I definitely agree. I was just saying that remembering back when -135s did have parachutes onboard, they weren’t easily accessible. The flight crews never flew with them on, the chutes were on hangars in the middle of the aircraft. The crew would have to go to the middle of the plane to don them, then would have to go forward to the lower entry hatch where they would pull a lever that would drop this large metal windbreak that would bust the entry door open and act as both a wind blocker and a kind of a slide for the individual crewmembers to slide down into the airstream and hopefully away from the jet. This is all to say, that bailout was controlled bailout-only for the tanker toads, not in any way uncontrolled.
Original design for the parachutes onboard was for the toads to use after giving away their fuel following an alert nuke launch, if they had nowhere they could get to.