Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Yes, they can. Congress should not be coming up with the specifications, but should very much be questioning why those specifications are in place.
Why? The Generals are just going to tell them, and then they'll say "ok" because they lack the knowledge to effectively call them into question. Why should anyone waste time with this exercise?
Especially why is it important all of a sudden when women just happen to be going to Ranger school.
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Which I have to do all the time. (well not with bridges because I'm not a structural engineer.) I get hired by Client_01 to design X. I develop the plans, and submit the plans and specs to the client, meet with them, and explain why I'm proposing every item on the list (or as many items as the client cares about). If they don't understand, it's my job to explain its importance. The client is not going to pay the bills if I sit there and respond, "it's technical, you wouldn't understand". Furthermore, very many in Congress have a solid handle on military operations.
Very few in Congress have a solid handle on military operations; the number is rapidly dropping. Back when this WAS true, they didn't find it important to question things like specific training standards, so why should they now?
This is not like you dealing with a client. Ranger school has been there a long time. Whenever it was first established it was put into the defense budget, as required, and it could have been debated then. It could be debated in any succeeding defense budget. It never is; I have never heard of Congress callign the need for Ranger or other special operations training into question. There is no sudden need to have hearings specifically on the standards in question just because women are attending. Even if Congress
can do this it is still
terrible public policy for them to do so.
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Congress is well within its rights to ask WHY women can't be in the ranger program.
Women obviously can be in the Ranger program, or we wouldn't be having this discussion. That would have been a legitimate issue, but it's already resolved.
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They should not set quotas or treat it like a social program - nobody's suggesting that, stop with the strawman.
Stop using "strawman" as an excuse to hide your backpedaling. That's exactly the effect that having hearings on Ranger training standards just when the first class of women all failed would have. That's the entire reason we're having this conversation, so stop trying to coyly pretend it's about Congressional oversight. Look at the **** thread title again if you forgot.
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But they should not just tolerate a general saying, "it's technical, you wouldn't understand".
They shouldn't be asking questions about the particulars of training requirements, period. They should especially not do so when it's an obvious fig leaf for "we want women to pass for political reasons".
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The general question of "will women in the military help, hurt, or not affect military readiness" is a question Congress should be asking at a time when woman are showing an interest. It's a question that the military should be able to respond to.
The question of having women in the military is not the matter at hand. Women are already pervasive in the military and no one is suggesting changing that.
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No, that falls flat. You can't just apply standards equally, you must show that the standards are necessary.
No, actually you don't. That might be a legitimate question if Ranger school were not providing an adequate number of graduates
overall based on its cost, but no one has suggested that. Ranger units are not complaining of inadequate graduates, nor are other units that make heavy use of Ranger graduates.
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If there's a particular standard that's hard/impossible for a group to meet, then that standard SHOULD be questioned.
No it shouldn't. This makes it a social program - something you already specifically denied anyone wanted it to be.
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If necessary, fine. If not, change it. For example - if one of the standards is to have to hit a toilet from 5+ feet away, there's no value in that, but it excludes women.
There is no indication that such transparently irrelevant standards are in place, and their theoretical possibility is not a reason to hold hearings on relevant ones. If such a standard existed, the fact that it's completely irrelevant as a criteria for Rangers is the issue, not the fact that it excludes women. Even if there were no women at Ranger school it would still be stupid.
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The military is going through this right now with beards. Sikhs are required by their religion to grow beards. The military does not allow this. So, this one standard is excluding an entire group. The military has been questioned, and the reason given is gas mask effectiveness (relating directly to combat readiness). While this is in dispute, if it holds up that should be the end of it. If it is shown that gas masks work fine over beards, then the standard should go (I think there are other reasons as well, but you get my point).
The problem with this argument is that it's already known that gas masks and beards don't work together. That's why the standard exists. You may note that at one time, members of the military often had very impressive beards. Then chemical weapons appeared, along with gas masks. That's also about the time the military mandated shaving. Imagine that. The question was asked and answered, and there is no need for anyone to "determine" anything.
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No amount of posting exasperated icons is going to help you save face. The part you skipped over - that the main reasons for failing Ranger school are inability to perform tactical tasks to standards under pressure - aren't ones easily related to differences between men and women. You latched onto this idea that maybe it's too much of a physical strength requirement and now don't want to let the idea go.