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The down side of a free and democratic society that has evolved into one where social media posts have replaced accessing real news and where the advancement of one's self tends to lead to one where individuals are no longer prepared to put their lives on the line. They tend to believe the good times will always roll without a major effort or sacrifice on their part.If you can’t find volunteers to defend said society it might deserve to be destroyed. If there isn’t a big enough carrot to offer you aren’t offering the right thing.
The measure of the strength of the society as a whole is whether or not it is prepared to force the issue where needed and whether or not it has leaders who will make that happen even at the risk of their political futures.
Mostly I think it's a mute point though because a soldier needs more than a 303 rifle and a tin hat to go to war these days. One needs to have equipment to man and that equipment is expensive and limiting. It is highly unlikely that Canada will produce what it did during WW2:
Canadian industry produced more than 800,000 military transport vehicles, 50,000 tanks, 40,000 field, naval, and anti-aircraft guns, and 1,700,000 small arms.
And though our population has grown form 11 million to 40 million, we won't be raising the number of people we did in WW2:
More than one million Canadians served full-time in the armed forces during the Second World War, approximately 731,000 in the army, 106,000 in the navy, and 250,000 in the air force.
In the 1960s we had a peacetime full-time military of around 125,000 when our population was around 20 million. I'm of the view that you could raise and maintain an all-volunteer army of 40,000 full-timers and another 40-50,000 reservists which would be enough to man four to five fully equipped divisions based on a 3.5% GDP military budget. Will people volunteer after hostilities start - probably, they did for Afghanistan. More importantly, if you set up your legislation and policies right so that all serving personnel are bound to a fixed term of Supp Res service after release, you will have a pool of trained manpower to draw on without the need to conscript.
Conscription for conscriptions sake I am not sure would survive. Just like how the death penalty likely couldn’t survive a court challenge thanks to the right to life liberty and security of the person. Conscription violates all of those, along with the right to be free of cruel and unusual punishment, mobility rights, freedom of association, etc.
I said it a few days ago. The Charter has limitations in section 1 - the Charter "guarantees the rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society." A law providing for compulsory military service required to protect society itself easily falls within that.
Further, section 33 provides "(1) Parliament or the legislature of a province may expressly declare in an Act of Parliament or of the legislature, as the case may be, that the Act or a provision thereof shall operate notwithstanding a provision included in section 2 or sections 7 to 15." The rights you are trying to squeeze in - and I disagree that they are applicable in any event - are all subject to a "notwithstanding" provision.
