Okay, lets discuss your points in your post.
This is the second time you have told me what I know or don't know. You base your knowledge on the Navy. I will readily admit I don't know how the Navy does things. You have a propensity to transfer your knowledge of the Navy to all the other services. It don't work that way. How many people have been drafted into the Navy?
I retired with 28 years in the Army. The last time I deployed we had 37 IRR folks in our unit to backfill slots that were not filled because of soldiers with medical problems. I had about 15 in my platoon.
I have seen people get article 15s for severe sun burn and I supported the punishment. We had three females get pregnant while deployed. They received Article 15s Navy calls it Mast) and were sent home. There was no way to backfill since we were in theater. Other people had to assume their responsibilities and duties in addition to their normal duties. Not equal nor fair.
This garbage is just more of that blah blah diversion crap that you added for bulk I guess.
To recap, you don't know squat about the Army and you don't know what I know or don't know. That was a fail. You don't know squat about how the IRR works in the Army. The Army and Navy are different.
This is the end of this conversation.
You said "that reservist has already done his three or four years", yet that isn't true for all reservists. Also, most of those were called up to fill specific ratings, jobs, MOSs, not because someone got pregnant, as you are claiming. Even if a few had to fill those positions, the likelihood of that actually being truly the reason they were activated in itself is very, very small but rather put there because of opportunity after they were already activated.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Individual_Ready_Reserve
They are/were activated for their specialties, not because someone got pregnant, as your one post suggested. That isn't how it works.
And a sunburn is still different than pregnancy. You can easily do things that will keep you from getting sunburned, especially seriously sunburned, every time. That is not true for pregnancy. Plus, punishing just for getting pregnant (as I've said, in appropriate time and place) would be sexist in itself because men are not punished for getting their wives pregnant, but swap sexes, and it would be a punishment for simply doing the same thing a man can do.
We are discussing ways people can get out of the draft. You keep insisting that a woman being able to get out of the draft for getting pregnant is somehow unequal, yet there are plenty of things that get men out of the draft as well, just based on their circumstances.
Hell, my concern has nothing to do with the military, since I feel that we should have some sort of volunteer draft list (sort of like opening up IRR to everyone and offering additional incentives to sign up for it). I have an issue with the fact that it would have some unintended consequences of more women getting pregnant, and/or staying pregnant to avoid the draft. You cannot determine when a woman got pregnant just from a single pregnancy test (she could have had sex the day before she took the test). There is also the fact that women have different religious rules placed upon them than men (in fact, many women in Israel claim a religious exemption to their conscription there). One of those is to be fruitful and multiply and requires that they don't take any precautions against pregnancy and still have sex with their husband.
I also do research and come from a family full of soldiers, not sailors. I know quite a bit about the Army as well. Even know about the Marines and how anal they can be about the rules. They are the ones who I could see punishing a woman for getting pregnant at home (again, I'm fine with women getting in trouble for getting pregnant in a place where no one is supposed to be having sex to begin with, like at sea or in theater, and even said that already).