Humor, Politics

Women Sailor Commit Suicide – Military Service Too Hard


“Anything a man can do, a woman can do, easily”, screamed the Feminazis.

“Women can multitask, compared to the linear thinking stupid males”, said the misandrist females.

What in tarnation are these female “warriors” (sic) going to do when a real war starts?

Spread their legs to stop slow down the enemy?

Just listen to this moronic female sailor complaining about military service on a ship, you know a bunk with clean sheets, three meals a day, shower, etc. and NO incoming missile.

nearly uninhabitable living conditions aboard the ship, including constant construction noise that made sleeping impossible and a lack of hot water and electricity.”

How much lack of hot water or noise or electricity are the guys in the trenches in the Ukraine getting you friggin idiot? How much sleep are the men getting between incoming artillery barrages?

It is hard to believe she said this crap; but there it is.

Jesus! Women Warriors!

God help us, because these weekend Valkyries sure won’t.

Here is Hannah the Fearsome Female Sailor

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As her one-year anniversary with the Navy approached last May, Hannah Crisostomo swallowed 196 pain relievers. Her organs shut down. Her brain swelled during multiple seizures, and she stopped breathing.

She was on life support for eight days, during which time doctors had warned her family that she may never regain normal brain functions. When Crisostomo woke up, she immediately wondered why she was still alive. Her thoughts grew more despairing during the next few weeks in the hospital and then in the Navy’s psychiatric ward.

“If they keep me in the Navy, and they put me back in the same situation, I’m going to kill myself,” she recalled thinking, “and I’m going to be successful the next time.”

That spring, Crisostomo, an aviation boatswain’s mate handler on the aircraft carrier USS George Washington, had been moved to night-shift repair duties. Amid disorganization on the ship during an extensive overhaul, Crisostomo said she was constantly berated for things out of her control.

At the time, she was dealing with some family issues. She also said bipolar disorder that went undiagnosed had played a role in her decision-making. But Crisostomo, now 20, said 95 percent of the reason she tried to kill herself was work-related.

The command pushes you to that point,” she said, adding that she had tried to get help but was belittled instead. And unlike a traditional corporate employee, she could not simply quit because she had signed a five-year contract.

“There is no putting in your two-week notice and getting out,” Crisostomo said.

Crisostomo and several other George Washington sailors said their struggles were directly related to a culture where seeking help is not met with the necessary resources, as well as nearly uninhabitable living conditions aboard the ship, including constant construction noise that made sleeping impossible and a lack of hot water and electricity.

Since Crisostomo’s attempt, at least five of her shipmates on the George Washington have died by suicide, including three within a span of a week this April, military officials said. The latest cluster of suicides is under investigation by the Navy and has drawn concern from the Pentagon and Rep. Elaine Luria, D-Va., who served in the Navy for two decades.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/uss-george-washington-sailors-detail-201114693.html