cesare753 said:
I apologize, clearly my age would be used against me, I should have seen that earlier, I've accumulated this understanding of mine through several pieces of written work, info seeking on the internet and through word of mouth within my connections locally in the military.
Don’t hide behind the fact that you’re young and try to turn that into those who challenge you being the bad guys. Man up and present your “proof”.
cesare753 said:
Now, there seems to be a misunderstanding of the message I'm trying to convey, due to my failure to properly convey my message in general.
No, it’s your failure to present your message in supportable detail.
cesare753 said:
Standards have been lowered due to the introduction of women in the combat roles of the CF, now WHY, I ask, DND, in its infinite knowledge, would lower such standards of training, if, as it is a well believed and accepted fact in Canada that men and women are equal more or less in the same respects?
Then explain to me why, when I was platoon commander the mid-1980s, we were releasing soldiers that would not have made it into, let alone survived in, today’s army. That was long before we allowed women to serve in the combat arms. You may believe that certain “standards” have been lowered, but you have deluded yourself into missing the point that our
expectations for soldiers have dramatically increased. Why do you think there are so many threads on this site talking about responsibility, education, demands of individual training, fiscal responsibility, etc., etc., etc. We took in soldiers 25 years ago that wouldn’t get past the Recruiting Centre now. So please, don’t talk to me about your idea of the “old Army.”
cesare753 said:
I care not that women serve in combat roles, so long as they can carry out their responsibilities on the individual level, I do care however that standards were lowered, even though women were introduced into the combat arms under the impression that men and women were equal.
That’s funny, I’ve met women in the combat arms, officers and soldiers, are more than equal to their male peers. How many have you actually worked with? Maybe it’s you and your sense of masculine bravado that’s being challenged here, and you want to mask it with big talk about the Army degrading standards.
Why don’t you get over yourself and work on being a better soldier in today’s Army rather than day-dreaming about “good old days” that you have no real experience of.
cesare753 said:
Furthermore to correct those convinced I am in some way a "sexist", I feel that combat arms recruits are loosing out on valuable training since the lowering of standards as well as collectively in regiments were the level of training would decline as newer junior
NCO's eventually begin to fill out the rank and file as others retire or resign within the following years.
I don’t think you’re sexist, I think you are uninformed, and unwilling to take a realistic view of the Army today. You mask your own lack of real experience and understanding by parroting empty verbiage and refusing to accept the views of experienced soldiers.
I have seen current units doing more and more complex training than we imagined possible 25 years ago. I see units constructing ranges now I wouldn’t have dared proposing, and those who know me will attest that I did a fair bit of live fire range work in my time and was always willing to go to the limits of the safety manual as it was published then. I believe we are already seeing the benefits of NCOs trained under these more demanding and more challenging conditions. Your knowledge of the evolution of army training over the past few decades is very lacking.
cesare753 said:
Because of this drop in standards, recruits, regardless of sex will either benefit less from training, or such individuals that should not have proceeded past basic in the before time, now are seeping through.
Can you tell us exactly where the “drop in standards” has been affecting the Army. It may be just me, but I see an Army which is much more capable than it was 20 years ago, which places greater individual and collective demands on its soldiers and gets more from each one of them. What is your basis for actual comparison?
And I will state again, 25 years ago we had plenty of soldiers that would not have gotten through the recruiting system today, or survived in the demanding training environment we have today.
cesare753 said:
To make a long story short, Men and Women are believed to be equal in Canada, yet DND lowered standards anyways.
And today we take young infantry soldiers, of either gender, instruct them in complex ROE, train then to use a vehicle-mounted weapon system that reaches our 2+ kilometres, and we trust them to make the proper decisions on when and what to engage.
Yup, we’ve lowered our standards haven’t we?
Stop selling your own generation short, you do not know what you are talking about.