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Re: Women and the Draft
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I believe points A and B would require a physical exam though. As long as those tests were passed than, I do not see that being a problem. I tend to not believe test results of any sort though, so I am still up in the air. I am not sure if this is the right thing to do but: I am going to take Mike?s side of the debate. I follow his reasoning perfectly. I am not going to reiterate it; you can read it for yourself. Soezgg is the first person to argue why women should not be allowed in the draft. It seems that most everybody who has posted has supported women in the draft. The debate about whether they should be there or not has been overlooked. If I am wrong about this, it?s probably because I quickly skimmed many of the long posts between Bill and Mike. |
Re: Women and the Draft
i havent yet read all the posts in the thread, but they are quite interesting...
anyways, as a person about to enter the military, let me first start out by saying i am completely against the draft. i believe that the current status of the US military with its voluntary status is a good thing, and helps both with morale (knowing the person next to you wants to be there, instead of being unsucessful in dodging the draft) and oveall quality for pretty much the same reason. i have seen things and heard rumors about bush setting up things so a draft can go as soon as 2005 after elections. as for whether or not a woman should be drafted, why yes, i believe in womans equality, not for giving them special freedoms over other people (please dont even get me started on the rape shield laws in certain parts of the country)...but women can perfrom non-combatant jobs in the military, i believe some figure thats at least over 50% of the military doesnt have combatant jobs. not sure, but i'll check with my recruiter later. anyways, those are my 2 cents with interest, and well, on a lighter note, no more school after tommorow, or today rather.....its sad to miss first, but i hope i can get back into the program someday..... night everyone... |
Re: Women and the Draft
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Re: Women and the Draft
Without question the morale of a volunteer army is much better than a drafted one. However, the whole point of the draft is that there are not enough volunteers in the military. We either expand the number of troops or lose.
I don't really buy the argument that if our administration was doing a good job then we would have an abundant supply of volunteers. I firmly believe in what the president is doing with the military; but you're not going to see me drop out of college and voluntarily enroll without a draft. The parents are paying for college now, who knows what happens 5 years down the road when I return from duty. I guess the argument could be made that I could just drop out of college then enroll and use the money I get from the goverment to finance my education. Military service isn't my calling in life, but that doesn't mean during desperate times I won't perform some type of military duty. Volunteer military service is for people who: need the money for college, is a familly tradition, or are bored with the working a minimum wage job after leaving high school. Since I fall under none of those categories, I currently attend college. |
Re: Women and the Draft
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I personally do not see any reason to forbid women from serving in infantry. Yes there are physical differences, but generalizations apply to men as well as women. On a case-by-case basis, there are men who are weaker than women. How could you permit them to enter the army yet forbid a woman of similar characteristics based solely on gender? Isn't that supposed to be the beauty of America? That as long as an individual meets the requirements and possesses the necessary characteristics and skills, he/she/it can do whatever he/she/it wants? |
Re: Women and the Draft
I'm not going to quote anyone, because I think that's dumb.
Little does everyone know, there are DIFFERENT STANDARDS for men and women in the military. While women have over 21 minutes to run two miles on their physical training test, men have only 15 minutes and 43 seconds. While women have to do only 17 pushups, men have to do 47. These are only examples, but as you can see, it would be easy for weak people of both sexes, but the weaker male is still much stronger than a weak female. I am not going to trust that a woman will be able to have the physical strength and endurance to perform in situations where peoples lives are in danger. This is exactly why women are not currently allowed to be in the Military Occupational Specialty of 11B (INFANTRY). And again, on the DRAFT issue. The draft would only happen if the US needed millions of bullet sponges (infantry) so women are not needed. |
Re: Women and the Draft
Edit: Many of the below things are the exact same as what soezgg said up above due to the fact I had chores and clicked the Reply button a good 15 min after I wrote the following...
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http://155.217.58.58/cgi-bin/atdl.dll/fm/21-20/Ch14.htm Regarding my thoughts on the initial thread subject - I would fully support drafting both men and women. It is not fair to exclude one group when both are legally guranteed the same rights. As Mike argued, if you have the same rights, you have to be subjected to the same service. Nonetheless, as already mentioned, physical deficiencies may prevent infantry service - but that does not prevent working in other ways in the army. There are cooks (first non-combat position that came to mind - don't accuse me of being sexist), office workers, etc. But when I think about having women in infantry, I'm unsure. Even if the PT test standards were the same for both groups, I would have to think long and hard about including women in the fight. |
Re: Women and the Draft
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Please explain your posts carefully and be cordial, for everyone's sake. I have no intention of insulting you with this reply, I just wish to clarify some points that may counter your evidence. Please feel free to prove me wrong, I'd welcome it. |
Re: Women and the Draft
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and as for women in the infantry, i personally dont know any women qualified to go in, but if they could, i would welcome the day. but to be fair, there are males who do not qualify for infantry duty as well. and besides, not everyone registered for the draft get in, some arent fit enough, or have other ways of getting out.... that, and a quick clarification, i am going into the military, but not Army, im going into the Air Force |
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Hooah, I have been to the sand box, cant say I liked it much. But from that perspective you come to realize that everything you see, every single piece of information you recieve, even that which you concieve in your own brain is slanted and warped in some way. Thus, you realize that you can never, ever count on anything and NOTHING is factual. I realize that most of this response is irrelevant and not neccesary, but I felt motivated to reply. |
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But the literal translation: I meant that what you see in the media, what you learn in the news, textbooks, and statements other people have said, are all biased in a great way. So you have to be careful how you form your opinions, and realize that unless you have first hand experience, you are just spitting out someone else's version of what happened. So when I see people on forums such as this, dictating all the information they have seen in CNN, I just laugh sadly because they are so uninformed and they dont even know it. It IS a conspiracy. Anyway. Off to work. |
Re: Women and the Draft
*Off topic*
Ahem.. Less tension and name calling.. Please? :/ |
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