On Women in Dangerous Roles

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cmdrjones
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Re: ghost busters reboot with female cast

Post by cmdrjones »

Broomstick wrote:
Battlegrinder wrote:
cmdrjones wrote: Their presence proves that we have a political viewpoint vested in pushing that narrative.
indeed SOME women are capable of 'holding thier own' and they are the exception that proves the rule. In the last time I participated in army combatives, we put the best female E5 up against an average male and she had to struggle with ALL that she had to not get choked out in under 3 minutes and we could tell he was going at 50%. If you are on the firing line, who do you want next to you, a person who MAY be one of the few who can 'hold their own' or somebody who can and will completely dominate the enemy?
I have my doubts as to how relevant someone's hand to hand combat skill is the context of modern warfare, and however questionable that skill may be for the people on my side, I'm reasonably certain that the people we'd be fighting would be even worse, given the past 15 years.

And IIRC, women are actually more dextrous than men, on average, so I think I'd prefer having someone who was probably a good shot on my side.
Not to diss hand-to-hand combat, which still has a role, modern combat is about more than physical strength. Women are able to shoot just as well as a man and function quite well in sniping roles. It's a level playing field in aviation, and women combat pilots have proven every bit as capable as their male counterparts.

You're focusing solely on one attribute: raw physical strength. There's a lot more to handling danger and hazards than that.

All true. I agree. My observation of women being snipers is that they are more patient and willing to wait for the "perfect" shot, but have problems with the physicalty required to SET UP the "perfect" shot. i.e. lay in this field covered with biting insects in your own piss for 3 days until you get what you came for...

The follow up question is: For society is it WORTH IT to train our best and brightest women and put them in dangerous situations just to prove a point that anybody with one whit of historical knowledge knew was true anyway?
Terralthra wrote:It's similar to the Arabic word for "one who sows discord" or "one who crushes underfoot". It'd be like if the acronym for the some Tea Party thing was "DKBAG" or something. In one sense, it's just the acronym for ISIL/ISIS in Arabic: Dawlat (al-) Islāmiyya ‘Irāq Shām, but it's also an insult.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by Simon_Jester »

cmdrjones wrote:Where do you come from dude? :P
Point of order: Broomstick is a dudette.
Women USED to shoot all the time, especially in more rural areas, I'll grant. I'd argue that shooting skills are undergoing a renaissance amongst women and that once (pre-1960s) they were common in the general population, waned and are now becoming fashionable again for women.
Can you back this up by tracking membership in, say, women's rifle clubs over time? We have this charming custom of wanting people to back things up here.
Your other points are noted, but i'll caveat them by bringing in large numbers. yes tehre are lots of metro-dudes nowadays I wouldn't trust with a gun, but we're talking about the military, so it's mandatory...
This isn't coherent. Also the charming "metro-dudes" phrasing. I mean, what, do you judge manliness on a linear scale, with the guys who pay attention to personal grooming being automatically less manly and therefore less competent in battle? That's nuts.
And yes women CAN get a jump in spatial skills through training, but many of them choose to skate by. and yes there are plenty of women on either end of the bell curve, but there are far MORE men on either end of the bell curve
This is not coherent.
So, what are you saying? Women shouldn't be allowed near birth control? Their only proper role in society is walking wombs and baby machines?

This is fun, but since I'm in retail I have to work today. I expect I'll be back later.
No, as I said above, i'm for freedom, if women want to have 0 or 50, doesn't matter to me, i'd just rather not be forced to pay for it either way.

Now, what do I think is IDEAL for society? Well, well, that's another question. I'd rather the role of motherhood was honored for its absolute vital position that it is, and that women in general recognize the cost-benefit and opportunity costs involved with the "modern" lifestyle.
Consider.

Our modern economy is based on the assumption that women will be in the workforce, and wouldn't even function if women of childrearing age and tried to be housewives. Raising a family on one income, unless it is one of a relative minority of good middle-class jobs, is very difficult if not impossible. Especially given the condition that the kids are supposed to have a chance of going to college.

So man-as-sole-breadwinner just isn't going to work. The free market has spoken and housewives aren't what it wants.

Subject to that constraint, women must have access to things like maternity leave and day care in order to have a job (which they must do) while having children (which they'd like to do). But you don't want to pay for poor people's day care, so what's the answer. Are poor people supposed to be not reproducing at all?

You accuse 'feminism' of not acknowledging its role in the problems faced by women today. But our own refusal to pay for a society that actually tries to help people out of a jam plays a big role too. And you're really big on refusing to pay for things.

There are plenty of feminists who are arguing that society is methodically cheating women by forcing them to go to work (on inferior terms) and demanding that they make babies (with or without decent maternity leave and pre-natal care) and then raise the children well (in their copious free time)... and to do this without any real structural support.

The traditional answer (woman as housewife) is a violation of women's freedom of action, and moreover is totally uneconomical in the modern era, as proven by the shortage of employers willing to pay a man enough money to support a family in reasonable comfort.

So we need a new answer- but if the new answer is going to work it will involve people that don't have children paying for the education and protection and care of other people's children. There are important reasons why I would want to pay for other people's children in my capacity as a taxpayer. But can you perceive these reasons?
cmdrjones wrote:The follow up question is: For society is it WORTH IT to train our best and brightest women and put them in dangerous situations just to prove a point that anybody with one whit of historical knowledge knew was true anyway?
If a woman wishes to join the armed forces, or to seek out danger in other ways, why is it "our" decision that she should or should not go? Why is it not her decision. This is what I'm talking about when I say that, when the chips are down, given a choice between freedom for others and sacrificing your own power to make a decision you want to make... you choose to keep your decision-making power.
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salm
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by salm »

The best and brightest people usually don´t join the military. They tend to get some high paying job that doesn´t include getting shot at.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by cmdrjones »

salm wrote:The best and brightest people usually don´t join the military. They tend to get some high paying job that doesn´t include getting shot at.

So what did you get on the DLPT, the DLAB or the ASVAB? Please forward me the results of your last 3 NCOERS....
Terralthra wrote:It's similar to the Arabic word for "one who sows discord" or "one who crushes underfoot". It'd be like if the acronym for the some Tea Party thing was "DKBAG" or something. In one sense, it's just the acronym for ISIL/ISIS in Arabic: Dawlat (al-) Islāmiyya ‘Irāq Shām, but it's also an insult.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by cmdrjones »

Point of order: Broomstick is a dudette.
Ok... whoops
Can you back this up by tracking membership in, say, women's rifle clubs over time? We have this charming custom of wanting people to back things up here.
I have this thing called life experience and general observation. No, it's not SCIENCE! and feel free to reject it out of hand, as I predict you will, but if we were talking about menstruation for example and Broomstick started giving me a bunch of information I generally didn't agree with, i'd at least have to consider the source before asking for peer reviewed statistics on everything. Tell you what, using occams razor, when rifles were commonly brought in to high schools in rural areas so that kids could leave school and got directly to thier favorite hunting spots without going home first, when gunracks in trucks were a common sight, and when we had "tractor day" at high school when farmers would drive tractors to exams... do you think there were fewer or more female shooters per capita in those areas than now when almost NONE of those things go on?

Your other points are noted, but i'll caveat them by bringing in large numbers. yes tehre are lots of metro-dudes nowadays I wouldn't trust with a gun, but we're talking about the military, so it's mandatory...
This isn't coherent. Also the charming "metro-dudes" phrasing. I mean, what, do you judge manliness on a linear scale, with the guys who pay attention to personal grooming being automatically less manly and therefore less competent in battle? That's nuts.


How many battles have you been in?
And yes women CAN get a jump in spatial skills through training, but many of them choose to skate by. and yes there are plenty of women on either end of the bell curve, but there are far MORE men on either end of the bell curve
This is not coherent.

There are more male geniuses and morons then there are female geniuses and morons...
on average.

http://blogs.iq.harvard.edu/sss/archive ... stri.shtml

Our modern economy is based on the assumption that women will be in the workforce, and wouldn't even function if women of childrearing age and tried to be housewives. Raising a family on one income, unless it is one of a relative minority of good middle-class jobs, is very difficult if not impossible. Especially given the condition that the kids are supposed to have a chance of going to college.

What's happened to real wages since 1973? Why do you think that is so?
If women left the workforce en masse that would be a reduction in the supply of labor, yes, what happens to something when the supply of it goes DOWN?
How much student loan debt has the population of the US taken on? Do you think this is a good thing or a bad thing with regards to the millenial generations earning prospects?
So man-as-sole-breadwinner just isn't going to work. The free market has spoken and housewives aren't what it wants.
"For now," said the lacedaemonian...

Subject to that constraint, women must have access to things like maternity leave and day care in order to have a job (which they must do) while having children (which they'd like to do). But you don't want to pay for poor people's day care, so what's the answer. Are poor people supposed to be not reproducing at all?
So women HAVE to have maternity leave and day care to have children? someone tell sandra Fluke! If I am in such a minority why do you care WHAT I do with my money? If you rescinded the mandatory nature of taxation and allowed people to send their tax dollars whereever they wanted, nice progressive minded people would surely fund all of the health care and maternity leave anybody could ever need, right?

And as for poor people not reproducing, it's not the poor that I am referring to, its the proper ROLE for different institutions in our culture. I agree with you that we DO have a catch 22 at the moment, a welfare state that has put a bandaid on poverty for 60 years while simultaneously degrading the very population upon which it depends to sustain it, and using that degradation for justifying it's continued existence and even expansion!

You accuse 'feminism' of not acknowledging its role in the problems faced by women today. But our own refusal to pay for a society that actually tries to help people out of a jam plays a big role too. And you're really big on refusing to pay for things.
Damn straight.
There are plenty of feminists who are arguing that society is methodically cheating women by forcing them to go to work (on inferior terms) and demanding that they make babies (with or without decent maternity leave and pre-natal care) and then raise the children well (in their copious free time)... and to do this without any real structural support.
What inferior terms?

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/the-gender- ... lete-myth/
The traditional answer (woman as housewife) is a violation of women's freedom of action, and moreover is totally uneconomical in the modern era, as proven by the shortage of employers willing to pay a man enough money to support a family in reasonable comfort.
Did we start wifestealing again? How many women are forced into marriage in the US? Employers pay men less, because they can. And largely because there have beens several different downward pressures on wages, including, women working, innovation, mechanization and immigration... guess which one we can influence the easiest with our own choices?
So we need a new answer- but if the new answer is going to work it will involve people that don't have children paying for the education and protection and care of other people's children. There are important reasons why I would want to pay for other people's children in my capacity as a taxpayer. But can you perceive these reasons?
Yes, and I agree with you, I just don't agree with using government FORCE to get that result, there are easier, more elegant ways.

If a woman wishes to join the armed forces, or to seek out danger in other ways, why is it "our" decision that she should or should not go? Why is it not her decision. This is what I'm talking about when I say that, when the chips are down, given a choice between freedom for others and sacrificing your own power to make a decision you want to make... you choose to keep your decision-making power.

The key word was "society"... is a woman part of our society or not? Are men? I already answered the question above: If a womand wants to have 50 or 0 babies I DON'T CARE. That also goes for seeking out dangerous activity such as free climbing. What I DO have a problem with is being asked to pay for it. Now, the military on OTOH is different, because it involves sacrificing for the body politic.

I also choose responsibility as well... I don't hold women to the same standards as men, to do so would be cruel and idiotic. Otherwise, the phrase "women and children first" would have no meaning.
Terralthra wrote:It's similar to the Arabic word for "one who sows discord" or "one who crushes underfoot". It'd be like if the acronym for the some Tea Party thing was "DKBAG" or something. In one sense, it's just the acronym for ISIL/ISIS in Arabic: Dawlat (al-) Islāmiyya ‘Irāq Shām, but it's also an insult.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by Broomstick »

cmdrjones wrote:Where do you come from dude? :P Women USED to shoot all the time, especially in more rural areas, I'll grant.
SOME women used to shoot – in Europe, which largely lacks a shooting culture, it was rare for any man outside the military to have serious experience in shooting, much less the women. That was more a pursuit for the upper classes who has access to firearms and game preserves. Peasants and serfs are not typically allowed serious weapons.

In the US, correct, women in rural areas or on the frontier shooting wasn't uncommon but it was quite rare in urban areas as far back as you care to go. Not unknown, but rare. There are many accounts of women hunting throughout history, including where you might not expect it like subsistence hunter-gatherer groups. One can select examples from all over but that doesn't contradict the fact that in general men have been the hunters/shooters and women the gatherers. Largely because it's a lot easier to chase yams and greens when you're 8 months pregnant than to try to chase deer or rabbits when you're that far along in pregnancy. It's the same reasons that you tend to see men do the big butchering jobs involving disjointing something the size of a deer or cow (or larger) before turning the results over to the women for furthering processing – it's not that women can't, but biology makes that division of labor much more sensible the more primitive your technology.

Well, bravo, we now have technology – sharp steel knives instead of knapped flint, mechanized slicing/dicing tools, grinders, specialists in butchering and packaging and cooking... we've leveled the playing field. Men no longer have to expend their energy on hunting/killing/butchering/plowing/harvesting and, thanks to our modern tools, women can take on the burden of some of those tasks now that brute strength is not such a factor
I'd argue that shooting skills are undergoing a renaissance amongst women and that once (pre-1960s) they were common in the general population, waned and are now becoming fashionable again for women.
Common in what population? New York City? I doubt it. Sure, on the frontier women learned how to shoot but that was from necessity, not innate desire. Isolated homesteads needed all the adults (defined pretty loosely, 10 or 12 might be considered adult enough for these purposes) able to deal with vermin, defend the household, and obtain food when necessary. Likewise, a lot of frontiersmen had to learn to cook, clean, mend clothes, and do other forms of “women's work” if there weren't enough women around to get it all done. Circumstances forced a more egalitarian division of work, but that wasn't entirely by choice.
Your other points are noted, but i'll caveat them by bringing in large numbers. yes tehre are lots of metro-dudes nowadays I wouldn't trust with a gun, but we're talking about the military, so it's mandatory.
What does being a “metro-dude” or not have to do with being in the military or not? Or are you under the delusion that every man in the military is some ballsy over-muscled he-man? What does any of that have to do with the ability to shoot or not?
And yes women CAN get a jump in spatial skills through training, but many of them choose to skate by.
Because 1) society expects them to have poor spatial abilities and 2) they are not in a situation where they are forced to improve.

It's sort of like all the comedy in movies and the like about men being clueless about taking care of infants. If an adult male can't feed a baby (with a bottle, of course) or change a diaper it's not because he's unable to, it's because he hasn't learned how to do it. And we live in a society where many men chose to “skate by” and child-raising are skills arguably more important to the human race right now than whether or not you can shoot a bull's eye at 100 meters.
and yes there are plenty of women on either end of the bell curve, but there are far MORE men on either end of the bell curve
So? How does that refute any of my points?

As an example: 1% of women in the US is 1,500,000 people – would you discourage that many women from pursuing something they have the aptitude for merely because they're on the far end of the curve? Why? Why discard the skills and abilities of one and half million people? I'm sure the percentage of men who could ever qualify for a SEAL team is much, much lower than that, yet we do not discourage men in the military with interest from pursuing that as far as their abilities will permit. There are many examples where society relies on the skills and attributes of a tiny percentage of the population for certain critical functions. The notion we'd disregard half the population because only a fraction of them have the aptitude is ludicrous.

Yes, there are some things were biology makes a difference. For example, I'd expect a woman to have about as much chance of qualifying for a SEAL team as a man would have of spontaneously lactating to feed a newborn. We can't construct the rules for that sort of outlier. For most endeavors, though, cops and firefighters and combat specialists there are a certain percentage of people who qualify who just happen to be female. We should use those willing and qualified in those capacities.
So, what are you saying? Women shouldn't be allowed near birth control? Their only proper role in society is walking wombs and baby machines?
No, as I said above, i'm for freedom, if women want to have 0 or 50, doesn't matter to me, i'd just rather not be forced to pay for it either way.
From my viewpoint, that is very foolish.

First of all, you have some interest in your neighbor's children receiving proper education and care while growing up. People with an education are less likely to turn to crime to survive and I for one would prefer my neighbors' children to be professionals like doctors and accountants than thieves. Second, you have an interest in their basic health because healthy contribute more to a society than sickly or crippled people, and are less of a drain on resources. We can't prevent every illness and disability but failure to prevent what we can prevent is penny wise and pound foolish.

Second, a woman who has 50 children is not going to be a healthy woman. Child-bearing takes a toll on even the strongest and healthiest of women over time. 50 kids is not healthy, arguably it's abuse even if it's self-imposed. I have to wonder about the mental health of a woman desiring 20 children these days, much less 50. Needless to say, any coercion to that sort of reproduction by a women is morally repugnant.
Now, what do I think is IDEAL for society? Well, well, that's another question. I'd rather the role of motherhood was honored for its absolute vital position that it is, and that women in general recognize the cost-benefit and opportunity costs involved with the "modern" lifestyle.
We live on a planet that arguably holds 2-4 times as many people as it can sustain long-term. It would do both our species and the planet's ecosystem considerable long-term good to NOT maintain a replacement rate of reproduction for a couple generations. Sure, there will be issues with that, but there would also be some butt-ugly issues with breeding to the point either starvation, war, disease, famine, or some combination knocks down our numbers.
We have many accounts, even in the mainstream feminist media, of women decrying childlessness, spinsterhood, man-boys, delayed or broken marriage, lack of respect for women (the end of chivalry etc.), the rise of pornography, being left with a Sexual marketplace that leave them very few choices besides serial monogamy, outright sluttery, or complete abstinence, the difficulties of being a single mom, all without even acknowledging the role that feminism writ large had in helping to create and/or exacerbate these same problems.
And yet, earlier, you declared that if women had complete reproductive control they'd opt not to have children. Which is it?

The truth is that most women do want a kid or a few of them, and society beats that into their heads with a sledgehammer as being a good thing. The childless woman is held up as a weeping, emotionally devastated object of pity – which is at odds with most women I know who chose not to have kids (as opposed to wanting them and coming up infertile, but even some of those come to terms with the situation).

I think motherhood should be honored, but not as the ONLY road for a woman, the ONLY meaningful option. Praise of motherhood all too easily becomes not an option for motherhood but a requirement for it... and I don't think that's healthy for our species in our present circumstances.

Even aside from that – raising a couple of kids typically takes up only about 1/4 of the average woman's lifespan these days. What do you propose she do with the rest of those years? Knit baby-booties and sit at home with nothing to do? There's a reason a lot of female politicians start their careers 10-15 years later than the men – they're busy having kids those years but after that's largely over they pursue something else to do with their time and energy.
cmdrjones wrote:
Broomstick wrote:Not to diss hand-to-hand combat, which still has a role, modern combat is about more than physical strength. Women are able to shoot just as well as a man and function quite well in sniping roles. It's a level playing field in aviation, and women combat pilots have proven every bit as capable as their male counterparts.

You're focusing solely on one attribute: raw physical strength. There's a lot more to handling danger and hazards than that.
All true. I agree. My observation of women being snipers is that they are more patient and willing to wait for the "perfect" shot, but have problems with the physicalty required to SET UP the "perfect" shot. i.e. lay in this field covered with biting insects in your own piss for 3 days until you get what you came for...
As I am in no way an expert on sniping I can't really address much about that, other than to say that cultural attitudes about a women's role having cleanliness and cleaning a high priority might factor into that. Certainly, there is no apparent difference between the tolerance of girls and boys as infants for filth and bodily wastes.
The follow up question is: For society is it WORTH IT to train our best and brightest women and put them in dangerous situations just to prove a point that anybody with one whit of historical knowledge knew was true anyway?
It depends on how many and how great the need.

For combat pilots, the necessary combination of physical and mental attributes is rare enough that it makes no sense to discard a significant number of applicants based solely on gender, especially when gender has no impact on their ability to fulfill that role. For something like a submarine, close confinement for months of a mixed-sex crew can lead to some potentially very ugly situations, which is why society has deemed it expedient to only field same-sex crews (the exceptions would be the very largest of modern subs, when people are not in such close quarters). However, there is now apparently a large enough pool of female Navy personnel that fielding an all-female sub crew is now reasonable to discuss without lowering standards – that doesn't mean we'll do it, only that it might make a lot of sense. It's an option, but since we aren't desperately in need of more sub crews that might stay on the back burner for awhile. On the other hand, if we were in the middle of a shooting war involving subs I think we'd see all-female as well as all-male sub crews being fielded these days, just as in WWII the military trained a crapload of women to fly planes – there was a never-ending demand for pilots and it didn't make sense to discard a bunch merely because they were women, nevermind a society far more restrictive in regards to gender roles.

Which was nothing compared to the Soviets, where women were snipers in active combat and driving tanks because there was such a personnel shortage and the need was so desperate.

At other times, society may not have a desperate need based strictly on resources but determines expanding the pool of candidates and people in that role to be a good thing. An example of this is the loosening of requirements for police work – I remember a time when women could not be police officers. Never. Sure, metermaids, radio dispatch, but never, ever, and actual cop (I have an aunt who tried for years to get on the St. Louis police force with no luck). Then after the 1960's and civil rights and a lot of social unrest society decided that a more diverse police force would be a good thing, so they lowered height requirements, removed gender restrictions, and ethnic barriers. Now, no one thinks twice about a cop who is female or Latino or black or all of the above.

Even more gratuitous was the bullhsit about mail carriers – oh, the hoopla when we started getting female mailmen! What ever were we going to call them? Truth is, no one gives a fuck if they're called “mail carriers” or “female mailmen”, now THAT was a stupid and needless restriction on employment. How is a woman less capable than a man of driving a jeep and stuffing envelopes into a box?
cmdrjones wrote:
Point of order: Broomstick is a dudette.
Ok... whoops
Not a problem – I am frequently mistaken for a man on line and do not take offense.
Our modern economy is based on the assumption that women will be in the workforce, and wouldn't even function if women of childrearing age and tried to be housewives. Raising a family on one income, unless it is one of a relative minority of good middle-class jobs, is very difficult if not impossible. Especially given the condition that the kids are supposed to have a chance of going to college.
What's happened to real wages since 1973? Why do you think that is so?
If women left the workforce en masse that would be a reduction in the supply of labor, yes, what happens to something when the supply of it goes DOWN?
In theory that's one thing, but I tell you, removing women from the workforce is going to really suck for female-headed households and/or women who don't have a man to support them.

My father was raised by a single mother in the 1920's. At a time when she was paid less than half for doing the exact same work as the male accountants at the firm and with ZERO chance of ever advancing to partner. It was all legal, accepted, and normal – and it sucked for dad and his brother and their mother and their aunt and niece who were also being supported by my grandmother. Who, again, was paid less than half of any man doing the exact same work.

For all the problems of the modern world I find today's world MUCH more equitable than what my father's family faced in the 1920's.
How much student loan debt has the population of the US taken on? Do you think this is a good thing or a bad thing with regards to the millenial generations earning prospects?
Student loan debt is a hell of a tangent for this thread, don't you think. I mean, the topic is a worthwhile discussion but you might want to start a separate thread for that.
So man-as-sole-breadwinner just isn't going to work. The free market has spoken and housewives aren't what it wants.
"For now," said the lacedaemonian...
The truth is that there have ALWAYS been women who worked, and always a number of women who did “men's work” (usually out of necessity but sometimes out of desire). The women's contributions, however, have not always been valued.

I would prefer there to be more options for people, rather than requirements, and more praise for those who take the more unusual path and not just for those doing the typical thing.
So women HAVE to have maternity leave and day care to have children?
Yes, the average woman needs that – don't just point to the paragons (who typically also have greater financial means to employ people to help her do the work).

There's a reason why giving birth is called “labor”. A women should have time to recover from what is either some of the hardest work a human is called upon to do, or to recover from major abdominal surgery. Sure, some can stand right up and go back to work – some people can amputate one of their own limbs or remove their own appendix without anesthesia but I wouldn't advocate that as a societal standard!

YES, CHILD CARE IS REQUIRED! We don't always call it that, but it is not mentally healthy for a human adult to be in charge of a child or children 24/7 without relief. Even full time mothers employ sitters, take turns watching each other's children, send the kid's to grandma's or aunts/uncles for a bit... Again, the nature of woman's work and raising children is not always acknowledged by society. SOME sort of child care arrangement IS required for raising a human being – lack of it leads to problems like kids home alone for prolonged periods (something society now strongly condemns) or, in extreme cases, women snapping and killing their own children.

The question is whether women are left to cobble together arrangements and, in the case of the poor, struggle to pay for help or whether society values raising decent citizens enough to help out with that. That doesn't necessarily mean government-assigned nannies. It could encompass everything from government licensing and certification of professional caretakers to providing a subsidy to help pay for such care. That doesn't mean every parent is going to go that route, but not everyone has an abundance of relatives and friends who are able to help.
If you rescinded the mandatory nature of taxation and allowed people to send their tax dollars whereever they wanted, nice progressive minded people would surely fund all of the health care and maternity leave anybody could ever need, right?
That used to be the rationale for the government NOT getting involved in feeding the poor... then the Great Depression hit and the charity dried up. People were, literally, starving. That's the problem with relying on the private sector and/or charity – sometimes when the need is greatest the funding is least.
I agree with you that we DO have a catch 22 at the moment, a welfare state that has put a bandaid on poverty for 60 years while simultaneously degrading the very population upon which it depends to sustain it, and using that degradation for justifying it's continued existence and even expansion!
That “band-aid” beats the hell out of people literally starving to death in the streets or being forced to steal just to survive – which were real things before the FDR administration stepped in. Tell me how that would be better than the current situation?
So we need a new answer- but if the new answer is going to work it will involve people that don't have children paying for the education and protection and care of other people's children. There are important reasons why I would want to pay for other people's children in my capacity as a taxpayer. But can you perceive these reasons?
Yes, and I agree with you, I just don't agree with using government FORCE to get that result, there are easier, more elegant ways.
Excuse me, have you studied history at all?

We have public education because before we didn't few of the public received education.

We have forced taxation because when we relied on “volunteer” funding (see Articles of Confederation and The Whiskey Rebellion) insufficient funds were donated to run a viable government.

We have food stamps because charity and the private sector are not a reliable last-resort to prevent starvation.

Some of those “easier, more elegant ways” have been tried and found wanting.
I also choose responsibility as well... I don't hold women to the same standards as men, to do so would be cruel and idiotic. Otherwise, the phrase "women and children first" would have no meaning.
What are you saying here? You NEVER hold a woman to the same standard as a man, for anything or any reason? That is, frankly, insulting. Outside of a very few biological issues (brute strength, lactation, etc) that is bullshit. Where those biological limitations do not apply the same standards should apply to all.

As far as “woman and children first” - I'd amend that to civilian women and children. That phrase should not apply to a female cop, a female fire-fighter, or a female ship captain.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by Lord Revan »

I find it kind of ironic that he implies(with the metro-men line) that militaries are filled with these über macho men who think even combing their hair is unmanly and would die before doing it, when in fact the on-base grooming standards in most western militaries are some on the strictest rules you have.

for example in Finnish Defence Force you have to fully clean shaven and with short hair if male (most recruits have their hair off as well), and this applies for officers as well and if you break these rule, you get to "enjoy" night time guard duty (if not on a frontline base), only this is relaxed is when it would be impractical to maintain, like when you're deployed during an active battle.

oh and my bootcamp (acting-) squad commander was a woman, who a)went to cadet school after she was done with training us b) was at the time was dating the actual squad commander.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by Ziggy Stardust »

cmdrjones wrote: How many battles have you been in?
How many have you been in?
cmdrjones wrote:All true. I agree. My observation of women being snipers is that they are more patient and willing to wait for the "perfect" shot, but have problems with the physicalty required to SET UP the "perfect" shot. i.e. lay in this field covered with biting insects in your own piss for 3 days until you get what you came for...
How many snipers have you observed in person, female or otherwise? What qualifies you to judge a sniper's competency and behavior? What are your credentials?
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by Zeropoint »

Lyudmilla Pavlichenko, greatest sniper of World War Two and slayer of over 300 Nazis, was a woman. Seems to me that the fairer sex has what it takes.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by salm »

cmdrjones wrote:
salm wrote:The best and brightest people usually don´t join the military. They tend to get some high paying job that doesn´t include getting shot at.

So what did you get on the DLPT, the DLAB or the ASVAB? Please forward me the results of your last 3 NCOERS....
I don´t know what your abbreviations mean but I´m going to assume they are some US American military training tests.
What bearing my results on these abbreviated tests have on my previous statement you´d have to outline, though, as your request doesn´t seem to make any sense.
It´s like if I claim that baskeball players are generally not short and you ask me to show how good my layup technique is.
It seems like you´re offended, though, but I don´t know why. Most professions don´t attract the best and brightest.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by salm »

Broomstick wrote:
For combat pilots, the necessary combination of physical and mental attributes is rare enough that it makes no sense to discard a significant number of applicants based solely on gender, especially when gender has no impact on their ability to fulfill that role. For something like a submarine, close confinement for months of a mixed-sex crew can lead to some potentially very ugly situations, which is why society has deemed it expedient to only field same-sex crews (the exceptions would be the very largest of modern subs, when people are not in such close quarters).
Actually a number of European armies have had mixed crews on subs since the early 80s. It doesn´t appear to be that problematic even on ships that are ridiculously small compared to the US navys behemoths.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by cmdrjones »

How many have you been in?
Combat missions 200+ Ambushes meh, 10 or so... actual fire fights ~3. 1 big one lasting more than an hour.

How many snipers have you observed in person, female or otherwise? What qualifies you to judge a sniper's competency and behavior? What are your credentials?
Cav scout for 5 years. My lieutenant was a former infantry E6, sniper, sniper instructor and sniper team leader. No I am NOT sniper trained, but I got to observe them and talk with them quite a bit.
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Terralthra wrote:It's similar to the Arabic word for "one who sows discord" or "one who crushes underfoot". It'd be like if the acronym for the some Tea Party thing was "DKBAG" or something. In one sense, it's just the acronym for ISIL/ISIS in Arabic: Dawlat (al-) Islāmiyya ‘Irāq Shām, but it's also an insult.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by cmdrjones »

SOME women used to shoot – in Europe, which largely lacks a shooting culture, it was rare for any man outside the military to have serious experience in shooting, much less the women. That was more a pursuit for the upper classes who has access to firearms and game preserves. Peasants and serfs are not typically allowed serious weapons.

In the US, correct, women in rural areas or on the frontier shooting wasn't uncommon but it was quite rare in urban areas as far back as you care to go. Not unknown, but rare. There are many accounts of women hunting throughout history, including where you might not expect it like subsistence hunter-gatherer groups. One can select examples from all over but that doesn't contradict the fact that in general men have been the hunters/shooters and women the gatherers. Largely because it's a lot easier to chase yams and greens when you're 8 months pregnant than to try to chase deer or rabbits when you're that far along in pregnancy. It's the same reasons that you tend to see men do the big butchering jobs involving disjointing something the size of a deer or cow (or larger) before turning the results over to the women for furthering processing – it's not that women can't, but biology makes that division of labor much more sensible the more primitive your technology.

Well, bravo, we now have technology – sharp steel knives instead of knapped flint, mechanized slicing/dicing tools, grinders, specialists in butchering and packaging and cooking... we've leveled the playing field. Men no longer have to expend their energy on hunting/killing/butchering/plowing/harvesting and, thanks to our modern tools, women can take on the burden of some of those tasks now that brute strength is not such a factor. Common in what population? New York City? I doubt it. Sure, on the frontier women learned how to shoot but that was from necessity, not innate desire. Isolated homesteads needed all the adults (defined pretty loosely, 10 or 12 might be considered adult enough for these purposes) able to deal with vermin, defend the household, and obtain food when necessary. Likewise, a lot of frontiersmen had to learn to cook, clean, mend clothes, and do other forms of “women's work” if there weren't enough women around to get it all done. Circumstances forced a more egalitarian division of work, but that wasn't entirely by choice.
I have no problems with this.


What does being a “metro-dude” or not have to do with being in the military or not? Or are you under the delusion that every man in the military is some ballsy over-muscled he-man? What does any of that have to do with the ability to shoot or not?
It's an attitude thing. perhaps we don't mean the same thing. When i use that phrase I am picturing amore extreme example than you are I suppose. And no, not every man in the military is over-muscled, though it is an essential element of the soldier and his/her training and evaluated constantly. Physicality has to do with all aspects of military culture, not just shooting, though it IS en essential element of shooting. Holding a7 pound rifle in the proper firing postitions for an extended period of time is a heck of an isometric workout.
And yes women CAN get a jump in spatial skills through training, but many of them choose to skate by.
Because 1) society expects them to have poor spatial abilities and 2) they are not in a situation where they are forced to improve.

Agreed.
It's sort of like all the comedy in movies and the like about men being clueless about taking care of infants. If an adult male can't feed a baby (with a bottle, of course) or change a diaper it's not because he's unable to, it's because he hasn't learned how to do it. And we live in a society where many men chose to “skate by” and child-raising are skills arguably more important to the human race right now than whether or not you can shoot a bull's eye at 100 meters.
Ah yes, but we're talking about women in dangerous situations remember? But, point taken. In general making sure babies survive is more likely to come up than shooting something at 100 meters, but when it comes up BOY is it important!
and yes there are plenty of women on either end of the bell curve, but there are far MORE men on either end of the bell curve
So? How does that refute any of my points?

As an example: 1% of women in the US is 1,500,000 people – would you discourage that many women from pursuing something they have the aptitude for merely because they're on the far end of the curve? Why? Why discard the skills and abilities of one and half million people? I'm sure the percentage of men who could ever qualify for a SEAL team is much, much lower than that, yet we do not discourage men in the military with interest from pursuing that as far as their abilities will permit. There are many examples where society relies on the skills and attributes of a tiny percentage of the population for certain critical functions. The notion we'd disregard half the population because only a fraction of them have the aptitude is ludicrous.

Yes, there are some things were biology makes a difference. For example, I'd expect a woman to have about as much chance of qualifying for a SEAL team as a man would have of spontaneously lactating to feed a newborn. We can't construct the rules for that sort of outlier. For most endeavors, though, cops and firefighters and combat specialists there are a certain percentage of people who qualify who just happen to be female. We should use those willing and qualified in those capacities.
You say we can't consctruct rules for outliers? Good. That's what I'm saying... the argument begins at how far down the bell curve we go to GET our female cops and firefighters etc. I say if the top 1% (You may argue 5% or whatever) WANT to be there and will DO the work and don't care about the opportunity costs, then fine, let them. My personal opinion is that we (as a society) shouldn't be encouraging the most physcially capable women to spend their best years getting beat up by life etc. But that's just me.

First of all, you have some interest in your neighbor's children receiving proper education and care while growing up. People with an education are less likely to turn to crime to survive and I for one would prefer my neighbors' children to be professionals like doctors and accountants than thieves. Second, you have an interest in their basic health because healthy contribute more to a society than sickly or crippled people, and are less of a drain on resources. We can't prevent every illness and disability but failure to prevent what we can prevent is penny wise and pound foolish.

Second, a woman who has 50 children is not going to be a healthy woman. Child-bearing takes a toll on even the strongest and healthiest of women over time. 50 kids is not healthy, arguably it's abuse even if it's self-imposed. I have to wonder about the mental health of a woman desiring 20 children these days, much less 50. Needless to say, any coercion to that sort of reproduction by a women is morally repugnant.
I do have SOME interest in them. I also recognize that our society is broke and we will have to make hard choices and soon. (feel free to disagree, i am sure most of you will) As far as the 50 number goes, I know that's not realistic, i was being purposefully hyperbolic. BTW the only people who engage in forced reproduction on women that I know of are our enemies... so agreed.

We live on a planet that arguably holds 2-4 times as many people as it can sustain long-term. It would do both our species and the planet's ecosystem considerable long-term good to NOT maintain a replacement rate of reproduction for a couple generations. Sure, there will be issues with that, but there would also be some butt-ugly issues with breeding to the point either starvation, war, disease, famine, or some combination knocks down our numbers.
See the above quote about tough choices....
We have many accounts, even in the mainstream feminist media, of women decrying childlessness, spinsterhood, man-boys, delayed or broken marriage, lack of respect for women (the end of chivalry etc.), the rise of pornography, being left with a Sexual marketplace that leave them very few choices besides serial monogamy, outright sluttery, or complete abstinence, the difficulties of being a single mom, all without even acknowledging the role that feminism writ large had in helping to create and/or exacerbate these same problems.
And yet, earlier, you declared that if women had complete reproductive control they'd opt not to have children. Which is it?
The Above problems are not all about childbearing, but 2nd and 3rd order effects of the system we have REPLACED traditional childbearing WITH. So, if women opt NOT to have some many children and don't generally become wives and mothers, we get the above effects in the population as a result. Effects that are not all so great and remain as of yet not only largely unsolved, but largely unaddressed.
The truth is that most women do want a kid or a few of them, and society beats that into their heads with a sledgehammer as being a good thing. The childless woman is held up as a weeping, emotionally devastated object of pity – which is at odds with most women I know who chose not to have kids (as opposed to wanting them and coming up infertile, but even some of those come to terms with the situation).

I think motherhood should be honored, but not as the ONLY road for a woman, the ONLY meaningful option. Praise of motherhood all too easily becomes not an option for motherhood but a requirement for it... and I don't think that's healthy for our species in our present circumstances.

Even aside from that – raising a couple of kids typically takes up only about 1/4 of the average woman's lifespan these days. What do you propose she do with the rest of those years? Knit baby-booties and sit at home with nothing to do? There's a reason a lot of female politicians start their careers 10-15 years later than the men – they're busy having kids those years but after that's largely over they pursue something else to do with their time and energy.
I don't think society beats it into their heads, in fact, quite the opposite. Women have maternal instincts, or we wouldn't have made it this far as a species.
Agreed motherhood isn't the ONLY option, but IMHO its the most selfless.
As for women's increased lifespans, I say let them do whatever they want, THAT is the best time to do it! AFTER childbearing years! I'd rather a young woman have the facts at 18 and decide wisely whether to struggle with trying to "have it all" or stick to wife and mother role or simply go for a career, rather than the situation we currently have where feminists push women into the "have it all" role and damn the torpedoes.
It depends on how many and how great the need.

For combat pilots, the necessary combination of physical and mental attributes is rare enough that it makes no sense to discard a significant number of applicants based solely on gender, especially when gender has no impact on their ability to fulfill that role. For something like a submarine, close confinement for months of a mixed-sex crew can lead to some potentially very ugly situations, which is why society has deemed it expedient to only field same-sex crews (the exceptions would be the very largest of modern subs, when people are not in such close quarters). However, there is now apparently a large enough pool of female Navy personnel that fielding an all-female sub crew is now reasonable to discuss without lowering standards – that doesn't mean we'll do it, only that it might make a lot of sense. It's an option, but since we aren't desperately in need of more sub crews that might stay on the back burner for awhile. On the other hand, if we were in the middle of a shooting war involving subs I think we'd see all-female as well as all-male sub crews being fielded these days, just as in WWII the military trained a crapload of women to fly planes – there was a never-ending demand for pilots and it didn't make sense to discard a bunch merely because they were women, nevermind a society far more restrictive in regards to gender roles.

Which was nothing compared to the Soviets, where women were snipers in active combat and driving tanks because there was such a personnel shortage and the need was so desperate.

At other times, society may not have a desperate need based strictly on resources but determines expanding the pool of candidates and people in that role to be a good thing. An example of this is the loosening of requirements for police work – I remember a time when women could not be police officers. Never. Sure, metermaids, radio dispatch, but never, ever, and actual cop (I have an aunt who tried for years to get on the St. Louis police force with no luck). Then after the 1960's and civil rights and a lot of social unrest society decided that a more diverse police force would be a good thing, so they lowered height requirements, removed gender restrictions, and ethnic barriers. Now, no one thinks twice about a cop who is female or Latino or black or all of the above.

Even more gratuitous was the bullhsit about mail carriers – oh, the hoopla when we started getting female mailmen! What ever were we going to call them? Truth is, no one gives a fuck if they're called “mail carriers” or “female mailmen”, now THAT was a stupid and needless restriction on employment. How is a woman less capable than a man of driving a jeep and stuffing envelopes into a box?
I have a few quibbles here and there with this, but nothing major. I agree.
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In theory that's one thing, but I tell you, removing women from the workforce is going to really suck for female-headed households and/or women who don't have a man to support them.

My father was raised by a single mother in the 1920's. At a time when she was paid less than half for doing the exact same work as the male accountants at the firm and with ZERO chance of ever advancing to partner. It was all legal, accepted, and normal – and it sucked for dad and his brother and their mother and their aunt and niece who were also being supported by my grandmother. Who, again, was paid less than half of any man doing the exact same work.

For all the problems of the modern world I find today's world MUCH more equitable than what my father's family faced in the 1920's.
Glad I'm not advocating for the forcible removing of anybody. If women who had male support left voluntarily, then wages would necessarily rise. I can dream can I? As for the "wage gap" it's largely a myth, your examples notwithstanding. IMHO, if a woman is doing the same work, she should get paid the same, but women as a whole generally don't. They work less overtime, they work indoors, they take time off to have kids and thus have less overall experience, they don't generally do dangerous and dirty work when they don't have to and so on. The rationale behind paying women less for the same work was to drive them out of the workforce so that a man with a family could take the position. Is that wrong? 6 of 1 half dozen of the other. If men aren't encouraged to strive and compete they become man-boobs and basement dwellers that no woman wants anyway, right?
there is no free lunch.
Student loan debt is a hell of a tangent for this thread, don't you think. I mean, the topic is a worthwhile discussion but you might want to start a separate thread for that.
Yeah, I went off the rails there.
So man-as-sole-breadwinner just isn't going to work. The free market has spoken and housewives aren't what it wants.
"For now," said the lacedaemonian...
The truth is that there have ALWAYS been women who worked, and always a number of women who did “men's work” (usually out of necessity but sometimes out of desire). The women's contributions, however, have not always been valued.
Valued by whom? Feminists? I'm all about valuing motherhood and all the work that goes into it. Much of "women's work" will ALWAYS be unpaid, hence why it is selfless.
I would prefer there to be more options for people, rather than requirements, and more praise for those who take the more unusual path and not just for those doing the typical thing.
These days, the tradcon family IS atypical, :mrgreen:

Yes, the average woman needs that – don't just point to the paragons (who typically also have greater financial means to employ people to help her do the work).

There's a reason why giving birth is called “labor”. A women should have time to recover from what is either some of the hardest work a human is called upon to do, or to recover from major abdominal surgery. Sure, some can stand right up and go back to work – some people can amputate one of their own limbs or remove their own appendix without anesthesia but I wouldn't advocate that as a societal standard!

YES, CHILD CARE IS REQUIRED! We don't always call it that, but it is not mentally healthy for a human adult to be in charge of a child or children 24/7 without relief. Even full time mothers employ sitters, take turns watching each other's children, send the kid's to grandma's or aunts/uncles for a bit... Again, the nature of woman's work and raising children is not always acknowledged by society. SOME sort of child care arrangement IS required for raising a human being – lack of it leads to problems like kids home alone for prolonged periods (something society now strongly condemns) or, in extreme cases, women snapping and killing their own children.

The question is whether women are left to cobble together arrangements and, in the case of the poor, struggle to pay for help or whether society values raising decent citizens enough to help out with that. That doesn't necessarily mean government-assigned nannies. It could encompass everything from government licensing and certification of professional caretakers to providing a subsidy to help pay for such care. That doesn't mean every parent is going to go that route, but not everyone has an abundance of relatives and friends who are able to help.
now we're arguing about whether it's more efficient for society to lower taxes and let people make their own choices or utilize a large bureaucracy to enforce these types of things on businesses and so on.
That used to be the rationale for the government NOT getting involved in feeding the poor... then the Great Depression hit and the charity dried up. People were, literally, starving. That's the problem with relying on the private sector and/or charity – sometimes when the need is greatest the funding is least.
See above... people have always been starving somewhere. All that Aid to africa had major unintended consequences... so does the welfare state.
That “band-aid” beats the hell out of people literally starving to death in the streets or being forced to steal just to survive – which were real things before the FDR administration stepped in. Tell me how that would be better than the current situation?
It beats the hell out of it FOR NOW. I'm operating from the assumption that deficits matter and that currencies can, will, and have been destroyed in the past and that the EU/USA are NOT special and can obliterate themselves.
Excuse me, have you studied history at all?
this is unintentionally hilarious.

We have public education because before we didn't few of the public received education.
We have forced taxation because when we relied on “volunteer” funding (see Articles of Confederation and The Whiskey Rebellion) insufficient funds were donated to run a viable government.

We have food stamps because charity and the private sector are not a reliable last-resort to prevent starvation.

Some of those “easier, more elegant ways” have been tried and found wanting.
yes, they ARE wanting, but they are better than nothing.
I also choose responsibility as well... I don't hold women to the same standards as men, to do so would be cruel and idiotic. Otherwise, the phrase "women and children first" would have no meaning.
What are you saying here? You NEVER hold a woman to the same standard as a man, for anything or any reason? That is, frankly, insulting. Outside of a very few biological issues (brute strength, lactation, etc) that is bullshit. Where those biological limitations do not apply the same standards should apply to all.

As far as “woman and children first” - I'd amend that to civilian women and children. That phrase should not apply to a female cop, a female fire-fighter, or a female ship captain.
Let me clarify: I'll hold women to the same professional standards as men.
Terralthra wrote:It's similar to the Arabic word for "one who sows discord" or "one who crushes underfoot". It'd be like if the acronym for the some Tea Party thing was "DKBAG" or something. In one sense, it's just the acronym for ISIL/ISIS in Arabic: Dawlat (al-) Islāmiyya ‘Irāq Shām, but it's also an insult.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by cmdrjones »

Ziggy Stardust wrote:
cmdrjones wrote: How many battles have you been in?
How many have you been in?
cmdrjones wrote:All true. I agree. My observation of women being snipers is that they are more patient and willing to wait for the "perfect" shot, but have problems with the physicalty required to SET UP the "perfect" shot. i.e. lay in this field covered with biting insects in your own piss for 3 days until you get what you came for...
How many snipers have you observed in person, female or otherwise? What qualifies you to judge a sniper's competency and behavior? What are your credentials?

Oh. PS My father was a sniper in WWII and talked extensively with me about his experiences, including taking a Japanese full colonel at 1700 yards with a star rifle. THAT is a hell of a tale.
Terralthra wrote:It's similar to the Arabic word for "one who sows discord" or "one who crushes underfoot". It'd be like if the acronym for the some Tea Party thing was "DKBAG" or something. In one sense, it's just the acronym for ISIL/ISIS in Arabic: Dawlat (al-) Islāmiyya ‘Irāq Shām, but it's also an insult.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by sarevok2 »

Dr Taylor should feel offended that SJWs accuse him of abusing women based on his shirt. He should feel offended because SJWs are judging people by their appearance. And trying to dictate what others can wear.

But wait I think being offended is a privilage reserved for SJWs. Only they have the right to outrage.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by madd0ct0r »

I'd accuse you of shitting up the thread but I'm not convinced this thread isn't shit to start with.

I mean really, another "can women do dangerous roles" discussion that reads just like every other discussion on it?
In the real world people are quietly getting on with their jobs without feeling the need to beat their chests about their status.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by cmdrjones »

madd0ct0r wrote:I'd accuse you of shitting up the thread but I'm not convinced this thread isn't shit to start with.

I mean really, another "can women do dangerous roles" discussion that reads just like every other discussion on it?
In the real world people are quietly getting on with their jobs without feeling the need to beat their chests about their status.

If you look closely, it's not "can" its "should"

Mentioning facts and answering direct questions isn't chest beating... I can do that too though:

"No shit privates, there I was..." :lol:
Terralthra wrote:It's similar to the Arabic word for "one who sows discord" or "one who crushes underfoot". It'd be like if the acronym for the some Tea Party thing was "DKBAG" or something. In one sense, it's just the acronym for ISIL/ISIS in Arabic: Dawlat (al-) Islāmiyya ‘Irāq Shām, but it's also an insult.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by madd0ct0r »

'Should' presumes a right to make a judgement, and implies a duty to prevent a woman carrying out a dangerous roll if you feel they shouldn't.

Neither are in agreement with a basic morality of 'competent adults should be able to do what they'd like, as long as that does not impinge upon other's ability to do the same.' aka the golden rule.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by Ziggy Stardust »

cmdrjones wrote: Combat missions 200+ Ambushes meh, 10 or so... actual fire fights ~3. 1 big one lasting more than an hour.
Where? When? What unit? What was your rank and role? Please provide some evidence that you aren't pulling this out of your ass. We've had people come here before lying about having military experience, and they are not treated well I can assure you.
cmdrjones wrote: Cav scout for 5 years. My lieutenant was a former infantry E6, sniper, sniper instructor and sniper team leader. No I am NOT sniper trained, but I got to observe them and talk with them quite a bit.
In other words, you have absolutely no qualifications or credibility in judging how well a sniper does their job. Considering I asked you how many female snipers you observed and you didn't answer the question, I assume that number is 0, thus making your earlier statement about female snipers complete and utter bullshit.
cmdrjones wrote: Would you like me to explain what a Trash Suit is?
What possible relevance does this have to my question?
cmdrjones wrote: Oh. PS My father was a sniper in WWII and talked extensively with me about his experiences, including taking a Japanese full colonel at 1700 yards with a star rifle. THAT is a hell of a tale.
First of all, so fucking what? My great uncle manned a destroyer in the fighting around Guadalcanal; I've heard stories, too. That does not qualify me at all to judge how well naval officers do their jobs, because hearing stories (stories filtered by 50+ years no less) does not entail osmosis of practical knowledge. Whether or not your father was a sniper in WWII has absolutely nothing to do with how qualified you are to talk about snipers, this is just a vague and possibly fictitious appeal to authority.

Second of all, so far as I can tell, the longest confirmed kill made during WWII by a sniper was 1100 meters by Mätthaus Hertzenauer in 1944. The distance you cite is borderline impossible with WWII era optics. Which means I ask you to provide some evidence of your father's feat or else admit you are lying.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by salm »

Does it really matter if he´s a soldier or not? Even if he was a soldier he´d have to prove his point with facts and good arguments.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by Ziggy Stardust »

salm wrote:Does it really matter if he´s a soldier or not? Even if he was a soldier he´d have to prove his point with facts and good arguments.
It only matters because he is using the claim of being a soldier AS evidence of his points. He really hasn't presented any facts or arguments in this thread, just a lot of gibberish that he justifies by claiming first-hand experience. The supposed fact that he is a soldier is integral to his entire argument. He's the one that made it relevant by using it as justification for his claims. Even if this weren't the case, falsifying military experience is a serious offense in-and-of-itself.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by Simon_Jester »

cmdrjones wrote:
What does being a “metro-dude” or not have to do with being in the military or not? Or are you under the delusion that every man in the military is some ballsy over-muscled he-man? What does any of that have to do with the ability to shoot or not?
It's an attitude thing. perhaps we don't mean the same thing. When i use that phrase I am picturing amore extreme example than you are I suppose... [snip ramble about getting exercise in the army]
See, the problem is that when you say "metro-man" you appear to be picturing a male who obsesses over his own appearance, lacks traditional masculine virtues (such as courage and steadfastness) and is, overall, "effeminate."

Now, that raises some questions about your attitude. See, it's hard to even define a "metro-man" unless you bring in the idea "man that acts like a woman." In which case you're basically saying "here is what boys do, here is what girls do, boys who do any of the 'girl' things are icky because cooties."

I mean, for crying out loud, take Prince Rupert of Bavaria. Man had long hair, liked to paint, routinely wore cosmetics, and had a reputation for immense, rash, fiery courage while leading massive armies for his uncle, Charles I of England. Or the samurai culture of feudal Japan, in which traditional manly pursuits included poetry recitals, elaborate tea-drinking rituals, flower arranging, and chopping men in half with swords.
And yes women CAN get a jump in spatial skills through training, but many of them choose to skate by.
Because 1) society expects them to have poor spatial abilities and 2) they are not in a situation where they are forced to improve.
Agreed.
If you agree with this, why are you even arguing that women lack the requisite skills?

Fighting may not be a traditional female skill, but the degree to which females lack fighting ability is a cultural thing. If we routinely trained everyone to fight as hard as they could, women might on average be outpointed a little by men... but there'd still be lots of perfectly competent female warriors.

It's like marathon running. The female runners might have longer times than the male runners, but a female marathon runner can run virtually everyone else in the world, male and female alike, into the ground.
You say we can't consctruct rules for outliers? Good. That's what I'm saying... the argument begins at how far down the bell curve we go to GET our female cops and firefighters etc. I say if the top 1% (You may argue 5% or whatever) WANT to be there and will DO the work and don't care about the opportunity costs, then fine, let them. My personal opinion is that we (as a society) shouldn't be encouraging the most physcially capable women to spend their best years getting beat up by life etc. But that's just me.
Lots of women get beat up by life in varying ways anyway.

I do have SOME interest in them. I also recognize that our society is broke and we will have to make hard choices and soon. (feel free to disagree, i am sure most of you will)...
We will indeed have to make hard choices. Thing is, the question is in large part what those choices are. For example, Bush made the easy choice of removing the capital gains tax. This has contributed to the massive expansion of a financial sector. The financial instruments have gotten so complicated and contrived, and the tactics of Wall Street's hedge funds and fast-moving traders have gotten so underhanded, that it destroys the public interest. The situation is far beyond, and far worse than, anything that an 18th or 19th century advocate of free markets could have imagined.

So now we've got this parasitic financial sector growing up, promoting bubbles, engaging in corporate-raider tactics that can gut actual productive concerns and create massive disruption of the labor market (i.e. people's lives). If a government agency had this level of power over the people, and used it this hamhandedly, with so little accountability when things get screwed up...

We'd be seeing calls for armed revolution from a lot more than a few fringers at the outer edge of the Tea Party.

And one of our hard choices is: do we let the parasitic financial sector grow indefinitely? Or do we burst its bubble by drawing off a share of its profits? In this case, the decision to tax is the hard choice, but arguably the correct choice. It would also remove some of our other hard choices that have much more direct consequences (weapons not used to defend ourselves, or children not fed).

To a large extent, the present debt crisis is an artificial crisis, created by people who don't understand the Laffer Curve and think that you can always get more revenue by cutting taxes. And it's idiotic for us to respond to an artificial crisis by creating another crisis, which spending cuts would do. If you have an artificial crisis on your hands, should never respond by creating a second crisis. Just remove the first one.
We live on a planet that arguably holds 2-4 times as many people as it can sustain long-term. It would do both our species and the planet's ecosystem considerable long-term good to NOT maintain a replacement rate of reproduction for a couple generations. Sure, there will be issues with that, but there would also be some butt-ugly issues with breeding to the point either starvation, war, disease, famine, or some combination knocks down our numbers.
See the above quote about tough choices....
Thing is, once again, I can agree we'll need to make the "tough choice." My problem with you is that I think you are making such choices wrong. It's like, the decision to gargle bleach is 'tough' in that gargling bleach is painful. But that doesn't mean it's a good move to gargle bleach. Gargling bleach is only going to make things worse.
We have many accounts, even in the mainstream feminist media, of women decrying childlessness, spinsterhood, man-boys, delayed or broken marriage, lack of respect for women (the end of chivalry etc.), the rise of pornography, being left with a Sexual marketplace that leave them very few choices besides serial monogamy, outright sluttery, or complete abstinence, the difficulties of being a single mom, all without even acknowledging the role that feminism writ large had in helping to create and/or exacerbate these same problems.
And yet, earlier, you declared that if women had complete reproductive control they'd opt not to have children. Which is it?
The Above problems are not all about childbearing, but 2nd and 3rd order effects of the system we have REPLACED traditional childbearing WITH. So, if women opt NOT to have some many children and don't generally become wives and mothers, we get the above effects in the population as a result. Effects that are not all so great and remain as of yet not only largely unsolved, but largely unaddressed.
I would argue that most of these second and third-order effects are not effects of what you think they are.

Middle and upper-class women don't have to be single moms if they don't want to. Most of the ones who are, have made a considered decision that no man is a choice better than any of the men currently on offer. Under "traditional motherhood" such a woman is called an 'old maid,' is not supposed to reproduce, and is widely despised or pitied. How is that an improvement?

Poor women often do have to be single moms (with, at most, a succession of boyfriends, many of them contemptible, on the side). But is that because of feminism? Or is that because the economic conditions of low-income life have gotten so shitty and shattered over the past few decades that it's become very difficult to hold together a nuclear family in the face of those conditions?

And yes, there are prices to pay for accepting that. But the opportunity cost of being married to an irresponsible bozo, or worse.a jackass with anger management issues. All that just to have "a man in your life?" Who would push that on women? And yet that's exactly what the norm was in the fifties. "Never mind that he beats you, you need a husband and now that he's got you pregnant it's not like anyone else will even look at you!"

That is traditional wifehood right there.

Meanwhile, most of the other problems you list are not the result of feminism, they are the result of the breakdown of manly qualities. Or, more likely, the fact that while those qualities were always the ideal, they were also far less common than you think they were. Broomstick is one to listen to here because she actually remembers what life was like before feminism succeeded in changing the tone.

I'm not sure you do.
I don't think society beats it into their heads, in fact, quite the opposite. Women have maternal instincts, or we wouldn't have made it this far as a species.

Agreed motherhood isn't the ONLY option, but IMHO its the most selfless.

As for women's increased lifespans, I say let them do whatever they want, THAT is the best time to do it! AFTER childbearing years! I'd rather a young woman have the facts at 18 and decide wisely whether to struggle with trying to "have it all" or stick to wife and mother role or simply go for a career, rather than the situation we currently have where feminists push women into the "have it all" role and damn the torpedoes.
Except now you're asking women to join the workplace and start their careers at the age of 45-50. This is going to place them at a considerable competitive disadvantage. It also greatly undermines all the women who do have actual ambitions to, say, be an artist and have children. Or to lead a business to success and have children. Or to do, well, pretty much anything and have children.

Men have always gotten to "have it all," in the sense of having a career and life outside the home and getting to have children. Society is still working on how to let women have this too, but we only have about 40-50 years of experience with seriously trying to do it at all. So it's no wonder there are still some bugs to be ironed out in beta testing.

Your disapproval of the fact that women prefer to live this way, and rather condescending criticism of how they want to "have it all" strikes me as unsavory.
Glad I'm not advocating for the forcible removing of anybody. If women who had male support left voluntarily, then wages would necessarily rise. I can dream can I?
Markets don't really work that way. Supply and demand is not an "everything will be okay in the end" button. What happens is, suppose 10% of the female workforce drops out to get married and be housewives. Now that translates into 10% of all households consist of a male breadwinner who supports a permanently unemployed adult.

But those 10% of male workers are still competing with the 90% of the population that isn't part of this grand experiment. Who still only have an average of one mouth to feed, or perhaps two. Whereas Mr. Breadwinner has about three or four to feed.

The amount of money he needs to keep his family alive far exceeds the amount of money a single man (or woman) is willing to take to do the same job. As a result, Mr. Breadwinner's bargaining power is limited; his decision to take on the sole support of his family does not automatically result in new jobs popping up that pay double what they used to. And that's what he needs- not a small incremental rise in the salary of the average job, but a job that pays double.

So the actual standard of living of many of those single-income households falls below middle-class levels. Their children grow up undereducated and less healthy. They have to settle for living in undesirable areas with decaying infrastructure, high crime, and stressful living conditions. They are screwed.

All because the modern economy is built around two-income households, not one-income households.

Now, you can get away with this. My family did. But that's because my father is a scientist who was well-paid by a government agency to do research throughout my childhood years. As a result, he was able to support a housewife and two kids... But by the end of his career, he was getting paid about twice the American median income. Joe Average wouldn't be so lucky.
As for the "wage gap" it's largely a myth, your examples notwithstanding. IMHO, if a woman is doing the same work, she should get paid the same, but women as a whole generally don't...
Bullshit; the wage gap is measured by comparing women who work in the same industry doing the same jobs. MAYBE they work less overtime and volunteer for the crappy jobs less often (citation BADLY needed). But their base salary should still be the same, right? Except it often isn't.
The rationale behind paying women less for the same work was to drive them out of the workforce so that a man with a family could take the position. Is that wrong? 6 of 1 half dozen of the other. If men aren't encouraged to strive and compete they become man-boobs and basement dwellers that no woman wants anyway, right?
Except many men were always lazy, unmotivated, bad providers. The need to feed a family is not in itself insurance against men becoming irresponsible deadbeats or drunks. It just makes the consequences worse when they do.

More generally... Men should be motivated by motivating men. Not by making it effectively impossible for women to accomplish anything so that men can keep our precious clubhouse intact and flatter ourselves that the women would be helpless to survive without us.
The truth is that there have ALWAYS been women who worked, and always a number of women who did “men's work” (usually out of necessity but sometimes out of desire). The women's contributions, however, have not always been valued.
Valued by whom? Feminists? I'm all about valuing motherhood and all the work that goes into it. Much of "women's work" will ALWAYS be unpaid, hence why it is selfless.
Er no. The point is that women always did a substantial share of work outside the home, it's just that these contributions were not respected. Motherhood was sort of respected, although if you were poor people accused you of being a stupid slut who was popping out too many babies*.

But anything else? Say, working like mad cleaning some rich bastard's house so your children could have food to eat? No respect. Woman goes into politics? No respect, she must be insane, send her to a mental asylum. Widow keeps husband's business from falling apart? No respect, and add the joys of your male relatives (and his) trying to horn in and forcibly take over the business regardless of how good a job you were doing.

The idea that women can be professionals with attainments that have real value is pretty much a product of late 20th century feminism. Before that, women were at best the secretaries and cleaning ladies who made something worthwhile easier to do, and nobody ever bothered to remember them for their achievement.

*This stereotype is identical to welfare queens but predates welfare, which makes you wounder about how intellectually honest Ronald Reagan was when he complained about said welfare queens...
now we're arguing about whether it's more efficient for society to lower taxes and let people make their own choices or utilize a large bureaucracy to enforce these types of things on businesses and so on.
It doesn't take much bureaucracy to enforce labor laws

I mean, you know how in America it's almost unprecedented for an employer (aside from comically disorganized small businesses and fly-by-night operations) to not pay a worker? That's actually the product of a law. A very enforceable, very simple set of labor laws that severely punishes you for not paying an employee. Broomstick is, by the way, eminently qualified to speak of this subject, as her signature suggests. :D

See, here's the thing. Large government bureaucracies are really only needed in one of two cases.

1) The government has to do something. The army is a bureaucracy, and it needs to be. The job of defending a nation against armed, organized enemies is too big to be done without mobilizing a large organization. Large organizations need bureaucracy. This is why ANY organization devoted to doing something on a large scale becomes a bureaucracy. Churches, corporations, nonprofits, you name it. This is not a thing unique to governments.

2) The government has to carefully vet each individual case to make sure someone is in compliance. This requires hordes of inspectors and regulators, and is the cause of most real government intrusion into people's everyday lives.

This is why, counterintuitively, amping up the number of inspections you do to root out welfare fraud can result in a more bloated and wasteful bureaucracy dedicated to administering welfare. Because at some point you're paying an inspector fifty thousand dollars a year, and requiring several clerks to work hundreds of extra hours a year at a few dozen dollars an hour... just to rout out ten or twenty thousand dollars' worth of real welfare fraud.

It can actually be cheaper (or at least, a better return on investment) to just mail people a goddamn check rather than having to screw around with this.
_____________________

Now, labor law doesn't actually require hordes of government inspectors. If a company is supposed to provide maternity leave and day care subsidies, you make that a law. Any company that doesn't gets sued in what is probably an open-and-shut case. Game over, everything's taken care of, we can all go home. No bureaucracy required.

What would take bureaucracy is creating a system where the government subsidizes your day care but then proceeds to inspect the day care every week, makes you fill out two hours' worth of paperwork a week to keep the day care, and sends someone to barge into your home at odd hours to make sure you're not hiding a live-in nanny under the sofa cushions.
That used to be the rationale for the government NOT getting involved in feeding the poor... then the Great Depression hit and the charity dried up. People were, literally, starving. That's the problem with relying on the private sector and/or charity – sometimes when the need is greatest the funding is least.
See above... people have always been starving somewhere. All that Aid to africa had major unintended consequences... so does the welfare state.
So is it better to havep people starving in the US, or to have them not starving? You dodged the question.

Whatever 'tough choices' we might have to make in the 21st century, whether to feed our own citizens isn't likely to be one of the necessary ones. Unless, of course, we methodically screw up our economy by refusing to properly educate and organize our own people, until that economy decays to Third World levels of productivity and organization.
Excuse me, have you studied history at all?
this is unintentionally hilarious.
You regularly make statements that contradict history or show a lack of accurate perspective on historical events. The hilarity is in large part on your end.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by cmdrjones »

madd0ct0r wrote:'Should' presumes a right to make a judgement, and implies a duty to prevent a woman carrying out a dangerous roll if you feel they shouldn't.

Neither are in agreement with a basic morality of 'competent adults should be able to do what they'd like, as long as that does not impinge upon other's ability to do the same.' aka the golden rule.

So if someone else gets crippled or sent to the emergency room due to their own choices my taxes will never have anything to do with it? Sweet!
Terralthra wrote:It's similar to the Arabic word for "one who sows discord" or "one who crushes underfoot". It'd be like if the acronym for the some Tea Party thing was "DKBAG" or something. In one sense, it's just the acronym for ISIL/ISIS in Arabic: Dawlat (al-) Islāmiyya ‘Irāq Shām, but it's also an insult.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by cmdrjones »

Ziggy Stardust wrote:
cmdrjones wrote: Combat missions 200+ Ambushes meh, 10 or so... actual fire fights ~3. 1 big one lasting more than an hour.
Where? When? What unit? What was your rank and role? Please provide some evidence that you aren't pulling this out of your ass. We've had people come here before lying about having military experience, and they are not treated well I can assure you.
cmdrjones wrote: Cav scout for 5 years. My lieutenant was a former infantry E6, sniper, sniper instructor and sniper team leader. No I am NOT sniper trained, but I got to observe them and talk with them quite a bit.
In other words, you have absolutely no qualifications or credibility in judging how well a sniper does their job. Considering I asked you how many female snipers you observed and you didn't answer the question, I assume that number is 0, thus making your earlier statement about female snipers complete and utter bullshit.
cmdrjones wrote: Would you like me to explain what a Trash Suit is?
What possible relevance does this have to my question?
cmdrjones wrote: Oh. PS My father was a sniper in WWII and talked extensively with me about his experiences, including taking a Japanese full colonel at 1700 yards with a star rifle. THAT is a hell of a tale.
First of all, so fucking what? My great uncle manned a destroyer in the fighting around Guadalcanal; I've heard stories, too. That does not qualify me at all to judge how well naval officers do their jobs, because hearing stories (stories filtered by 50+ years no less) does not entail osmosis of practical knowledge. Whether or not your father was a sniper in WWII has absolutely nothing to do with how qualified you are to talk about snipers, this is just a vague and possibly fictitious appeal to authority.

Second of all, so far as I can tell, the longest confirmed kill made during WWII by a sniper was 1100 meters by Mätthaus Hertzenauer in 1944. The distance you cite is borderline impossible with WWII era optics. Which means I ask you to provide some evidence of your father's feat or else admit you are lying.

2000-2005 1/7 Cav B troop, under LTC Bill Salter, OIF II I was an E5 and a M3A3 gunner and dismount team leader.
Being that there ARE no female snipers in the US army that would be an incredible standard to hold me to now wouldn't it?
Aslo, when did direct observation NOT become a source of information.
Scientists do that very thing, right?

AS for the trash suit, it is a bit of 1st hand knowledge of the subject matter. If we were talking about say physics and you offered to describe in detail some parts of that giant collider in Europe, i'd probably take it that you at least knew SOMETHING about the subject, yes?

You can feel free to dismiss anything you want. Have you ever asked anybody in your field for advice? Did you ever put any of it into practice?
AS far as the range goes, that could have been misrecollection on his part, as you said it was over 50 years ago.
I can tell you where he's buried and you can go tell him all about what a bullshit artist he was and how cool you are, deal?
Terralthra wrote:It's similar to the Arabic word for "one who sows discord" or "one who crushes underfoot". It'd be like if the acronym for the some Tea Party thing was "DKBAG" or something. In one sense, it's just the acronym for ISIL/ISIS in Arabic: Dawlat (al-) Islāmiyya ‘Irāq Shām, but it's also an insult.
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Re: On Women in Dangerous Roles

Post by Ziggy Stardust »

cmdrjones wrote: 2000-2005 1/7 Cav B troop, under LTC Bill Salter, OIF II I was an E5 and a M3A3 gunner and dismount team leader.
Can you prove any of this?
cmdrjones wrote: Being that there ARE no female snipers in the US army that would be an incredible standard to hold me to now wouldn't it?
YOU ARE THE ONE THAT CLAIMED YOU HAD OBSERVED FEMALE SNIPERS.

If you haven't observed female snipers, why did you lie and claim you had?
cmdrjones wrote: Aslo, when did direct observation NOT become a source of information.
Scientists do that very thing, right?
You need to prove you actually have directly observed something, you miserable dolt. I contend that you are full of shit and lying about all of your supposed qualifications. Considering that you just admitted to lying about observing female snipers, and haven't produced a shred of evidence despite the fact that I asked you to, I consider this a concession. You do realize that science is far more about direct observation, right? It is about measurable and replicable observation that can be materially proven. You need to prove the direct observations you claimed actually took place.
cmdrjones wrote: AS for the trash suit, it is a bit of 1st hand knowledge of the subject matter. If we were talking about say physics and you offered to describe in detail some parts of that giant collider in Europe, i'd probably take it that you at least knew SOMETHING about the subject, yes?
Or that I just Googled something about the giant collider and told you that. Seriously, how fucking stupid are you? You do realize that just spitting out technical jargon is not proof of anything, right?
cmdrjones wrote: You can feel free to dismiss anything you want. Have you ever asked anybody in your field for advice? Did you ever put any of it into practice?
Again, this is completely irrelevant to the point.

Since apparently you are too stupid to understand, I am going to make this very, very clear:

YOU claimed to have military experience.
YOU explicitly said that you have directly observed female snipers in action.
Vaguely waving your hands and saying that you've talked to people who are snipers is not a qualification. I've talked to plenty of people from various fields, and that does not make me an expert in any of those fields.

Now, right now, provide some evidence of your claims of military experience or admit you were lying. Otherwise I am going to the mods.
AS far as the range goes, that could have been misrecollection on his part, as you said it was over 50 years ago.
I can tell you where he's buried and you can go tell him all about what a bullshit artist he was and how cool you are, deal?
Again, you are so spectacularly stupid that you miss the point completely.

If you really were as much of an expert on combat and snipers in particularly as you have claimed in this thread, YOU WOULD HAVE IMMEDIATELY KNOWN THAT THE 1700 YARD FIGURE WAS BULLSHIT. I'm not even an expert, and I realized this immediately. How is it that you, who apparently has immeasurable experience in combat situations and direct observation of snipers, failed to realize this? Is it because ... you're a lying piece of shit? Please, provide some evidence of your military experience and prove that you aren't a lying piece of shit.
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