Posted on 10/04/2025 8:10:12 AM PDT by John Semmens
Physical fitness saves lives, DEI takes lives.
That site also asks for donations, as does Free Republic.
I don’t know how real any of those quotes are, but combat is stressful. (Duh!) Physical fitness supports endurance and mental acuity. Fat sedentary officers have no appreciation of the tasks they are undertaking or ordering others to undertake.
Support needs to be fit and strong also.
We had a guy in our unit (C 2/504 Abn Inf) that couldn’t physically keep up.
They transferred him to a non-combat unit in about a month.
This was in 1979.
Wrong! What a stupid comment!
"Why shouldn't folks of divergent abilities be participating in active combat or in the ranks of those giving the orders?"
They can. Nobody disagrees. They must rise to the standards established. If they can, fine.
These stupid remarks merely expose the level of stupidity of those who criticize Hegseth and Trump. The dangerous level of stupidity.
The military does many things that are not strictly necessary. They polish the brass, mop the floors, salute the officers.
This is done to maintain discipline and control It is a whole culture that comes in very handy in actual fighting.
I’m all for the goal of being physically fit, but I don’t want to lose the best ones over this. Patton seemed to be in good shape, but MacArthur could’ve lost some pounds.
Harris is an idiot. During my 22 years of service in a noncombat role we understood that there might come a time when everyone would need to pick up a gun and become a warrior...and we trained for that.
That 2nd photo appears to be: Sorting of captured German supplies?
MacAuthur is probably not the best example. I can see age scaling, but officers should set an example, not an exception.
Is that 70-30 or 80-20?
I was in a Pershing Missile firing battalion in Germany in the 70’s. It was not a push button war. We would emplace for about 10 hours and move. We had to erect tents, antennas, and camoflague netting. It was difficult manual work. We had three women in the commo platoon. I thought we would shoot them if war broke out, they were worse than worthless, they were a burden. Most likely, we would have left them in Kaserne with some k-rations, wished them good luck in the event of war.
Google lens says that the photograph is French civilians helping American soldiers at an ammo dump in Normandy after the D-Day landings. It was published in Life magazine shortly after the invasion.
Too unbelievable for satire, ergo it must be true (and should be news.)
Thanks, John, for another fine commentary, disguised as satire.
Combat planning and leadership have a level of stress all it’s own, and those that are physically fit can do it for much longer. Look at the numbers of WWII, Korea, and Vietnam SR officers who were returned to the states because of severe medical problems brought on by stress.
Stress kills, and physically fit leaders fare better under continuous stress. The same applies to the corporate world, that is why many executives have mandatory exercise and lifestyle programs.
If you want to be a couch potato, you have no business in the military.
Yes, it’s harder as you age to stay fit; it requires discipline and dedication. We have lost that and this administration is trying to get it back.
Yeah!
I believe he was also on the older side of US Flag officers.
Didn’t he retire at one time and then got the appointment to head the Philippine Commonwealth military?
Both Frank Merrill of Merrill’s Marauders fame and Ted Roosevelt Jr died of heart attacks while serving in combat.
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