Crickets.
It is axiomatic that the White House, and not
just this one, makes controversial announcements when people are
otherwise distracted. Usually, this means late Friday afternoons when
there isn’t much time for the media to make trouble. This particular
announcement came on a Thursday, the day after two vicious killers
opened fire on a holiday party in San Bernardino, Calif.
Arguments against this move are many, some of which I touched upon in a previous column that focused on women’s unequal opportunity to survive because of various physical differences. This time, I submit another crucially important but politically incorrect proposition: Men’s lives will also be put at greater risk if women are in combat.
The reasoning should be obvious. Plainly put, men tend to like women quite a lot and either will be tempted to express their attraction, and/or will want to protect their female companions.
Scoff if you must, but blame Nature.
Any combat veteran will tell you that unit
cohesion is everything in battle. Common sense tells us that putting
young men and women in the prime of their sexual lives together in the
field, where the possibility of death is potentially imminent, is a
potential — and unnecessary — gamble on unit cohesion. There is, after
all, nothing like a funeral to remind the living of their mortal
imperative.
Sexual tension is a most
delightful distraction in civilian life. But in close quarters, where
men likely would vastly outnumber the few women who qualify for combat,
other human emotions — envy, jealousy and resentment — enter into a fray
that’s already complicated enough.
Read the rest here.
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