Maybe what this really indicates is that times and attitudes change and we need to come up with a more flexible IR (or posting) system that isn't designed for a 1 year separation but can accommodate different situations.
My wife doesn't have a job, she has a career, do people seriously think that she should give up her career because of a posting? She certainly doesn't think she should have to do that, and she worked a lot harder than I did to get to where she is. We agree that life in the military involves sacrifices, but those sacrifices are things like multiple operational deployments, exercises, long courses - being forced into poverty for a posting shouldn't be on the list. I know people who spouses are teachers, professors, nurses, doctors - they don't have a lot of flexibility to pack up and leave their careers - are they supposed to find a job at Tim Horton's or something?
I am ok with the cuts as long as the housing allowance is still there, I fully intend to apply for IR for my next posting because my family will not move right now, I'm not saying never, but just not right now.
This is 2012 not 1972. If the CF wants to hold on to valuable experienced and highly qualified people, and attract the type of people that we need for the future then its time to wake up and modernize some of the Victorian era policies and mentalities that are floating around out there.