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How were conscientious objectors treated in the United States during World War I?

User Dinesh T A
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The military were determined to get everyone they could." Bernard Lawson was one of some 16,000 conscientious objectors who refused to fight as conscription laws enlisted two-and-a-half million extra British troops from 1916 onwards.

User Dan Walmsley
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During WWI, conscientious objectors were allowed to serve in non-combatant military tasks, including farm labour in France under the American Friends Service Committee when there was a workforce shortage. However, there were conscientious objectors who refused any cooperation with the military because it would be contributing to the war effort. These absolute objectors were imprisoned in centres like Alcatraz Island or Fort Lewis and suffered from short rations or solitary confinement.

User Streetboy
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