BTW, 100 lb packs are tough but not impossible. I always thought that keeping the pack on was easier that taking it off. Once it was on if felt pretty light. But then again, I didn't have a military pack. My civilian pack was designed to spread all the weight to shoulders and hips. I'm sure the Military Packs are designed to carry as much as can. Big difference. I also screwed up once. I forgot to tighten my left shoulder strap when I jumped from one boulder to another attempting to cross a white water creek. My buddy caught me as the pack almost pulled me into the water. Never forget to tighten the straps. NEVER!
I know I would not have passed Ranger School. I do not do well when I don't know what coming at me. Hello! That is where Rangers, Green Berets, SEALs, and Delta, etc. do superbly. Awesome guys.
That said, still doesn't mean an American Soldier should be disallowed from attending Ranger School. ; ) There I said it again.
To what extent should the average person be forced to financially involve themselves so foolishly?
The U.S. military is not a social experiment.
That bears no resemblance to what I said, and you know that.
BTW, 100 lb packs are tough but not impossible.
They're even tougher when you're getting two hours of sleep every 24, not all at once, and the food's marginal, you're doing that for days at a time, and there's people out there trying to kill you.