cld617 said:
I realize that, and as before, a mbr reads too far into things.
The topic at hand here is whether or not women can physically withstand the rigors of Ranger school, or schools/course/selections similar to it. No one is saying they do not have the mental or resilience of aptitude to take these tasks on. It's a given that they do, and that can be laid to rest.
Take a breath before you feel the need to go off on someone because you don't think they understand soldiering.
Actually you are a bit off there. The original start to this thread raised by DaftandBarmy concerned four females suing to have women allowed to be in the combat arms and whether or not it was a proper place for the question to be decided. The physical aspects of females became a subset issue raised by those who question the ability of women to perform combat arms tasks. The actual issue raised in this thread is much larger than you wish to restrict it to.
I don't question anyone's position on the overarching issue of women in the combat arms; there are legitimate factors that go pro and con on this very important question. IMHO however, those who wish to restrict the discussion to the issue of average female physiology are either missing or deliberately restricting the debate.
At the forefront of this debate the real question of who decides whether or not women should be allowed to participate as equals at all levels of our society. We, and the US, have already decided at a national political level that they should and have put varying legislations in place to have that happen. There are some reservations in those laws which allow some limited form of discrimination where demonstrably justifiable (the extent and detail of those exemptions vary). In the US there are currently limitations to women in the combat arms.
The competing positions (in a greatly simplified way) are on the one side to allow equal unfettered access to all manner of employment for women regardless of the circumstances and on the other side to restrict that access where there is some demonstrable harm. The people who wish to restrict female access to the combat arms generally point at female physiology and "male bonding" as the two major factors why women would not succeed in the combat arms and accordingly their insertion into combat units would cause unnecessary harm to either themselves or others.
IMHO, both of the factors cited are real and not imagined. Therefore the real question actually is: do the consequences of those two factors constitute demonstrably justifiable reason to disallow equal female participation in the combat arms? In the end that is a national political decision, whether implemented by direct legislation by politicians or by judicial interpretation of existing laws by judges. The opinion of individual members of the military or even the entire military is just one factor to be considered in determining where the nation, as a whole, goes on this issue.
There is absolutely nothing wrong with politicians making life or death decisions about it's citizens, whether soldiers or civilians. Governments make that decision when they send people off to war or what weapon system to buy for the military or even what is the proper speed limit on a highway (lower speeds mean a lower death rate but will impede efficiency).
We've already made the decision in Canada that women are not restricted in the combat arms roles and I think the US will eventually go the same way. The problem that we have (as it is amongst the rank and file of firefighters) is that there will always be individuals at all levels of management/leadership who will disagree with the decision and will throw road blocks in the way of its implementation based on what they honestly believe is a higher and better understanding of the issues at their level. The fact of the matter is that while total gender equality may reduce combat effectiveness in some situations (and I'm not categorically saying it will or won't either way) that's an acceptable risk that the government accepts (and has every right to accept) in order to achieve the broader interests of society as a whole.
This is where the hard part happens. Once the political decision is made what does the existing rank and file (predominantly male) of the military do? IMHO it is their sworn duty to implement the policy.
The problem is that we again have two opposing (and usually honestly held) viewpoints: those who set policies and standards that foster integration in order to facilitate equality and those that set policies and standards that directly or indirectly restrict integration in order to maintain combat capability. IMHO the standards set should favour the principle of integration because that is the overarching intent of the government. Admittedly this is a hard balancing act as we who are or have served are generally not the type of people who want to willingly reduce our effectiveness.
Just a small side discussion on standards. In the US, the amount of time that it takes at a One Station Unit Training facility to complete both Basic Combat Training (BCT) and Advanced Individual Training (AIT) and turn out an MOS qualified infantryman is fourteen weeks. Give or take a bit, that's about the same amount of time we give a reservist in Canada to do BMQ, BMQ-L and DP1 Infantry while regular force training is over twice that amount of time.
Obviously standards vary depending on who is setting them, the criteria under which they are developed and the level of trade-off/risk one is willing to accept in order to achieve a desirable level of combat efficiency. The US is willing to invest half the time in training to put out a basic infantryman. I don't know whether that means Canada is too risk averse or the US is willing to accept a lower level of proficiency. I doubt that either is the reason. I presume it's simply that we have different criteria. For me the lesson is that standards are not set by some infallible being and the end-product produced by a given standard is not preordained, therefore one shouldn't consider the existing ones to be beyond reproach especially when they fail to work for a large proportion of the population.
That's going to be my last post on this issue for some time.
:cheers: