Norwegian Lunatics Form All-Female “Special Forces” Unit

Zeiger
Daily Stormer
April 22, 2017

No one thought to warn the Norwegians that G.I. Jane was a Hollywood movie, not a documentary.

Men and women are completely equal and the same in every way. The only reason men are much stronger and have higher testosterone level is because of differences in education and artificial gender norms.

Everyone knows this.

I mean, if things weren’t this way, building an all-female special forces squad would be a really bad idea, wouldn’t it?

NBC News:

An explosion just a few feet away rocks the unmarked station wagon as it travels along a dirt road in the Norwegian woodland.

Immediately, two soldiers jump from their front seats and run for cover behind the carcass of an old, rusty tank. Firing their weapons at targets along the snow-covered hillside, they call for support from the rest of their unit.

This firefight is just a drill, but the soldiers taking part are battling to break down one of the final barriers to women serving in the armed forces. They are training to become part of Norway’s Jegertroppen or “Hunter Troops” — the world’s first all-female military special forces unit.

More than a year after the U.S. Department of Defense repealed a longtime ban on women serving in ground combat assignments, relatively few have been trained or assigned to these jobs in the U.S. military.

Wow, don’t these fagots watch anime? If they replaced their ground forces with schoolgirls, their effectiveness would skyrocket.

Norway has moved a lot faster to break down military gender barriers. Its parliament introduced legislation in the 1980s that opened up all military roles to women. Last year, Norway became the first NATO country to introduce female conscription.

TOP KEK!

Now that’s what I call an equality OVERDRIVE.

But the introduction of the all-female special forces unit in 2014 raised the profile of women in the Norwegian military the most.

The unit was started after Norway’s Armed Forces’ Special Command saw an increased need for female special operations soldiers — particularly in places like Afghanistan where male troops were forbidden from communicating with women. The exclusion of half the population was having a detrimental impact on intelligence gathering and building community relations.

Get women to interrogate Afghans? What could possibly go wrong.

I sure hope these women are looking forward to becoming the sex slaves to Taliban warlords. That’s the part they don’t show on those girl-power tv shows.

Well, I’m being unfair.

Maybe these girls are gonna be smooth operators, completing their dangerous missions in enemy territory without getting raped by goat-herders.

My money is on the goat-herders though.