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When I was in the Navy we had a few women, so I didn't get to go into combat with them too often, well as much into combat as a carrier can get anyway. but we had a fire on the flight deck once with a Tomcat full of bombs and a F-18 next to it loaded, and the women on the flight deck were the first ones there manning a fire hose spraying the bombs so they would stay cool enough to not explode, while the crash and smash guys rescued the pilots.
I've been retired now for 10 years, but if they ever called me back and said I'd serve with women in my command, then so be it. I have nothing against women doing jobs, epically since a woman can do just about anything we men can do, plus in a aircraft it has been proven that a womans reflexes are way faster than a mans. |
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I Stand corrected as well,
look http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/s...3-3102,00.html |
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I highly doubt a computer will EVER replace a pilot. |
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Mmarsh made this good and valid point from history:
MMarsh......I'd like to point out to those that feel women should not be in combat that there is already precedent: Women served on the Front for the Red Army during The German Invasion of Russia, including the infantry. Some of the soviet union best snipers were women such as LYUDMILA PAVLICHENKO (309 confirmed kills) There was even a Guards Squadron called the "Night Witches" all women, the leading ace Anna Yegorova 38 confirmed kills. All in all I believe there were 80000 Russian women in combat roles during WWII. Women also served in various partisan group/resistence cells and there were many women in the Vietcong (against us unfortunatly). So I dont buy the 'women can't serve' arguement. history proves different. However I'm not convinced these kinds of women can be found in the Western Society of Generation X, Y, Z and so I side more with Charlie when he wrote: Quote:
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Well - I do have to say that from 15 to 20 years, the biggest (very big) deprivation for me, as a seaman and as a soldier, was that of the company of women. At sea hitting port was glorious, every 2 months or so, but a year in a tent in the desert was a different matter.
Please feel free to take this as a positive or a negative for this thread ![]() |
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