Colphax wrote:
The second article is from 2007. IIRC, from back then I read an article or two comparing the chaplain services of the US Navy and the US Air Force, with the Navy being far more tolerant of other religious views in the ranks. The Air Force, and especially the Air Force Academy, has changed some of those policies since then, as I recall a follow-up article mentioning.
Now that you mention it, I seem to remember something like that too. I don't think it was so much a matter of the Navy being "far more tolerant" though, simply having a greater variety of Chaplains. In any case, what goes on at the Air Force Academy isn't generalizable to the rest of the military or even the rest of the Air Force. Service academies are very much their own little world. In some cases, they even have specific exceptions in the regulations; for example weapons issued to cadets at West Point are not subject to the normal arms room procedures the rest of the Army is.
Quote:
As to the Bible references on the scopes: considering the fact that mere rumors of desecration of a Koran leads to whackjobs saying that it's another Western Crusade against Islam, it is a bit of a PR blunder to have Christian biblical references on military equipment. But I'll bet they inscribe this stuff on all their products. this can be rectified with one phone call from a military procurement officer saying: "uh, yeah, please don't include those inscriptions in any future product you make for us. Thanks!"
It is indeed a PR blunder.. but really, anyone who doesn't already think we're in a "crusade" against Islam isn't going to decide we are based on this. No matter what we do, this will be a "religious war" to our enemies simply because we're (mostly) not muslims. As PR blunders go it's pretty trivial; it mainly serves as fodder for people who think the military is being "taken over" by evangelicals. I'd prefer the company had not done this, but it's really almost more of a "for the lulz" thing than anything else.