I was about to make a comment about moving fast & light (no K-pot or Pro vest in 1989) but I realize those guys are fighting the second Korean War, I was on the end of the Cold War.
ChickenHead
3 years ago
The American military policies in the 1960s of allowing people with disabilities to serve in the military was well-intentioned but counterproductive to rediness.
One of the largest effects was seen in the area of perceptive and cognitive dysfunction.
Traditionally, those who were diagnosed with such issues were allowed to continue serving but placed in non-critical career fields where their disabilities were expected to have little effect.
Unfortunately, there are no jobs in the military which are not, in some way, critical to the mission.
This picture highlights the failures of these abandoned, and quietly forgotten, social engineering projects of the liberal 60s civilian and military leadership.
In point #3, the dyslexic sign painter clearly spelled “reflective vest” wrong.
I was about to make a comment about moving fast & light (no K-pot or Pro vest in 1989) but I realize those guys are fighting the second Korean War, I was on the end of the Cold War.
The American military policies in the 1960s of allowing people with disabilities to serve in the military was well-intentioned but counterproductive to rediness.
One of the largest effects was seen in the area of perceptive and cognitive dysfunction.
Traditionally, those who were diagnosed with such issues were allowed to continue serving but placed in non-critical career fields where their disabilities were expected to have little effect.
Unfortunately, there are no jobs in the military which are not, in some way, critical to the mission.
This picture highlights the failures of these abandoned, and quietly forgotten, social engineering projects of the liberal 60s civilian and military leadership.
In point #3, the dyslexic sign painter clearly spelled “reflective vest” wrong.