Title: U.S. Army FORCES Cadets to Wear High Heels to Promote Feminist Campaign Source:
Prison Planet URL Source:http://www.prisonplanet.com/u-s-arm ... promote-feminist-campaign.html Published:Apr 21, 2015 Author:Paul Joseph Watson Post Date:2015-04-23 13:17:42 by Deckard Keywords:None Views:22296 Comments:95
Cadets at Temple University were threatened that their careers would be finished if they refused to participate in a feminist campaign to promote the completely debunked college rape culture myth by wearing red spray painted high heels.
Imagine what ISIS or the Russian military is thinking when they see these images. Third wave feminism has poisoned EVERYTHING, even the U.S. Military.
UPDATE: Infowars was contacted by a former US Army servicemember who told us that his unit Delta Company, 1st Battalion, 2nd Infantry Regiment, 172nd Infantry Brigade was also FORCED to participate in the Walk a Mile in Her Shoes event in 2011.
I was deployed in Afghanistan during this time, but my comrades in the rear told me this event was a MANDATORY, he writes. As a former medic, I know that the only way out of this was to lie about injuries or pull some form of guard duty at this time.
#14. To: Deckard, liberator, GarySpFc, sneakypete, BobCeleste, CZ82 (#0)
An unlawful order for a few reasons:
First such foot attire while performing military duties is harmful to a Soldier's feet, knees, and back.
Second a commander cannot force a Soldier to wear clothing attire of the opposite sex. A commander CAN have a policy describing what 'proper attire' includes on his/her military installation (like no halter tops, cutoff jeans etc.) in public places like the PX or post bank. But he/she cannot prescribe the attire of the opposite sex as mandatory 'uniform' for an official event. If the Soldier, Airmen, Marine or Sailor voluntarily does so, then there is no foul other than destroying over two centuries of military tradition and good order and discipline.
Lastly, and most important of the three reasons....This is just plain STUPID. Patton is rolling in his grave.
Now I can see most of the Navy doing this voluntarily:)
The event was not mandatory for Temple cadets.... no command pressure had been applied to convince members to participate.... 105 of the brigade's 120 members ignored it.
Regardless the ROTC commanders who even 'strongly suggested' such 'mandatory fun' will be in deep doo doo.
Especially violating every uniform policy ever known.
Making such modifications to the US Army uniform would at least require a regional ROTC commander (1 star General) approval. If that WAS approved by a regional commander, then he or she is in deep doo doo. Chief of Staff of the Army GEN (4 star) Ray Odierno would never put up with garbage like this.
#34. To: Gatlin, redleghunter, nolu chan and whoever was a Marine (#30)
What is this modern day military coming to?
This has been coming in the AF since the 70s when they changed the testing system (for E5-E7) and added the (PME) Professional Military Education test. When they did this they made the PME test count as much as your career field test (100 points for each). This allowed some people to be promoted even though they weren't that knowledgeable in their career field.
For the SRNCO promotion process they did away with the career field test, kept the PME test and would send you records before a review board. This board would look at your records and if you had the appropriate "brown noser" blocks filled (I.E. Base Commanders and Wing Commanders endorsement on your annual performance reports) you would get a higher board score than someone who knew/did their job better than you but didn't have the time to fill the "brown noser" blocks. So as you can see this lead to unqualified people being put in places of authority they shouldn't have been in. Reminds me of a lot of your typical run of the mill civilian government employee/politician.
Now I'm not that familiar with the Army, Navy and Marine promotion processes so not sure if they are the same or slightly different.