Because gender equality is more important than winning wars. And why
not? Seriously. It's not as if the US Armed Forces have been defending the
nation or its borders for the last 60 years anyhow.
The Marine Corps has made a major change to its Infantry Officer Course.
The first big challenge for many was a test of physical fitness. If you passed,
you moved on. If you didn’t, you washed out. The test was especially difficult
for women who had to meet the same standard as the men. Not anymore.
The Infantry Officer Course now uses the physical fitness test as an exercise, and not a pass/fail requirement.
Officials with Marine Corps Training and Education Command told Military.com “that Marine Corps Commandant Gen. Robert Neller had made a decision in November to transform the test from a high-stakes hurdle to an assessment from which students can drop without risking their place in the course.”
“[Neller] approved modifications to the IOC [program of instruction] to better tie student evaluation and graduation requirements to published infantry training and readiness manual, military occupational specialty specific performance standards, and operating force requirements,” TECOM officials said in a statement.
The Infantry Officer Course now uses the physical fitness test as an exercise, and not a pass/fail requirement.
Officials with Marine Corps Training and Education Command told Military.com “that Marine Corps Commandant Gen. Robert Neller had made a decision in November to transform the test from a high-stakes hurdle to an assessment from which students can drop without risking their place in the course.”
“[Neller] approved modifications to the IOC [program of instruction] to better tie student evaluation and graduation requirements to published infantry training and readiness manual, military occupational specialty specific performance standards, and operating force requirements,” TECOM officials said in a statement.
As the student evaluation and graduation requirements gravitate towards
female-friendly subjective homework and classroom attendance standards rather
than objective physical standards, we can expect women to increasingly not only
complete the Infantry Officer Course, but excel in it. Which, over time, will
lead to the consequences explained by Martin Van Creveld and quoted in SJWs
Always Double Down:
As Martin van Creveld, the Israeli military historian has noted, the more women enter any professional field, the more men leave it. And as the men depart, so to do the prestige and the economic rewards provided by the field. This creates a vicious cycle that both expels existing men from the field while repelling new men from entering it.
If the universities can be considered a reliable model, we're about three decades away from a majority female Marine Corps. No wonder China is content to patiently wait for its opportunity. This marks the second step in the end of the USMC's historical prestige. Even current female Marine officers understand this.
As Martin van Creveld, the Israeli military historian has noted, the more women enter any professional field, the more men leave it. And as the men depart, so to do the prestige and the economic rewards provided by the field. This creates a vicious cycle that both expels existing men from the field while repelling new men from entering it.
If the universities can be considered a reliable model, we're about three decades away from a majority female Marine Corps. No wonder China is content to patiently wait for its opportunity. This marks the second step in the end of the USMC's historical prestige. Even current female Marine officers understand this.
“Changing this rite of passage will be doing female Marines no favors in
trying to be infantry officers,” Marine 2nd Lt. Emma Stokien, a Marine Corps
intelligence officer, wrote. “Female Marines often have to work much harder
than their peers to earn the same respect, and entering the infantry under the
dark cloud of even perceived lowered standards will make this a practically
impossible challenge and potentially cause real harm to unit cohesion and the
faith between leader and led.”
Permitting women to join the Marine Corps
was the first mistake. Unqualified female officers are the second one. But the
empire is in decline, and so these events are not even remotely surprising.
There will be more unnecessary mistakes in the future and they will be more and
more disastrous, until the empire "unexpectedly" crumbles for
"no reason at all."