daughters got in an out for my aunt's funeral, in Ukraine. She is 50 years old, former teacher, no restrictions, the daughters are in the early 20, no restrictions either.

        • baxtr 19 minutes ago

          Yes, you’re right. I could have been more specific

          I thought it was obvious with the second paragraph

    • bilsbie 2 hours ago

      Seems crazy that women can vote to send men to war.

      • logicchains 2 hours ago

        No crazier than that the old can vote to send the young to war.

        • SauntSolaire 2 hours ago

          A little crazier — the old were once young, and could have been voted into a war themselves.

          • Ylpertnodi an hour ago

            And yet the vast majority of combat veterarans are very anti-war.

    • yorwba 2 hours ago

      Because the constitution only allows drafting men: https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/englisch_gg/englisch_gg.h...

      The intersection of parties wanting to reinstate compulsory military service and parties supporting gender equality doesn't currently have the necessary supermajority to change the constitution. So we get a wishy-washy compromise, as is so often the case in democracies.

    • jameslk 2 hours ago
    • t0bia_s 2 hours ago

      What about man that has gender woman in papers?

      • ashleyn 23 minutes ago

        Going to assume this phrasing is an awkward translation, but we can see how this works out in tolerant nations with conscription like Thailand. Typically, trans women who are already on a medical pathway are medically excluded from military service. This is less an affirmation of who they are by the military and more of a frank admission that their current state could never be made combat-ready. It's likely that even if SHTF, this would remain the status quo, because it's difficult to imagine draft resisters taking estrogen simply to avoid service. Even if treatment is largely done via informed consent, medical exclusion would likely require blood levels be in a certain range, or certain surgeries performed.

      • rvnx 2 hours ago

        Saved, can freely enjoy cocktails on the beach.

        The registered gender is the one that counts.

    • stephbook 2 hours ago

      According to the constitution, women can be drafted into hospitals.

      Look at $$4. https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/gg/art_12a.html

      You could of course require women to register, too. In case of war, they'll be drafted into hospitals. They just don't want to.

    • duxup 2 hours ago

      I suspect the end result is just, no political will for that at this point.

    • DiscourseFan 2 hours ago

      I agree but in countries with larger populations, there are two reasons:

      1) Women can have children, and after a major war a large section of the population may be killed, and its better to have more women than men, since you can repopulate faster.

      2) Women take over a large share of industrial labor during wartime. This was a mistake the Germans made in WW2, because they were so mystified by Nazism. But in the US, women basically took over all the manufacturing jobs that men left when they went to war, and it helped shore up the industrial base and, in the end, helped lead to an allied victory.

      In a place like Israel, there are so few people that it doesn't make a massive difference. If half the men get taken out, its not like the 2-3 million remaining women are going to be able or even want to "repopulate" so rapidly (not to mention that Israel has an interesting setup where a small section of the women make up the majority of the births--the ultra-orthodox--and the majority probably aren't having kids anyway).

      • oreally 2 hours ago

        I'm in a country ~5mil population (less than israel's) where men are conscripted and there is a fair amount of angst regarding their sacrifice. IMO, the cause is a mix of patriarchy and voteshare.

        Factor #2 is no longer true, nowadays more and more stuff is being produced by machines. Moreover women can pick up guns. Drones can be piloted. Lethality is only going to go up.

        No one sane would want to go fight in a war where lethality is high. Nor train for something that requires looming, recurring obligations for a good 10-20 years of their life. This is real sacrifce. If you want respect, at some point you have to put skin in the game.

      • diath 2 hours ago

        Easier to repopulate... at the expense of men being considered essentially disposable by the society. I should have as much right to not being forcefully sent to my death to wage billionaires' wars as the other half of population.

        • agrishin 2 hours ago

          Well, you see, if men stay alive, but women are killed, society collapses eventually as not enough new people are born. It sucks being a man in this scenario, but it is what it is.

          • throw-the-towel 5 minutes ago

            Arguably, not enough people are being born as it stands. We're already in your collapse scenario.

          • parchley 2 hours ago

            And if you include women (well, all genders) directly in the war efforts you double the amount of soldiers you have, which would increase your chance of winning and not needing to repopulate.

            • SauntSolaire an hour ago

              You can lose a war, yet still keep your country. You can also win a war, yet still need to repopulate.

            • rvnx 2 hours ago

              If you refuse to fight, you lose.

              If you all agree to refuse to fight, you win.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prisoner%27s_dilemma

              The key here is to refuse fighting. Nobody becomes a hero by becoming a murderer whose goal is to defend the political power of Stalin, Napoleon, Bush, or whoever.

    • globular-toast an hour ago

      Women have been treated similarly to children. Fewer rights, but also fewer responsibilities. Feminists are very vocal about the rights but not too bothered about the responsibility.

    • itsyonas 2 hours ago

      Honestly, I don't think the problem with war is that not enough women die in it. It makes more sense to argue against forcing anyone against their will to fight in a war.

      • unsupp0rted 2 hours ago

        That's a non-sequitur to the question.

        And the answer is that women are equal to men in all things, except when things get serious, and then all of a sudden biology matters again

        • itsyonas 2 hours ago

          > That's a non-sequitur to the question.

          How so? Why isn't the question 'Why is anyone being forced at all?' Their question assumes that someone has to be forced, which I fundamentally disagree with, so they should justify that assumption first.

          > And the answer is that women are equal to men in all things, except when things get serious, and then all of a sudden biology matters again

          Correct. They are equal, so I don't think either men or women should be forced.

        • mothballed 2 hours ago

          Well women are the rate limiting factor in having more men produced for war fodder.

          It probably makes more sense to ban birth control at the same time men are required to die for the war machine as both would then be playing out their slavery-induced biological role in ensuring survival of the nation. That is if you're down with the whole slavery for war thing.

          • missedthecue 2 hours ago

            Biologically true, but probably not in practice. Do we think Ukraine will compell women to repopulate postwar? It won't happen.

            • umanwizard an hour ago

              That’s essentially what the commenter is proposing when talking about banning birth control. This would be equivalent to compelling women to reproduce (or forego sexual relations, which in reality most people won’t do).

        • stickfigure 2 hours ago

          > women are equal to men in all things, except in extreme circumstances when violence is required on a mass scale

          Fixed that for you.

          • unsupp0rted 2 hours ago

            Not only violence. There are plenty of concerning situations in which you all of a sudden stop putting middle-manager women in email jobs or HR/DEI finger-wagging jobs.

            When things get existential, the jobs favored by men multiply and the jobs favored by women decrease. And nowhere more than in countries and societies which are highly feminist and supportive of women, which seems counterintuitive but isn't.

      • throwatdem12311 2 hours ago

        You might not want to fight in the war but eventually the war might fight you whether you like it or not.

        • itsyonas 2 hours ago

          In the case of a typical war of conquest, fighting pretty much stops as soon as one nation surrenders. However, no nation state in the world asks, 'How can we save the most lives?', instead asking, 'Do we have enough people to send to their deaths to potentially preserve our monopoly of power?'

          Of course, at the beginning of every war, some people genuinely believe that joining and defending the nation they live in is in their best interests, but these numbers quickly drop over time. As history and current events show, states start to use forced conscription in every prolonged war at some point.

        • logicchains 2 hours ago

          That's not true. When France surrendered in WW2 most French men didn't have to fight or die (unless they were Jewish).

          • hdgvhicv 2 hours ago

            99% of males in the U.K. avoided dying in ww2 - 380k military casualties vs a population of 47 million (and presumably 23.5 million male)

            I’m assuming non military casualties were evenly spread between male and female.

          • mothballed 2 hours ago

            That was also true of much of the feudal or monarchist European wars in the centuries before WWI. In the near term before the "democratic" era around WWI wars war largely seen as wars of the aristocracy and armed forces. Merchants could usually ~freely come and go between countries at war and you could generally pass to a country you were at war with without common people seeing you as an enemy. Wars also tended to be less "all or nothing" where the other side was evil and had to be destroyed and were seen more as property and rights disputes of the elite where armed force was a negotiating tactic or strategic use to assert some particular right.

            It wasn't until the scam of 'democracy' fooled people into thinking war was against the actual people of the other country that they not only scammed everyone into having such buy-in and stakes for the war but also to view the other countrymen themselves as the enemy. People started viewing the nation of themselves because their laughable miniscule influence of their vote somehow means the government is of them. (Note this was a resurface of course, there were times in history where war was seen as against a peoples rather than of the elite).

            • suddenlybananas an hour ago

              Stop reading Curtis Yarvin's pseudo-history. Like 8 million people died in the Thirty Years War before modern democratic states, and there's plenty of other examples.

      • peyton 2 hours ago

        The guys who are willing to shoot people will win that argument every time tbh.

    • AdrianB1 an hour ago

      Because of the equality implementation.

    • hobofan 2 hours ago

      Because CDU is the government.

    • einpoklum 2 hours ago

      > Why does it exclude women?

      In addition to the legal point regarding the constitution: A lot less people in those roles you listed, die. The compulsion is necessary for the state to get enough people to go die - or at least, seriously risk their lives - for it on the battlefield.

    • cubefox 2 hours ago

      It doesn't even exclude just biological women but everyone who has either "female" or "diverse" in their passport, which, according to current law, can both be biologically male.

    • umanwizard 2 hours ago

      There is an actual answer to this, don’t listen to the random people replying saying stuff like “because the CDU is in power” or whatever.

      The actual answer is because the constitutional instrument that allows conscription (Artikel 12a Grundgesetz) is explicitly limited to men. Therefore women are not subject to conscription in Germany, unless the constitution is changed.

      Perhaps if the constitution were written today instead of in 1949 it would include women too.

      • BoredPositron 2 hours ago

        You are misinformed and it is pretty much because of the CDU/CSU. There was a chance to change it with the help of the CDU just after the election but before the last government got dissolved the CDU objected...

        • umanwizard an hour ago

          Can you give a link to what you’re talking about?

  • markus_zhang 2 hours ago

    Question for German friends: What do you think about the production level of military equipment? If Russia does move (which I think is unlikely in the near future), how many days does the ammo last?

    • TheOtherHobbes 2 hours ago

      NATO has days/weeks of ammunition, so it's woefully under-resourced.

      NATO doctrine is basically air superiority against any invading force, with the ability to wreak destruction far behind the front lines.

      Conveniently the Iran war has depleted stockpiles of almost everything.

      The reality is NATO is vulnerable on two fronts.

      The first is that NATO has no defences against the kind of drone and missile waves Russia has been using against Ukraine. A surprise attack could easily take out a large part of NATO's air superiority and do significant damage to arms factories.

      The second is more serious - capture of the independent nuclear deterrent. The US is clearly giving up on defending Europe, the UK's deterrent is barely functional, and only France has a truly independent deterrent.

      Russia has spent a lot of time and money trying to get a puppet government elected on France, along the lines of the governments in Hungary, Slovakia, and the US.

      If France stops being a deterrent Russia would be able to nuke Brussels - and perhaps a few other capitals to make the point - and likely force immediate surrender.

      The question is really whether Russia can hold on until the French elections next year.

    • stephbook 2 hours ago

      Nice try!

  • webnrrd2k 3 hours ago

    Press gangs are back

  • einpoklum 2 hours ago

    I remember people in Germany who had to go underground to evade the draft, even as recently as the early 2000s.

    Here's a story from 2002 about how the supreme court there upheld the legality of a military draft:

    https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2002-apr-11-mn-37321...

    anyway, if you refused to be drafted and did not want to go to jail, you had to more-or-less stop using any government services, rent with roommates, avoid using a credit card etc. until you've reached some age, and then you could emerge again because the duty to serve expires at that certain (not very high) age. It was cuh-razy.

    • ck45 2 hours ago

      I'm not sure how credible it is, conscientious objection is literally in the German constitution: https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/englisch_gg/englisch_gg.h...

      • itsyonas 2 hours ago

        As you said, you can only object if it goes against your conscience, but if you are against it for political reasons (e.g. you don't think its worth it to die for Germany), that's not a valid reason and your objection will be denied. They were also incredibly strict during the Cold War, only easing off a bit afterwards when they wanted a smaller military.

        • ck45 2 hours ago

          What's a reason that is politically and not against one's conscience? I assumed that one's political beliefs would also manifest in conscience.

          The cold war has been over for a very long time. The whole process was reformed in 1984 by removing the mandatory oral hearing. Sources say that acceptance rate was above 90% after 1995. That's not good enough (should be 100%), but not terrible either.

          • itsyonas 2 hours ago

            > What's a reason that is politically and not against one's conscience? I assumed that one's political beliefs would also manifest in conscience.

            For example, I don't think it's in my interest to defend or die for the German state. However, I would use violence to protect my life if someone tried to kill me or threatened my life directly. The German state would interpret this as a political objection rather than a conscientious one, since I am willing to use violence in principle. If I could convince them that I would let someone kill me without defending myself because I categorically reject violence for any reason, they might consider that a conscientious objection.

            > Sources say that acceptance rate was above 90% after 1995.

            Yes, as I said, after the Cold War, Germany no longer wanted to maintain such a large army, so they started accepting any reasonably well-written argument. But in any war, you can see that nation states will start struggling to recruit new soldiers as it becomes obvious to the population that it's a rather pointless endeavour to die for their state. So, they start forcing people. We've seen that in Russia, Ukraine, Israel, USA, etc.

            • ck45 an hour ago

              Thanks for clarifying! I did some own research and apparaently in those oral hearings, objectors were often tricked into contradicting themselves with quite absurd scenarios.

            • tokai 2 hours ago

              >If I could convince them that I would let someone kill me without defending myself because I categorically reject violence for any reason, they might consider that a conscientious objection.

              That is a complete fantasy of yours. Political convictions are explicitly stated as a valid type of justification for conscientious objection by the Act on Conscientious Objection to Military Service. It even states the reasons do not have to be logical or objectively comprehensible, which easily covers your "I'm not opposed to all violence in all theoretically cases, but I fundamentally reject service for the German state".

      • einpoklum 2 hours ago

        On the contrary, it says that even if you object, they can force you into "alternative service" without the use of arms. So they make you a soldier without a gun, or rather - a state slave.

        • qayxc an hour ago

          > or rather - a state slave

          That's one way to put it. The other would be 1 year of paid community service (which the alternative services ALWAYS were).

  • The_suffocated a day ago

    Not all men, but all men over 17 and under the age of 45. This still seems draconian, though.

    • raffael_de a day ago

      Number of characters for the title is limited. And while I wouldn't necessarily call it draconian because after all somebody has to defend my country; it in deed comes as a shock. And it is also shocking that I just randomly stumbled over this news article when this law is in effect already for 3 months. How is it possible that our news talk about all sorts of nonsense but not about something as fundamentally relevant as this ... this is the real shock.

      • haukem a day ago

        I am also surprised that I haven't read about this in German news before. I am following the news. If Trump would have signed an executive order with a similar content affecting US citizen, German media would probably report about this multiple days long with many articles.

        I was looking in Google news for other reports about this, but only found an article from Berliner Zeitung published 5 hours after this article from Frankfurter Rundschau.

        I am worried about what other information which could be important to me, the news did not report on.

        As far as I understood the law the article from FR is correct: https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/wehrpflg/__3.html

      • uyzstvqs a day ago

        > And while I wouldn't necessarily call it draconian because after all somebody has to defend my country

        The ends don't justify the means. Conscription has no place in the free world. It's slavery, plain and simple. Going into the military should be an appealing career choice. Our soldiers are supposed to be highly skilled professionals, not cannon fodder in large quantities.

        • raffael_de a day ago

          So, if some other country with different value system attacks your homeland with intention to effectively colonize it then you'd be okay with just letting it happen?

          • kiviuq a day ago

            I believe it is up to the free individual to make that decision. I'm not saving the slave ship when I'm treated like one.

            ps: There are 8 billion people on this planet, and I've never had any serious issues with any of them, much less a reason to start a war. Governments are always the cause of everyone's misery. Beware of yours!

            • IAmBroom a day ago

              We now know for certain you don't live in Ukraine, nor any other country that has been invaded in your lifetime.

              • kiviuq a day ago

                My family is from Ramallah so my wish to die for someone's greater cause is somewhat constrained.

          • uyzstvqs a day ago

            No. I support a strong, volunteer military force of highly trained professionals (AVF). For example, how the US Army works today.

            It's not only moral and compatible with human rights in the free world, it's also far more effective.

          • plorkyeran 14 hours ago

            If you can’t get volunteers for a defensive war then that says a lot about how much the people living in your country value its continued existence.

      • mnmalst a day ago

        I agree in general. One reason we haven't heard anything about it might be that the administration already admitted that this legislation needs correction or at least clarification, as mentioned in the article.

        • raffael_de a day ago

          No, that is not mentioned in the article. The correction and clarification is regarding how exactly this is being implemented. The law is there ... don't think this is a mistake. And there should be serious discussions in a society before something like that is made a law.

          • mnmalst a day ago

            Fair, yes I agree. Didn't mean to excuse anything they introduced.

        • kristianc a day ago

          Draconian law gets introduced, public outcry ensues. Oh okay we will make it six months then. This is how civil liberties get eroded.

    • nwellnhof a day ago

      The law says all men aged 17 and older, not military-aged.

      https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/wehrpflg/__3.html

      • ffsm8 21 hours ago

        From your link

        (3) Die Wehrpflicht endet mit Ablauf des Jahres, in dem der Wehrpflichtige das 45. Lebensjahr vollendet.

    • znpy a day ago

      It’s also discriminatory on the basis of the gender, “weird” that nobody’s complaining about that.

      • atmavatar a day ago

        Men are biologically disposable. If a nation lost 90% or better of its adult male population, it could still bounce back within a generation or two.

        Women have no incentive to change that, and the small fraction of men powerful enough to change it can already exempt themselves from the meat grinder. The remaining men's opinions don't matter.

        • pfannkuchen 9 minutes ago

          So this definitely works for hunter gatherers and that’s definitely how humans are architected, I agree.

          However, if I think through what this process would look like under modern living arrangements, what would happen? Intensified serial polygamy with a massive increase in single motherhood? Full on polygamy?

          Our social structures aren’t really set up to handle that. It seems like it would be so bad for society that I wouldn’t really say men are “disposable” under the current arrangement. More like they are the roof and women are the foundation, maybe.

          It’s better to lose your roof than your foundation, sure, but losing your roof is still really bad. It does not really compare to, say, throwing out a paper coffee cup.

        • znpy a day ago

          And farewell gender equality I guess.

        • postsantum a day ago

          German women as capable as men, btw. How about to stop this sexist bullshit

          • array_key_first 21 hours ago

            It's not about capability, it's about value.

            Women's lives are valuable, men's are not. This has been the case across basically all societies in human history. Losing a ton of men really doesn't matter too much - especially young, family-less men.

            Losing a lot of women, though, is really really bad.

            • postsantum 19 hours ago

              I was informed that we are all equal. Plenty of wartime occupancies carry no risk of dying, like being a nurse

              • znpy 4 hours ago

                > Plenty of wartime occupancies carry no risk of dying, like being a nurse

                Isn't that reinforcing a gender stereotype? I was told we were against that kind of things around here.

          • Sabinus a day ago

            One woman can have one child a year. One man can have hundreds of children a year.

            This isn't sexist, it's reality. It's the rationale for male conscription and male disposability.

    • jalapenoj a day ago

      Drafts seem like an outdated pre-globalist concept. Die for the borders nobody respects anyway. You need to be nationalistic when it’s useful to your leaders that hate you. Of course just the natives need to die, all the immigrants won’t be doing that.

      • someguydave a day ago

        Fine you can make do in the Congo with everyone else who disrespects borders

        • pfannkuchen 7 minutes ago

          Are you proposing we send undocumented migrants to the Congo? That’s a terrible idea!

  • NooneAtAll3 2 hours ago

    time to emigrate

  • KellyCriterion an hour ago

    for the risk of getting downvoted:

    why only locals, but no migrants?

    • itsyonas 37 minutes ago

      ? This includes all male citizens aged 18 - 45.

  • mcculley a day ago

    If the U.S. implements a draft, would we first implement exit visas?

    • 5555624 a day ago

      If the U.S. implements a draft, will women be required to register? Right now, only men are required to register with the Selected Service when they turn 18. Would Congress amend the Military Selective Service Act?

      • dudul 19 hours ago

        If they aren't, all men should just identify as women.

  • renewiltord 2 hours ago

    > When asked, the ministry spokesperson pointed out that "the regulation was already in place during the Cold War and had no practical relevance; in particular, there are no penalties for violating it.”

    The famed German rule-following in action. This kind of routine violation of regulation is what led to Dieselgate. Social norms in places like this rarely support rule of law. There's a reason the EPA was the one which blew this wide open. Local regulators follow these norms because that's what German cultural norms are.

    • SoftTalker 2 hours ago

      The EPA was able to do this because they made up some new numbers and set an arbitrary deadline. The same cars the year before were fine. The EPA altered the deal and then exacted punishment.

  • dmitrygr 2 hours ago

    EU Charter of Fundamental Rights quoth:

    Article 20 Everyone is equal before the law.

    Article 21 1. Any discrimination based on any ground such as sex, race, colour, ethnic or social origin, genetic features, language, religion or belief, political or any other opinion, membership of a national minority, property, birth, disability, age or sexual orientation shall be prohibited.

  • cynicalsecurity 2 hours ago

    It's unenforceable in the EU that has no borders.

    • Xylakant 2 hours ago

      That doesn’t mean it’s unenforceable. You don’t need a permit to leave Germany to any country as long as your planned stay is shorter than 3 month. The only way this could be enforced is by checking if people are in country, that is in case of drafting them. The paragraph essentially ensures that any person that gets drafted needs to present themselves in person within 3 month of the draft notice.

  • keysersoze33 a day ago

    Being 46 (and quite an active 46 year old, just finished a Skitour), am curious why the cutoff for these things tends to be 45?

    • Yizahi a day ago

      I'm pretty sure it's politics. The reason is a potential draft, but it is also very potential for now and may never happen. So this message signalizes to the older and/or richer population two messages - "you will be protected by the mobilized army in the worst case" and "you personally will be exempt from the need to sit in a freezing trench for multiple years" (which is not true in reality, if the draft will be needed, higher age will be increased to 60 most likely). So the older and conservative population is appeased this way.

      CDU are losing popularity if we are to believe press, so that is one of the populist ways to boost some numbers for elections.

    • raffael_de a day ago

      There has to be some cutoff and I assume it's for law historic reasons, maybe other related laws reference that age.

      Cynically speaking: the people making those laws probably don't want to be impacted by it. And Germany is effectively a gerontocracy.

    • inhumantsar a day ago

      diminishing returns. people over 40 heal less quickly, start to run into chronic health issues, and are more likely to have suffered permanent injuries. it's easier to set a global cutoff at an age where the probability that any given person will be unable to do the job safely than it is to assess each person individually.

      • raffael_de a day ago

        I wouldn't survive a week at the front just because of my back. But I'll happily catch a couple of bullets.

    • spwa4 a day ago

      Let's see ... On December 5, 2025 the German parliament passed a law requiring all men between 18 and 45 years to register "for military service", which everyone should fully understand to mean to register for conscription.

      Oh and they've added a very political clause: the government can activate conscription WITHOUT a parliament vote. So most political parties who have voted in favor of conscription want to be able to claim "it wasn't us, it was Merz" (ie. CDU). In reality CSU and SPD have voted to effectively conscript German men between 18 and 45.

      In other words, Germany expects to be in open war in a matter of months to years. Like every country before them they've decided young men are cheaper than actually investing in military equipment (they're investing in military equipment, but they just won't have it in that time period)

      This probably means that if you can get out, get out, because it's not like being 46 years old will protect you from the impact of that, and yes it's not clear what the timing is going to be, and they're not being very forward about what the reason is for conscription.

      So that's why 45. Because the existing conscription law (1954 + 2025) allows for conscripting every German male between 18 and 45.

      • AnimalMuppet a day ago

        The US has this too. All males register at 18.

        But the US, for all its militarism, and all its military adventures, has not used the draft since Vietnam.

        So I would say that Germany sees the need to be in a position where it can respond quickly if they need it. Well, given current events in their neighborhood, I can see their point. In fact, I would say that they are probably at least three years late in doing this.

        • spwa4 a day ago

          I mean, short term it's obvious what will happen. Europe's peace at all costs (or should I say: at NO cost) will fail and Russia will attack in a matter of years. Some states will be forced to defend and a number of European countries will respond as a coalition. Many other European states will refuse to help, a few very publicly. And obviously this coalition will either beat Russia back or at the very least stop Russia advancing much at all. So far the obvious part of the next few years.

          Let's start with an easy one: Will Germany be ready (war is more than cheap bodies, after all, equipment, plans, ...)? No, they won't. They've never been ready before.

          Will the US help? That was a given even just 1 year ago, but now is strongly in doubt.

          What will Germany's reaction be to the European states that just don't help?

          What will happen to world trade? The question is who will save it, because the historical answer was of course US.

          • rawgabbit a day ago

            I am a US citizen and I try to see the world as it is.

            >Will the US help? That was a given even just 1 year ago, but now is strongly in doubt. With the current commander in chief, the US will do nothing except talk a lot of nonsense contradicting itself daily.

            >What will happen to world trade?. World trade as we know it is done. National security interests will force strategic industries to be on-shored. New trade deals will only be made with a short list of trustworthy allies.

            If Russia does attack, the US will take 1+ years to ramp up and we will take a long time before we reach Europe in large numbers. The rapid reaction forces we have are not prepared for the new way of fighting we see in Ukraine.

      • TiredOfLife a day ago

        For the past 5 weeks the most advanced military technology in the world has acomplished basically nothing.

        Also the main reason russia is still slowly gaining land in Ukraine is because there are not enough people to man the frontline.

  • cookiengineer 2 hours ago

    Note that this law still exists because it requires a constitutional change to include women (well, or to be abandoned). A constitutional change of the Grundgesetzbuch requires a 2/3rd majority in the parliament. That almost never happens these days, especially with green/left/social party being not really united anymore in their votes and the conservatives allying themselves with the far right.

    The last time Germany had that much of a majority, it was under Bundeskanzler Kohl and Schroeder if I remember correctly. So like ~25 years ago.

    Bundestag seats (from 2002 onwards):

    2002 (15): https://www.nls.niedersachsen.de/html/pressemitteilungen1.ht...

    2005 (16): https://www.nls.niedersachsen.de/html/presse_lwl_bw2005.html

    2008 (17): https://www.bundestag.de/parlament/plenum/sitzverteilung17-2...

    2013 (18): https://www.bundestag.de/webarchiv/textarchiv/2013/sitzvert_...

    2017 (19): https://www.bundestag.de/278118-278118

    2020 (20): https://web.archive.org/web/20211102103524/https://www.bunde... (couldn't find an article on the Bundestag website, got deleted. Web archive version is a little broken)

    2025 (21): https://www.bundestag.de/parlament/plenum/sitzverteilung

  • klausa a day ago

    That seems more “oh we fucked up and didn’t realize our changes to the law imply this” than “Germany forces men to request permission to leave”.

    • haukem a day ago

      It is very likely this was done intentionally. Maybe not all people involved in making this law noticed it, but the person working on article 2 did this intentionally. They explicitly list that this article is always active now:

      > (3) Außerhalb des Spannungs- oder Verteidigungsfalls gelten die §§ 3, 8a bis 20b, 25, 32 bis 35, 44 und 45.

      https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/wehrpflg/__2.html

    • raffael_de a day ago

      Highly doubt it. This is a very new addition. Their fuck up was to pretend for ideological reasons that a country doesn't need an army. And that the concept of considering a country home and its culture as something worth preserving is just right wing bs. Now they are surprised that only very few men deliberately registered for armed service ...

      • klausa a day ago

        We’ll see, I guess.

        The quotes very much read to me like someone realizing what the change of Paragraph 2 means to Paragraph 3 means in real time and having to figure out what to answer to journalists.

        I’m curious how that would work administratively though - would they require you to have that when trying to do Ausmeldung? And what about those who moved out before this law got changed?

        Technically, do I need to go Bundeswehr office when I come back next time, to get the permission?

        I _want_ to believe if this was a deliberate change that someone cared about; we wouldn’t be having this discussion right now because there would be clear answers to the very obvious questions here, but maybe my hope is misplaced.

        • raffael_de a day ago

          I'm not sure you understand how laws are made. It's not like "ooops a new law, who did that?" It's going through all sorts of processes with lots of people involved. And even if this is just an "innocent mistake", well, that would mean our government is run by a bunch of incompetent morons ...

      • venvoccd161 21 hours ago

        Even NATO generals aren`t talking about Russia invading Germany anytime soon. It`s all about securing NATO territory in the Baltics. Confusing this with "considering a country home and its culture as something worth preserving" when there is no threat to German soil is misleading.

  • coldtea 3 hours ago

    "Free world"

  • logicchains an hour ago

    Welcome to Dubai, German habibis, you can join all the Russians fleeing their draft here. Still a lot less likely to get hit by a drone here than to die when fighting on the frontlines in Europe.

    • lifestyleguru an hour ago

      We are indeed evolving into a situation where Islamic monarchies not only sound reasonable but start to look like a viable option.

  • haukem a day ago

    The article 3 of the Wehrpflichtgesetzes says this:

    > (2) Männliche Personen haben nach Vollendung des 17. Lebensjahres eine Genehmigung des zuständigen Karrierecenters der Bundeswehr einzuholen, wenn sie die Bundesrepublik Deutschland länger als drei Monate verlassen wollen, ohne dass die Voraussetzungen des § 1 Absatz 2 bereits vorliegen. Das Gleiche gilt, wenn sie über einen genehmigten Zeitraum hinaus außerhalb der Bundesrepublik Deutschland verbleiben wollen oder einen nicht genehmigungspflichtigen Aufenthalt außerhalb der Bundesrepublik Deutschland über drei Monate ausdehnen wollen. Die Genehmigung ist für den Zeitraum zu erteilen, in dem die männliche Person für eine Einberufung zum Wehrdienst nicht heransteht. Über diesen Zeitraum hinaus ist sie zu erteilen, soweit die Versagung für die männliche Person eine besondere – im Bereitschafts-, Spannungs- oder Verteidigungsfall eine unzumutbare – Härte bedeuten würde; § 12 Absatz 6 ist entsprechend anzuwenden. Das Bundesministerium der Verteidigung kann Ausnahmen von der Genehmigungspflicht zulassen.

    See: https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/wehrpflg/__3.html

    This was not changed.

    The article 3 of the Wehrpflichtgesetzes was previously only active in a war or close to war situation (Spannungs- oder Verteidigungsfall). Article 2 said this before:

    > § 2 Geltung der folgenden Vorschriften

    > Die §§ 3 bis 53 gelten im Spannungs- oder Verteidigungsfall.

    See: https://github.com/bundestag/gesetze/blob/master/w/wehrpflg/...

    Now it says this:

    > § 2 Anwendung dieses Gesetzes

    > (1) Die nachfolgenden Vorschriften gelten nach Maßgabe der folgenden Absätze.

    > (2) Die §§ 3 bis 52 gelten im Spannungs- oder Verteidigungsfall.

    > (3) Außerhalb des Spannungs- oder Verteidigungsfalls gelten die §§ 3, 8a bis 20b, 25, 32 bis 35, 44 und 45.

    > (4) Die §§ 15a und 16 sind nur auf Betroffene anzuwenden, die nach dem 31. Dezember 2007 geboren sind. Satz 1 gilt nicht im Spannungs- oder Verteidigungsfall.

    See: https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/wehrpflg/__2.html

    This law changed it: https://www.recht.bund.de/bgbl/1/2025/370/VO

    Is the a up to date git repository with all German law changes? The one I found was last updated 4 years ago.

  • Jamesbeam a day ago

    This headline is kind of misleading.

    First of all, there is no process yet for exactly requesting permission, secondly, the army already said they will not enforce the rule unless the Parliament declares combat readiness is necessary, and lastly, there is no punishment for not asking permission at this point in time.

    And to be completely honest, if more people made use of registering for the damn ELEFAND emergency contact list, this rule wouldn’t be necessary in the first place.

    So, men are kind of responsible for this themselves by being lazy.

    I had to help exfil Germans in Kabul when the US decided to pull out without telling all of their partners in time.

    Everyone wanted to be rescued, but you have no idea how many German idiots travel to foreign countries, not even taking five minutes to let their own government know how to reach them and where they went in case of an emergency.

    It’s super fun to drive around Kabul and pick up 55 years old complaining male Germans yelling at me because I told them I transport people, not their fucking luggage. Two even sued me afterwards for leaving their expensive camera equipment behind. A dozen complaints about my behavior.

    Sometimes it’s really annoying to protect the average citizen. Luckily, I understand that it is an extreme situation for them. Just like some people sue nurses after they broke their ribs reviving their dead ass.

    It’s a good thing all these idiots now have to ask for permission in the future and likely need to leave the data necessary so it’s known where they are, for how long and how to reach them.

    • raffael_de a day ago

      just want to point out you started at this headline is misleading and meandered to agreeing with this being a law now and it was made for a reason and it will be enforced sooner or later. and that's effectively the headline + you think it's a good thing.

      • Jamesbeam a day ago

        Thank you, I suspect the _de in your username means you are German or German-speaking?

        A friend from the US sent the link to this thread to me, asking about it.

        The source website has no ability to be switched to English language, so all information my friend got was from the headline, which without context was misleading for him. If it was clear people wouldn’t ask German-speaking friends to explain this to them, don’t you think?

        And if we are really precise, right now German men don’t need to request permission, because there is neither a process nor any paperwork in place to request permission.

        Without being able to see and understand the context, the headline on its own is misleading in my opinion.

        Just do an experiment for yourself.

        Take the original transcript from any trump speech during the Iran war and put it in a German translator. You will understand it’s about the Iran war but you will be surprised how insane those speeches sound if you are not able to understand English and rely on Google Translate to understand the context.

        • raffael_de a day ago

          I get your point, I'm not agreeing ... anyway, there are plenty of tools available to translate text from German to English.

          • Jamesbeam a day ago

            That’s fine. I don’t want to get into a discussion about how important the accuracy of translation is with topics like law, civil rights, military, etc.

            I trust humans. I don’t trust machines. You do you.

            Thank you for the exchange and pointing out my inaccuracy. I will try to do better next time.

            Have a good day and enjoy your Easter holidays if you’re Christian.

    • haukem a day ago

      > First of all, there is no process yet for exactly requesting permission, secondly, the army already said they will not enforce the rule unless the Parliament declares combat readiness is necessary, and lastly, there is no punishment for not asking permission at this point in time.

      Previously this article 3 was only active in the "Spannungs- oder Verteidigungsfall" which the Parliament has to declare. The law was extended with: "Außerhalb des Spannungs- oder Verteidigungsfalls gelten die §§ 3, 8a bis 20b, 25, 32 bis 35, 44 und 45." so this article is always active now.

  • sunshine-o 2 hours ago

    Those governments are totally inept.

    For decades they have alienated their own native population, especially men. And now they want to conscript them as their approval ratings are around 15℅.

    Think about it, Trump approval rating fell sharply but is still at about 40%. Merz is at 15% and most of those 15% are probably boomers in a nursing home. He is probably closer to 0% within the demographic he is trying to conscript.

    The only war you're gonna get in Europe is a civil war.

  • mikrl 2 hours ago
  • randomNumber7 a day ago

    I kind of predicted this a long time ago. They way germany is currently run they will need to act like the DDR and force their people to stay.

    Otherwise everyone with good education will leave.

  • i_have_to_speak a day ago

    Are homo sapiens the only species that organizes themselves into tribes and work towards the destruction of other tribes of same species?

    • delecti a day ago

      Not even close. Territorial disputes are incredibly common in nature. Humans are relatively rare in that we're capable of understanding that depriving competitors of resources will eventually lead to their deaths, but that is the ultimate result of winning a territory dispute in nature too.

    • rement a day ago

      No, Chimpanzees also have tribes and fight over territory

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gombe_Chimpanzee_War

      • i_have_to_speak a day ago

        TBF that is an isolated incident, not a distinguishing trait of a species.

    • raffael_de a day ago

      That is how some people make a lot of money.

    • Simulacra a day ago

      Weaver ants

    • dudul 19 hours ago

      No, this is a very common behavior in the animal kingdom...