
Alrighty then, ya'll are being ridiculous
The truth is, you wouldn't give a flying puck if the soldier lifting a 1" armored plate off your head is gay, lesbian, bi or trans. Nothing else in the world matters more at that moment, the plate coming off your head.
I think you should all pretend you have plates on your heads right now, you sound like plates have dropped repeatedly on your heads because nothing else matters than getting the GD 1" plate off ya head. Dig?
Context, sir.
You obviously leaped in without reading the whole thread. If you had, then you would have read my previous posts, and understood the context to which the post you've referred applied.
I'm just rolling with where the discussion goes. And right now, I'm saying - in conjunction with my earlier posts - that if a person can meet the fitness levels required for combat, then that person should NOT be withheld from combat due to discrimination. Furthermore, if they do not meet the fitness requirement, then there must be some kind of support role they are still capable of performing.
I have further mentioned that if the person continually places I before We, then it will breed disunity within that person's unit.
I have mentioned that such a person already knows what they are signing onto when he or she enlists. Complaining about it during boot camp only makes the individual look bad. Get the ducks in a row before enlisting. Boot camp is not the time for pushing personal agendas, and neither is combat duty. These are matters best left for inactive duty, reserve duty, or after discharge.
So yes, the military should NOT discriminate, but at the same time, a person shouldn't be joining the military to pursue his or her own social/political agenda. I've already admitted that I believe some changes are made in the military. HOW some people pursue those changes, however, often backfires by creating backlash and resentment.
Edited by
actionlynx
on Fri 08/11/17 06:51 PM