One out of every three cadets at the Coast Guard Academy is a female.
Under
feminist pressure, the military academies have relaxed their physical
requirements.
At the Air Force Academy at the base of the ramp leading to the parade grounds was inscribed the words ’’Bring me men... ’’ taken from the poem, "The Coming American," by Samuel Walter Foss. In a controversial move following the 2003 sexual assault scandal,
the words "Bring me men..." were taken down and replaced with the
Academy's core values: "Integrity
first, service before self, and excellence in all we do".
Like
virtually all other major institutions in America today, the armed
forces are operating under the tyrannical fist of political correctness,
with truth sacrificed to ideology. Back in October 1992, when the
George H.W. Bush administration’s Justice Department went to war with
the Virginia Military Institute over VMI’s exclusion of women, the PC veil was lifted for a moment.
Col.
Patrick Toffler, head of West Point’s Office of Institutional Research,
testified as to whether the U.S. Military Academy had lowered its
training standards to accommodate female cadets. After much resistance,
Col. Toffler admitted under cross-examination that women were taught
self-defense while men were taught boxing and wrestling. Pull-ups, peer
ratings, rifle runs and certain obstacle-course elements were scrapped.
The point here is not so much about physical allowances made for women but about the military’s denial of the truth. Smart military men and women learn to pretend or kiss their careers goodbye.
Oblivious to important differences between men and women, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is suing the Department of Defense to lift all combat exemptions for women.
Not putting women into combat deprives them of their constitutional rights, the ACLU is arguing on behalf of four servicewomen in a complaint filed in a federal court in San Francisco.
In the ACLU’s
parallel universe, women are just as aggressive, strong, fast and
warlike as men. You know, like in the National Football League, where
female linebackers strike terror in the hearts of Los Angeles Rams' Fearsome Foursome and the Pittsburg Steelers' Steele Curtain.
Much
of the pressure for this march toward barbarism is coming from career
feminist military personnel, who argue that lack of combat experience
hurts their chances for advancement. In other words, because a few women
want to climb the ladder of rank, all women in the military should be
put at risk for combat duty, whether they want it or not.
Hundreds
of thousands of women have served and do serve honorably in the
military and perform crucial jobs. They deserve every American’s
gratitude and respect. Some have been killed or wounded while serving
bravely in very difficult conditions.
The military has kept women
out of direct ground combat for a moral reason: Deliberately putting
women in harm’s way is not right; and for practical reasons: Women are
not as physically strong, and they have an impact on the men around
them. In a civilized society, men are raised to protect women. Now some
of America’s elite warrior units train men to be indifferent to women’s
screams. That’s what passes for “progress” in a “progressive” military.
It’s
not primarily about individual capability but military necessity.
Anything that detracts from the military’s mission to win wars and bring
troops back alive is not worth it, no matter how fashionable.
In a summary of 30 years of research on women’s suitability for combat and heavy work duty, professor William J. Gregor of the School of Advanced Military Studies
at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., concludes, “Few if any women possess the
physical capacity to perform in combat or heavy military occupational
specialties and none will outperform well-trained men. Training women
with men to the same physical occupational standards dramatically
increases the skeletal-muscular injury rate among women.”
Even conservative lawmakers seem too terrified to ask such questions as:
What happens to women who are captured? Should we care?
If women achieve equal opportunity (and exposure) on the battlefield, do they have an equal ability to survive?
Why is there an alarming increase in sexual assaults against women in the armed services?
Do people realize that their daughters almost certainly will be subject to any future draft if combat exemptions are lifted?
Is
it really no more harmful for servicewomen who are mothers to be
separated from their infants than when fathers are sent overseas? Should
we care?
(See Robert Knight: Deceitful Debate Over Women In Combat)
Monday, December 3, 2012
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