Women as Infantry Grunts. Why?

I am not sure why any woman would want to go to war with a company of infantry grunts. Yet, if we are to believe Joe Biden and several woke generals who are determined to use the U.S. military as a vehicle for social engineering, that is exactly what most of them are clamoring for.

I’m not buying it.

I don’t believe most women want to be crammed together like so many canned sardines into an armored personnel carrier or an amphibious assault vehicle with 15 to 25 hot, sweaty, and stinking infantry grunts as they move into harm’s way.

I don’t believe most women want to strap on a 70-pound pack, a 9-pound rifle, and several hundred rounds of ammo to slog through some jungle or across a scorching hot desert so she can be “one of the boys.”

First of all, in my opinion, she won’t be able to do it.

The first three women who attempted the Marine Infantry Officer Course in 2014 on an experimental basis were dropped after being unable to keep up with the hikes, Marine Corps Times previously reported, which involve carrying heavy equipment over long distances

U.S. Marines crammed into an AAV

Since then, a total of 12 women have completed the grueling 84-day course out of 39 female Marines who have attempted it, according to a Marine Corps spokesman.

To be fair, a few dozen men have also washed out of the program since 2014.

That isn’t surprising when you look at a recent Department of Defense report that shows 80 percent of all American males are not fit for military service–and of the 20% who are, only about 15% will make it through basic training.

When I was in the Army, I went through basic and advanced survival-counter-intelligence training, and even though back then I was in great shape, I was ready to go AWOL after all the abuse we got from merciless drill instructors.

Granted, there are more wimps and weenies around today than there were back in the 1960s. Look at the male role models today–especially on so-called comedy series such as the now departed show “Modern Family.” Two of the men in that show were gay, and of the other two, one was a raging weenie, and one was a 60-something man in a perpetual mid-life crisis with a trophy wife 35 years younger than him.

What kind of role models are they? When I was growing up, we had John Wayne, Clint Eastwood, Lee Marvin, Gary Cooper, Marlin Brando, and Charles Bronson. Today, those men are considered examples of “toxic masculinity”–brutes who have no “feminine side.”

Too many of the role models for boys today are weenies and wimps–and that’s perfectly okay with the woke mob.

A sad commentary on our society. But as long as boys are discouraged from being boys by schools that are more interested in social engineering than education by forcing little boys to behave like little girls, we will see fewer and fewer men capable of military service.

As long as schools insist on wiping out any semblance of competition by awarding each participant in every athletic event a trophy, even if they come in dead last, you are going to extinguish even the smallest competitive fires that may still be burning inside the next generation.

Schools today have “no tolerance” rules against any of the playful roughhousing boys used to engage in. Boys today are punished for defending themselves during after-school or playground scuffles that have always occurred between bullies and their victims. Girls, for the most part, are too intelligent to engage in such activities–at least they once were.

Maybe that is why the military brass is now so eager to bring women into the military. They need women who are more “manly” than the pathetic male specimens they are getting.

When I joined the Army in the 1960s, basic training was tough, and to say that drill sergeants laid their hands on you is putting it mildly.

Recruits who couldn’t do 30 push-ups were kicked in the butt until they did. You couldn’t get into the mess hall for meals unless you did at least five snappy pull-ups–not chin-ups–on the iron bar outside the door.

I recall a couple of recruits who couldn’t lift their 60-pound duffle bags filled with their army uniforms, fatigues, boots, hats, etc. As we walked down the battalion street inside Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., headed toward our assigned barracks, the two recruits lagged behind, dragging their duffle bags along the ground.

“Pick up that duffle bag, solder!” a sergeant screamed at one of the terrified recruits.

“I can’t, sergeant,” the recruit responded. He was probably no more than 5′ 5″ tall and probably weighed just a little more than the duffle bag he was trying so desperately to carry.

“By God, you can and you will, you maggot, or you will sleep outside tonight!”

With that, the sergeant lifted the duffle bag and threw it at the recruit, knocking him to the ground.

“Now get up and get that bag on your shoulder and move out smartly!”

The recruit was so terrified of the sergeant and the adrenalin was pumping so fast that he actually got the bag onto his shoulder and managed to somehow shuffle and stumble his way to the E-3-2 Company compound and into formation.

Basic training was one epithet-laced berating after another. And when it wasn’t verbal, it was often physical. Punching, pushing, kicking, slapping.

We accepted it as part of our initiation into the U.S. Army. In fact, we came to expect it because we were convinced it was part of the toughening-up process. Surviving it meant that we were becoming good soldiers.

As I understand it, that kind of abuse has been banned in the modern army. I was told by someone who went through basic just a few years ago that recruits who feel they are being mistreated or yelled at too much can ask the drill sergeant for a “time out.”

Are you kidding me? Is this our new woke military? God help us.

I can’t imagine any woman going through my basic training course with the hard-ass sergeants I had.

Most of them were WW II, Korean War, and Vietnam vets who had seen their share of combat. When we finally saw them in their dress greens during our graduation ceremonies, we noticed that almost all had won purple hearts and medals for valor in multiple theaters of war.

“This man’s Army ain’t for pansies, panty-waists, and wimps,” I recall First Sergeant Harrington yelling at us during our first day of basic training. “You will leave here ready to kill the enemy, or by God, you won’t leave here at all. We are here to kick your asses, and by God, I will put this size 12 boot all the way up to your ass hole until it comes out your f…k’n mouths if I have to. Do I make myself clear?”

“Yes, sergeant,” we yelled back in unison.

“Good, and now if there are any little girls in the ranks, I want you to fall out on the double,” he said.

No one stepped forward.

“Good, that means every swinging d..k here is going to be a soldier or die try’n.”

I wonder what kind of welcoming speech First Sergeants will be making to recruits in the new woke coed infantry?

Somehow I don’t think it will be the same–and neither will the Army.

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About Ronald E. Yates

Ronald E. Yates is an award-winning author of historical fiction and action/adventure novels, including the popular and highly-acclaimed Finding Billy Battles trilogy. Read More About Ron Here

2 thoughts on “Women as Infantry Grunts. Why?”

  1. Biden’s military “leaders” will simply lower the standards to put women through. It is the least a government who thinks men competing in women’s sports is a great idea could be expected to do!

    Reply

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