As Nortex posted, the Continental Army used teenagers - but those guys (and they were guys) had much more real life experience (want to eat chicken? process it yourself) than the modern smartphone savvy generation.
There seems to be a sort of "legend" among young, disaffected males that shooting up their school is somehow a justified protest action.
Making it harder to obtain anything beyond a single shot rifle until age 21 would probbly be an effective law, but will the 2nd Amendment allow it?
But the Army recruitment age needs to remain 18 (or younger) as that is the age when young people most need to find a job (or they tend to get into drugs too heavily to be useful, and/or they get a decent job and no longer want to enter the service) - teenagers are easier to train in the sense of instilling character (some would say brainwashing).
There seems to be a sort of "legend" among young, disaffected males that shooting up their school is somehow a justified protest action.
Making it harder to obtain anything beyond a single shot rifle until age 21 would probbly be an effective law, but will the 2nd Amendment allow it?
But the Army recruitment age needs to remain 18 (or younger) as that is the age when young people most need to find a job (or they tend to get into drugs too heavily to be useful, and/or they get a decent job and no longer want to enter the service) - teenagers are easier to train in the sense of instilling character (some would say brainwashing).