I understand that you and others don't agree with it - that's fine. Lets stand that perspective on its head. Would the Navy reap any advantages by not using arrests in its selection process? Would the public ultimately be better served? We've heard some anecdotal stories of people getting screwed one way or another for arrests that didn't result in convictions. I contend that those are statistical outliers. I don't have data in front of me to demonstrate this, but I'll be someone at BUPERS does, which is exactly why this is the policy. From a risk management perspective, eliminating applicants with an elevated risk of future trouble saves the Navy time and money. Neither the Navy nor the American people are served by potentially spending time and money on applicants who are statistically more likely to cause trouble. Definitely not fair, but why do we expect fairness to be a standard of selection in this process. Is the ASTB a perfect predictor for performance as an aviator? Of course not. There are, no doubt, plenty of guys who would score poorly and go on to excel as aviators. It's a method to cull the herd and put forward those applicants most likely to excel.
I'm sure we could go around and around on this issue. You can understand the issue and you can certainly think it's unfair, but you really can't argue that it's not in the Navy's best interests. So, if we agree on that, why are we surprised, shocked and outraged by something that is clearly the logical, rational choice for the American people?
God bless America.
Brett