There is a lot more to sniping than that. With an attitude like that I doubt you would last long in the training.Abedeus said:What are you, Fre... Okay, that's too easy.Doug said:Where's the "Surrender the instant the enemy attack" option?
I'm allergic and I have high blood pressure. Which is ironic, because I could easily be a sniper thanks to my aim.
Yeah, I know there's required a lot of patience, cold blood, sure finger... But even a normal infantry soldier requires that. Sniper is more needy, of course.Steelfists said:There is a lot more to sniping than that. With an attitude like that I doubt you would last long in the training.Abedeus said:What are you, Fre... Okay, that's too easy.Doug said:Where's the "Surrender the instant the enemy attack" option?
I'm allergic and I have high blood pressure. Which is ironic, because I could easily be a sniper thanks to my aim.
First thing first, my hat off for an intelligent and formed response. As for your arguments:ORLOFT said:I did read the OP but I'm afraid you may have missed my point. The whole purpose of my reply was to state three things:
1)If the cause were just, I wouldn't need to be drafted because I would volunteer. Given your other assumptions it wouldn't be a jump for you to assume volunteering would include training.
2)It is not cowardice to refuse to kill just because you are told to do so.
3)There is a moral objection, but it is not with killing. The moral objection is being forced to kill. If you are going to kill another person, or even be part of the killing in an indirect role, it is important that you willingly agree to do so.
You speak of fighting for freedom, but a draft takes those freedoms away, and you cannot preserve freedom by restricting or eliminating it. Also, you mention illegal orders and not following them. This is a mute point entirely as I was speaking not of the military itself, but of the government which controls it. Moreover, being that the OP does not speak as to the justice of the upcoming possible conflict, I don't think it is fair to assume one way or another as to whether or not it would be a just cause. This is why I replied to both possibilities.
You speak of people jumping to cynicism... we're talking about WAR. You don't have to jump to cynicism, you're standing it in. War is what happens when things have gone wrong, and even when the cause is just, the outcome is ugly. It is never a good thing, though I'll admit it is necessary from time to time.
I have flat feet as well, it won't bar you from service. More likely in the case of emergency response in defense of your nation, flat feet would be the least of the worries.shippuudenfreak said:I'd serve. I'd want to make sure I'm dying so that the people behind me live to see another day. I don't care. They probably wouldn't let me serve, as im flat footed. I'd just volunteer anyway.
Can you do complicated trigonometry equations in your mind in seconds? After several days lying prone in a muddy ditch awake and not being able to move?Abedeus said:Yeah, I know there's required a lot of patience, cold blood, sure finger... But even a normal infantry soldier requires that. Sniper is more needy, of course.Steelfists said:There is a lot more to sniping than that. With an attitude like that I doubt you would last long in the training.Abedeus said:What are you, Fre... Okay, that's too easy.Doug said:Where's the "Surrender the instant the enemy attack" option?
I'm allergic and I have high blood pressure. Which is ironic, because I could easily be a sniper thanks to my aim.
That's why I said "thanks to my aim". Other things, like having to control one's emotions (and not firing at a terrorist by an accident...), might he a bit harder.
About math - probably. I prefer trigonometry to logarythms. But honestly? All you have to do is take a correction based on wind (small) distance (a bit bigger) and fire. It's not like you will be often shooting from 1,5km.Steelfists said:Can you do complicated trigonometry equations in your mind in seconds? After several days lying prone in a muddy ditch awake and not being able to move?Abedeus said:Yeah, I know there's required a lot of patience, cold blood, sure finger... But even a normal infantry soldier requires that. Sniper is more needy, of course.Steelfists said:There is a lot more to sniping than that. With an attitude like that I doubt you would last long in the training.Abedeus said:What are you, Fre... Okay, that's too easy.Doug said:Where's the "Surrender the instant the enemy attack" option?
I'm allergic and I have high blood pressure. Which is ironic, because I could easily be a sniper thanks to my aim.
That's why I said "thanks to my aim". Other things, like having to control one's emotions (and not firing at a terrorist by an accident...), might he a bit harder.
Would you be able to not move a muscle for days at a time, except to piss and shit (in a bag, while still lying prone)?