What's it like training with women ?

Not in the military but...

>Corrections
>tons of fat THOTs that fuck inmates and rank
>were allowed to fail the easiest shooting qualification of all time
>get some OC on them, go home.

LEO training
>same as above
>plus...
>EEO points used openly
>women hired over men
>especially WYTE DEBBUL men
>females act like they can do X
>can't do X
>males officer gets hurt or has to clean up her mess

This is why i'm now a legal investigator/researcher for a comfy attorney's office.

>mismatched desert/woodland utilities

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Since integration has there been any real study of women who have been deployed in front line combat roles? or is everything we are up to still too small scale to get an accurate read on how theyve performed so far?

I will point out though, sometimes you do find a chick that can handle it. Like 1/10 who get hired. I had one that wrestled an inmate (covered in his own blood) with me. She was cool. Sadly she was a lesbian.

That's nothing new.

its unbalanced as fuck, fat chicks who can barely run max female PT test with she-hulks who are able to max male PT test.

Why hasn't there been much news of that?

I saw the ruling a while ago but nothing is being done to implement it.

Is it just the Army hushing it so recruitment numbers don't go down?

It's hard to even imagine how bad it would be just projecting my white collar experience with women onto the army.
Men can scream at each other until they have to be physically removed from the room and then pull together a few hours later during crunch. I've never seen a woman do that. Ever. And don't pretend they're so afraid of open conflict that I haven't seen them engage in screaming matches of their own.

>Since integration has there been any real study of women who have been deployed in front line combat roles?

Integration only happened in 2015. There has been virtually zero combat seen by regular grunts since then. The USMC hasn't even taken a combat fatality since 2014. The only guys seeing action are spec ops guys and those units are still exclusively male, at least for the time being. I don't know of any large scale studies about women but there have been a few that have told their individual stories about living on the frontlines. Look up Katie Petronio for instance. She lived at austere patrol bases for months and was inflicted with permanent disabilities(legs/hip problems and infertility) as a result of the intense physical workload and lack of sanitation and hygeine.

youtube.com/watch?v=255VzU0wxLg

I once got in a drunken fight with a buddy in my platoon at the barracks. I ended up with a broken nose and he lost one of his front teeth. 30 minutes later we were hugging and headbanging to Pantera while pounding more brews. 6 years later I was his best man at his wedding.

>I once got in a drunken fight with a buddy in my platoon at the barracks. I ended up with a broken nose and he lost one of his front teeth. 30 minutes later we were hugging and headbanging to Pantera while pounding more brews. 6 years later I was his best man at his wedding.

Does your command punish you for these things? I would imagine an injury requiring medical attention would be automatically brought to the attention of the unit's leadership.