From what I saw (which was no doubt cherry picked as some of the most outrageous), what has been posted on the site is far from the worst examples of (mock?) misogyny on civilian sites. It was a private group, for gods sake.Sexist, racist and abusive: that's the tone of hundreds of offensive messages posted on an internet chat site used by current and former Australian soldiers. The site and its confronting contents, uncovered by 7.30, suggest a campaign by the top brass to clean up the culture of the Australian military has a long way to go.
Last year it was the Skype sex scandal; before that, sexual misconduct by sailors. Now, a private Facebook group of more than 1,000 former and serving Defence force members provides another disturbing insight into the soldier's world.
And you know, despite what is claimed to be "a world in which 'All women,' as the post says, 'are filthy, lying whores'.", that is a jock post, that at least in part, is self mocking. Internet memes need to be taken in context, rather than quoted as actual beliefs.
Another example of the media putting people's careers at risk for private interactions, taken out of context.