Been There, Done That

Sack/The Minneapolis Star Tribune/Cagle Cartoons

Until recently, women in America’s armed forces were not allowed to serve on the front lines in combat (see "Women on the Front Lines"). But the U.S. Department of Defense changed this policy in January 2016. The Pentagon (as the agency is often called, after its five-sided headquarters in Arlington, Virginia) ordered that all combat roles be open to women.

That’s old news, say women who served in Afghanistan and Iraq, conflicts that have lasted for more than a decade. There, the absence of traditional battle lines means that combat can occur anywhere—so women have long been fighting alongside men. This cartoon, featuring a male and a female soldier, comments on the situation. Study it, then answer the questions.

1. What is the setting of this cartoon? How can you tell?

2. What is ironic about the man’s comment about the Pentagon?

3. What’s the meaning of what the female soldier says?

4. What might be the female soldier’s idea of “progress”?

WRITING PROMPT

What might male soldiers think about combat positions being open to women? Do you think they consider it progress to be fighting beside women? Why or why not?

Stephanie McMillan

Harriet Tubman is slated to be the first African-American woman on U.S. currency, starting in 2020. But have people already moved on from using cash?

Clay Bennett/Washington Post Writers Group/Cartoonist Group

The range of North Korea’s nuclear missiles keeps increasing. At the same time, dictator Kim Jong Un may be placing himself in a bull’s-eye, this cartoon suggests.

Lesson Plan (1)
Text-to-Speech