I would like to know where you get your evidence of women being better shooters physiologically, and being better fighter pilots and even more why you think they multitask better than men.
I remember years back reading the multitasking was a myth.
I would say were all fairly equal but of all the people I have taught to shoot, women tend to be less confident with higher calibres and struggled with the weight of the gun
Modern neuroscience. Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying women are somehow "equal" to men. They're not...they're different. Just like men can recruit nearly 100% of their motor units when exercising "strength", and women can "only" recruit roughly 80-85% of their motor units. In one view (sheer strength) they are weaker than men. But if you ask a man to pull 85% of his full capability...he can only still do that for maybe 7-8 reps before his muscles fatigue and he has to rest. A women can pull 85% of her max lift for (IIRC) something like 15 reps. Much of this phenomenon is accredited to female adaptation to child birth., and the evolutionary adaptation to successfully deal with labor contractions over long periods of time.
The comparisons between the sexes are extremely
contextual. I've been instructing people how to shoot for the last, oh, I don't know...20 years. Many of those years were an actual paying profession. That's where my evidence comes from, along with reading medical journals regarding physiological differences between the sexes at a neurological level. As well as seeing them, day in, and day out, on the range. With novice as well as accomplished shooters of both sexes.
Men are very good, in fact, overwhelmingly good, at physical combat. What they are not good at is multi-tasking
under stress. Men tend to lock onto a target/task and beat it into submission (evolution again). Women don't have that singular focus of mind, which in a primal sense is a disadvantage. But guess what? Many of the things we do today are not primal. We are not picking up a rock, and beating someone's skull in. We are using complicated tools. These tools require processing a lot of information in a short amount of time, from a (often times) variety of sources. In those cases, women often beat their male counterparts. It's not some woke bull****. It's physiology. I'm not here to justify or support the "I am woman, hear me roar" BS. Rather, I am just saying, that in certain circumstances, with certain tools, women actually perform better, on average, than their male counterparts. Don't get me wrong, there are retards in both genders, but to make some blanket general statement that women are somehow inferior to men, is just sheer arrogance. In the case of shooting, there are a lot of things going on, in the short amount of time a shooter has to take a shot. Women tend to excel in that environment. It isn't prolifically demonstrated because....duh, there are that many female shooters. But I have seen it. Time and time and time again.
As to the fighter pilot comment....<chuckle> you better look around. There are MANY accomplished female fighter pilots, and for the very reasons I've just explained. Some of those studies I read, were BECAUSE they showed performances that were (heretofore) seen as outliers. So, the neurologists got interested, and started testing things. Now, can a woman take as many high G's? Look at their physical composition. Women carry more muscle mass in the buttocks and legs (again, largely believed to be related to evolutionary adaptations to child birth). This means they care more blood in the lower body, so struggle more with G force pushing blood from the skulls, down into their lower extremities. But when it comes to processing multiple fast moving, incoming targets, selecting the appropriate responses, appropriate weapons for engagement, and coordinating with their fellow pilots, they tend to excel well beyond their male counterparts. Sorry, but that's just documented fact. Ever notice that most AWACS/AEW aircrew are mostly women? There's a reason that happens (though, God help their husbands; I'm sure they get used to crisp, automatic commands, and obedience, as they manage an airspace full of aircraft).
As I said, everything in based on context. This isn't about one gender being better than the other. It's about knowing how to put round pegs in round holes, and square pegs in square holes. Bringing gender into it is a fool's errand. If you can't understand that, I don't know what to tell you other than, we're just not going agree on much. And this is coming from a guy who spent most of his formative years in the US Marines; the world's biggest warrior culture in existence. Even there, we have come to understand where women perform well (and often times better than males) and where they don't. Gender doesn't matter. Mission accomplishment does. Round peg, round hole. Square peg, square hole. Whatever it takes to use the least amount of resources to crush the enemy, while limiting the amount of casualties/damage we take. Gender doesn't matter when it comes to making those decisions, so long as you understand when gender DOES matter. Or is at least a likely factor to consider, when weighing what is the best peg for that hole.
Q: "What's your gender?"
A: "Nobody cares. Work harder."