I am not an American, as you know, but reading this article these points sprung up:
Quotethat some people transitioning from one sex to another are under enormous physical stress and would not make good candidates for military service.
As has already been said, this is a presumption.
QuoteThe military actively discriminates (not in the sense that it treats unfairly, but that it discerns or selects) against most physical challenges.........
Not all discrimination is bad. .........
So is it a problem that the military has high physical performance standards and naturally selects against those who have physical challenges?
I can agree with each of these points.
But the article then goes on to discuss gays in the military.
This is an irrelevance.
I went to an all boys boarding school where, like most such institutions, homosexuality was one of the four taboos. (Along with bringing down the good name of the unit, stealing from your fellows and sneeking). The reason for these taboos in boarding schools as well as the military is that these destroy trust. In the case of homosexuality, we were sleeping together, showering together and mixing on a very personal basis. Just like in your family, if you think or fear someone may try to sexually assault you, it makes relationships difficult.
I was as gay then as I am now. There was no secret, neither for the other gay boys. But we never, not once, ever, expressed it. Simply because it would destroy our relationships.
But if I had been post op, my sexuality wouldn't have been an issue. I would have been a hetrosexual female. Any relationships I wouldn't have had would have been the same as any other hetrosexual female. The social and personal barriers between myself and the other boys would have been the same as any other hetrosexual females.
The only possibly problem I can think of for a post op transgender applicant, is the extent of the healing of their incisions. Like a hernia, for example, these wounds can burst. However, speaking as someone who did indeed have a hernia op, in my early 20s, I have since, lifted enormous amounts and suffered no such problems.
To suggest that a woman who is transgender is going to have any more problems than any other woman allpicant needs some clarification.
But using the gay argument, doesn't apply.