77% of Americans aged 17–24 cannot serve their country without a medical or behavioral waiver. Only 1% are both eligible and inclined to serve. The Army missed its 2022 recruiting goal by 25 percent — shrinking to its smallest size since 1940.
This is not a military problem. It is a civilizational health emergency.
- Obesity: 11% (single leading cause)
- Drug/alcohol: 8% (primarily marijuana)
- Medical/mental health: 7% (ADHD, anxiety, prior surgeries)
- Multiple disqualifiers: 44% fail on more than one dimension
- 2017: 71% ineligible → 2020: 77% ineligible
- Trajectory: ~2 percentage points per year toward 80%+ before 2030
- Youth obesity: 5% (1970s) → 13.9% (1999) → 21.1% (2021–2023)
- Adolescents are 50% more likely to experience major depression than 20 years ago
- 4+ hours of daily screen time correlates with 27.1% anxiety rates (vs. 12.3% at lower use)
- FY2022: Army missed goal by 15,000. Spent $1.9 billion on emergency recruiting in FY2023.
- Propensity to serve: 13% (pre-pandemic) → 9% currently
- 80%+ of recruits now have family military history — a civic institution becoming a hereditary one
China fields mandatory universal service. Russia maintains active conscription. South Korea: 18–21 months mandatory. Israel: 32 months (men), 24 months (women). Finland and Norway: mandatory, NATO’s highest readiness. Denmark: extended to women June 2025. The United States: all-volunteer, 77% ineligible, 1% willing.
The 77% is not random. It is the measurable output of systems optimized for comfort over capability: a food environment that produces metabolic disease at scale, an attention economy that captures developing minds for 8.5 hours daily, an educational system that removed physical activity and practical skill development, and a political class that removed consequence from failure and obligation from citizenship.
- Commission updated DOD Qualified Military Available study; mandate annual public reporting
- Introduce mandatory national service legislation (12–18 months, military OR civilian tracks: infrastructure, conservation, healthcare, education)
- Establish bipartisan Commission on Youth Readiness
- Expand Army Future Soldier Preparatory Course across all branches
- Federal physical fitness graduation standard
- Mandate device-free periods in K–12
- Require 100 service hours for high school graduation nationally
- Pilot resilience curriculum in 10 states
- Annual National Readiness Dashboard (public, mandatory, tracked)
- Cultural infrastructure: service as identity, not sacrifice
The question is not whether we can afford to act.
The question is whether we can survive not acting.
Every year of delay is another cohort entering adulthood without the physical capacity, the practical skills, or the civic orientation to contribute to the civilization they are inheriting. The trajectory does not flatten without intervention. It steepens.