(Siminski, 2012)
In the 1990s the veterans' Disability Pension scheme has had some effects. These results stated by the researcher Siminski (2012) are in disproportion to the situation in USA, of the same periods and it was thus concluded that there was employment disincentives inherent in Australia's veterans' compensation system. Though the nations are supposedly blaming the points system for their failure to accommodate ex-servicemen, the system does not show the difference between these countries and South Korea. The reason is that in these countries the veterans have already returned from a war and have alternate compensation media. However the serving personal are voluntary. There is no compulsion for anyone to serve the army except in a war. Therefore the compensation system may be shown as wasteful in a capitalist society that is not at war. (Siminski, 2012)
The law of compensation system -- extra points system, in the United States was to a great extent helpful in accommodating veteran's right from the Vietnam War to the Middle East crisis. In these cases the conscripts benefited after they were released from the army. Most conscripts are already proficient on some trade or another and therefore they have a future in competition. The situation in South Korea is totally different and if the Government of Korea is abolishing the system it is an ill considered move to manage the system. It can be proved by exploring the Korean situation that the point system is important to the men. The point system is necessary to ensure them a job, and the extra points will create equality with those who have not served but have acquired skills and compete. The point systems would also compensate for the two years compulsorily spent in the army.
The point that is moot is not whether the compulsory military service for men is discriminatory or not. In fact for South Korea the military service for men has been a blessing. It has brought together cohesion and a cultural ethos and unity in the country. The problem is thus not with the military although it was shown earlier that the human right activists do not view the compulsory enlistment in a favourable light, in this paper for the purposes of the hypothesis this fact is overlooked. It is also because it has been shown by researchers that the compulsory military work was good for the country. For example Kwona (2000), Professor at Korea Institute at Harvard University, USA published a tract in the 'International Feminist Journal of Politics' which reveals a detailed study of the South Korean system. Kwona (2000) claims that "military conscription in South Korea has attracted surprisingly little social research." "Mainly, such research has been left to military institutions. Also, few South Korean feminist analysts, until recently, have tried to fill this notable gap in political analysis." (Kwona, 2000)
Further the researcher shows that the workings of male compulsory military service must be looked into. The argument is that by the gendering of conscription, and the persistence of a culture of militarism the new democratic movement will still be from the 'authentic' South Korean in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. The compulsory male military service has had its many utilities and it was crucial in "constructing citizenship, nationhood, masculinity, femininity, motherhood and fatherhood and in creating the essential 'glue' that binds each of these six potent ideas to the concept of the nation-state in contemporary South Korea." (Kwona, 2000)
Thus the merits of the veterans extra point and its abolition is not justified to continue a system that proves beneficial to the state. It is argued that in order to derive benefits from the compulsory military service imposed by South Korea, the soldier must be equipped to meet the challenges of civil life when he returns to it. If the fate of the soldier after return is despair, then the system of the compulsory service itself will be challenged, resented and probably be the cause of strife and civil or military unrest in future. Is the extra point system beneficial? Definitely in the present set up it is. In the debates on the abolition of the veteran's extra point system the major thrust is to argue that as long as the compulsory military service system continues to operate it is difficult to avoid the extra point because of discrimination it causes. (Joo-hyun, 2002)
It is also difficult to remove the distinction between public/private sectors and the natural gender difference, the conscription causes...
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