The same physical and psychological exams male applicants have to go through should be enough to screen female applicants. If they aren't, why are we trusting them for male applicants?No but seriously i have always percieved women as less emotionally stable, especially when being shot at, are there any studies to back this up? Because this would be an influencing factor.
How would you test to see which women can perform as good as the men?
Oh cool lets do everything the IDF do because they are bastions of freedom and equalityFighting on the front line. The IDF do it.
This is a subtle form of sexism.This is a very difficult question to answer unless you have had some sort of experience in the defence forces.
Just one thing off the top of my head, is that males instinctively feel protective of women. If males are constantly trying to protect their female co-workers who are on the front line, it could lead to a heap of stupid mistakes and compromising the mission. One of my mates also said that fraternisation is a big problem in the army. If some of the female soldiers are sleeping around a lot, this could cause resentment and problems with group cohesion.
It theory, i will tentatively support women being allowed to serve wherever they want, as long as they are up the scratch and can pass the tests and thats what they want to do. It would probably need field trials and stuff though to see how it goes, but i am all for equality, and if they want to die on the front then sure thing, go ahead.
*citation required.I agree with Serious. Pretty sure that there are studies out there, somewhere, which show that men will put themselves in unnecessary danger to protect women on the frontline. Lowers the overall effectivness of the unit.
I never said it was fair, and I dont support it, i am all for equality. I am trying to think of valid reasons why the army thinks women aren't allowed on the front lines and that came up as a strong reason from my army friends. I dont know if men SHOULD act protective of women. Part of me feels that we should because they tend to be physically weaker and morally we should protect those weaker than us. That thought process could be because of social reasons and how i have been raised though, and the thinking part of me thinks it is not fair to automatically label women as weaker and unable to look after themselves and hence needing my protection.Yeah i think if they can pass the same screening tests as men then they should be allowed to join the infantry.
As much as i think women are inferior, if they meet the sam physical and emotional criteria as men then they can fight. Not that many women will cos they are weak lol. omg sexist hehe.
But yeah
Yes I'm fairly certain these were mentioned on Q&A.I agree with Serious. Pretty sure that there are studies out there, somewhere, which show that men will put themselves in unnecessary danger to protect women on the frontline. Lowers the overall effectivness of the unit.
Falklands War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediawhy dont we just make every country have a female head of state and then there will be no wars at all.
girl power.
god doesn't exist you fucking apeSure men protect men in the army, but I think it's different in that they wouldnt be acting on some deep psychological assumption about the other man's weakness and need to be protected, whether he's injured or in potential harms way.
I just think it's bs to throw around the 'sexist' talk and live in this lala land where there is zero gender difference and we're all - the - same. Dont you see the dirty communism youre all swallowing?
I think i'll jump the shark if I invoke my religion again, so I dont have citation for any of my claims. I just know in my guts' it's nuts
I would like to think that you cant 'learn' to accept women as men. It's something, like, deep and psychological that cant be got at, ya hear? From, like, the womb and shitYes I'm fairly certain these were mentioned on Q&A.
But surely rather than banning women from the infantry, it would be better to train the male soldiers to have more confidence in the abilities of their female counterparts (which would probably happen over time once women began to participate in the infantry anyway).