Quote:
Originally Posted by Stealhead
Warfare and military service are such complex things you can easily have two different people that had the same job but in different locations you will get two different experiences even on something as small as a submarine the story that the XO could tell you and story that the torpedo man can tell you would be different because of their role.A Corpman and a Marine involved in the same unit during Vietnam would also give you different views it may vary even between two infantrymen what happened what stood out to them and from a physiological stand point they all might deal with their experiences very differently. From this standpoint I'd say that the same would true for women.
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Which really brings us back the the whole point of the thread. Outside of some clearly established physical differences are there jobs, even involving closed quarters like on submarines, where women would not be able to do an adequate job? If not, why are physical differences and the notion that they will not be able to sexually control themselves and issue? If our fighting men and women are mature and controlled enough to make decisions pertaining to life and death situations and placing oneself in harms way, surely they can have the self control to not act like guppies when grouped together.