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niyad

(113,259 posts)
Thu Jun 23, 2016, 12:01 PM Jun 2016

Combating the Military Sexual Assault Crisis Should Come Before Equality Under the Draft

Combating the Military Sexual Assault Crisis Should Come Before Equality Under the Draft


On June 14, the Senate voted 85 to 13 to pass a defense authorization bill which would require women to register for Selective Service. But in a military landscape rife with sexual violence, this step toward women’s full equality under the law seems short-sighted and even irresponsible.




2016 marked the first year the U.S. military allowed women in combat roles. Back in February, we reported the introduction of a bill by Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.) and Ryan Zinke (R-Mont.) which sought women’s inclusion in the draft. The Senate has reviewed the bill, and seems to be of the opinion that if women are fit to fill combat positions, there’s no real reason to exclude them from Selective Service registration.
. . . .

It’s encouraging to read that Congress is focused on attaining women’s equality. (As eagerly as they acted to rectify the inequality of the Selective Service Act, one would think it’d be simple enough to enforce already-existent bills which prohibit sex-based wage discrimination and champion equal rights for women, right?) But in some ways, this legislation effectively erases that women in the military are working in the midst of a rape culture crisis—and thusly would put more women at risk.

Over 20% of active-duty female soldiers are sexually assaulted while serving, making these women more likely to be raped by a fellow soldier than shot by enemy fire. (The 20% statistic reflects cases which were reported, leaving the number of unreported occurrences to be anyone’s guess.) Though the dangers facing women in the military are clearly known, they have continued to take a backseat to issues deemed more pressing—including defense spending. A 2015 U.N. Council urged the U.S. military to work to “prevent sexual violence in the military and ensure effective prosecution of offenders and redress for victims.” Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York has tried for three years to get an amendment passed which would change the way military sexual assault cases are handled. Yet little has actually been done by Congress to address these ongoing issues.

Until action is taken to keep the women serving in our nation’s military free from sexual assault and rape, they will never be equal members of the armed forces. And although the draft’s inclusion of women appears to signal a changing attitude toward gender norms in the military, this legislation isn’t the most important step toward full-scale gender equality for women within it. The military sexual assault epidemic makes it evident that women are not treated the same as men even as they serve our country, and that epidemic makes Mandatory Selective Service registration for women patently reckless.

http://msmagazine.com/blog/2016/06/21/combating-the-military-sexual-assault-crisis-should-come-before-equality-under-the-draft/

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Combating the Military Sexual Assault Crisis Should Come Before Equality Under the Draft (Original Post) niyad Jun 2016 OP
Completely agree with this,end military rape culture before forcing women into it stuffmatters Jun 2016 #1
. . . niyad Jun 2016 #2
I'm sure someone would know better than I... Chan790 Jun 2016 #3
we will see if someone can answer your question. I have a feeling the woman-hating reichwing niyad Jun 2016 #4
. . . niyad Jun 2016 #5
absolutely! recommended! Bill USA Jun 2016 #6
+100 Night Watchman Jun 2016 #7
. . . niyad Jun 2016 #8

stuffmatters

(2,574 posts)
1. Completely agree with this,end military rape culture before forcing women into it
Thu Jun 23, 2016, 05:09 PM
Jun 2016

The reported cases of sexual assault are 20%. I suspect the real percentage is 50+ since reports have to be made to commanding officers and "handled" within the chain of command.


Kristin Gildebran's Bill was defeated, which tried to take the process out of the control of the culture (and often rapists) themselves.
Yet this passed with overwhelming margins?

 

Chan790

(20,176 posts)
3. I'm sure someone would know better than I...
Fri Jun 24, 2016, 07:36 AM
Jun 2016

but couldn't Hillary, once elected, as CiC, simply directly-order implementation of the change the Congress wouldn't pass in Gillibrand's bill? It wouldn't be permanent in some sense (any order can be countermanded by a subsequent one)...but it would never likely be reversed because the President that did so would look like they're pro-rape and anti-women.

She would be the highest commanding officer...it's not like any commissioned officer can refuse her a direct order like "All future rape-allegations will be turned over to OSI, CID, NCIS, CGIS or DCIS (depending on the branch of service and location of alleged crime scene) immediately (and not at the discretion of the commanding officer) for investigation and will be adjudicated, if found, in general courts-martial."

niyad

(113,259 posts)
4. we will see if someone can answer your question. I have a feeling the woman-hating reichwing
Fri Jun 24, 2016, 12:03 PM
Jun 2016

would scream and holler, at the very least.

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