It's standard for the vast majority of the American electorate from both parties who don't actually have to risk their lives or lifelong disabilities as a consequence of these wars.
Does your mandatory service play a factor in your decision to vote? Say, if you have some Danish politician that wants to go to war pretty much everywhere, in perpetuity, but he promises you all the other stuff you care about, would you still be like, fuck no, who wants to go die for this?
Where I had hoped Tulsi could get some leverage was in pointing out that, if the democratic electorate really wants programs like universal healthcare, then the easiest way to pay for it is to take the money from the MIC and end the wars. But, alas, democrats really are a stupid lot.
A candidate in a crowded GOP primary could get some traction by pointing out that we could end the wars and rebate the American tax payers probably a third of his annual tax payments. They at least get that. A lot of them want the wars, though, because it's not like they are fighting it and they live vicariously through it like this is some kind of Hollywood war movie.