- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 530
All I'm going to contribute is this....
Men by nature have a higher peak physical strength than women. If it only took more time for women to "train-up" to men's peak levels then you'd see women capable of competing in athletics against men. We do certainly not see this in physical contact sports like hockey or football, nor even in non-contact sports like track & field, tennis, skiing or soccer.
Bottom Line: There are fundamental differences which have to do with how we've evolved. To pretend otherwise is disengenuous.
With that in mind, I'll leave it to those that serve to tell me how great an impact those physical differences have on field performance. My own thought is that as a gender-neutral individual (can be female or a smaller male), I'm indifferent about limitations of physical attributes IF they make up for that by bringing other attributes to the table such as superior marksmanship, or communication skills, or specialized knowledge such as combat first aid. In short, almost all shortcomings can be overcome if the individuals brings other skillsets to the mix, that otherwise you wouldn't have. My only caveat is that being of a specific gender should not be a politically-provided "get-out-of-jail free card" to avoid physical training to maximize what potential they do have, as such dereliction constitutes negligence due to the fact a physical failure in the field can easily result in either yourself or comrade dying. I candidly don't care about which gender you are, I believe there should be physical requirements applied to some trades that have to do with body fat, and relative strength to body weight. Any deficiency in these should require manditory physical training until requirements are met....or the non-gender specific individual should transfer to a trade where physical demands aren't as strenuous and as such would have lower benchmarks set.
Cheers, Matthew.
Men by nature have a higher peak physical strength than women. If it only took more time for women to "train-up" to men's peak levels then you'd see women capable of competing in athletics against men. We do certainly not see this in physical contact sports like hockey or football, nor even in non-contact sports like track & field, tennis, skiing or soccer.
Bottom Line: There are fundamental differences which have to do with how we've evolved. To pretend otherwise is disengenuous.
With that in mind, I'll leave it to those that serve to tell me how great an impact those physical differences have on field performance. My own thought is that as a gender-neutral individual (can be female or a smaller male), I'm indifferent about limitations of physical attributes IF they make up for that by bringing other attributes to the table such as superior marksmanship, or communication skills, or specialized knowledge such as combat first aid. In short, almost all shortcomings can be overcome if the individuals brings other skillsets to the mix, that otherwise you wouldn't have. My only caveat is that being of a specific gender should not be a politically-provided "get-out-of-jail free card" to avoid physical training to maximize what potential they do have, as such dereliction constitutes negligence due to the fact a physical failure in the field can easily result in either yourself or comrade dying. I candidly don't care about which gender you are, I believe there should be physical requirements applied to some trades that have to do with body fat, and relative strength to body weight. Any deficiency in these should require manditory physical training until requirements are met....or the non-gender specific individual should transfer to a trade where physical demands aren't as strenuous and as such would have lower benchmarks set.
Cheers, Matthew.