Last edited by Methais; 11-19-2024 at 03:18 PM.
The blow linked article provides context about military physical fitness standards..
Women—who currently make up more than 21 percent of the active-duty force—have held combat roles in the military for decades, though it’s been a gradual progression. Congress repealed the law banning women from combat aviation and on ships in 1991 and 1993, respectively. The Navy reversed the policy barring women from submarines in 2010. And then in 2013, Congress announced the repeal of the combat exclusion policy, which was implemented in 2015. Over a quarter of a million women served in Iraq from 2003 to 2011, the largest-scale and most visible deployment of women in U.S. history. More than 1,000 women were injured in combat and 166 killed as of 2017, according to the Service Women’s Action Network (SWAN).
Lory Manning, a Navy veteran who served as the director of government operations with SWAN, said Hegseth’s comments are “ill-informed” and there’s no substantial evidence that the presence of women in combat roles harms the U.S. military’s effectiveness.
“He keeps saying they’ve lowered standards for women [in combat roles], and that is just not true,” said Manning, who also led Women in the Military Project at the Women’s Research and Education Institute for 15 years. “Number one: it’s against the law to lower standards for women.”
Manning said he is likely confusing or conflating two different kinds of military standards: basic physical fitness and occupational. The basic physical fitness tests differ across military services and are typically adjusted by age and gender.
“These are basically just to see if this person is fit to be in the military, whether they’re a heart surgeon or a Catholic chaplain or a combat person,” Manning said. “But for every single job in the military, there’s also a set of occupational standards that have to be met. And the law says that they must be gender and age neutral.”
More...
The *blow* article confirms what we have been talking about. You think that basic physical tests should be made easier for a 35 year old female as compared to a 18 year old male?
Secondly, and what you fail to grasp, is the standards for ALL get lowered when you are forced to meet DEI quotas. This is how it works: The Marines need X number of females to meet their self imposed DEI goals. X number of females in a specific role, like a combat soldier, get washed out for not meeting the standards of that position. So what do they do? They lower the standards for all so that more females will make the cut.
Last edited by Suppressed Poet; 11-20-2024 at 09:59 AM.
Yes. The purpose of the test is to determine if a person is physically fit, not to determine if the person is fit for a particular role in the military. Without making adjustment based on age or gender, many generals and other high-ranking individuals would be ineligible to serve. It's an old problem that was solved long ago.