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‘Gays’ in the
Military: Bad Idea Then, Bad Idea Now By J. Matt Barber Although George Washington was a revolutionary, he wasn't a
radical. The idea
of open homosexuality within our armed services has long been
considered
preposterous.Washington wisely understood that to allow men among the
ranks who sodomized
other men would necessarily distract from the mission at hand, disrupt
unit
cohesion and damage the morale of non-sodomy-disposed soldiers forced
to sleep
and bathe alongside those so inclined. It's understandably disquieting
to
wonder whether your foxhole buddy "has your back" or wants to rub it.
In general
court-martial orders dated March 14, 1778, Washington, through his
designs,
addressed the disposition of a homosexual soldier "tried for attempting
to
commit sodomy": "[We] do sentence him
to be dismiss'd [from] the
service with infamy. His Excellency the Commander in Chief approves the
sentence and with abhorrence and detestation of such infamous crimes
orders
Lieutt. Enslin to be drummed out of camp tomorrow morning by all the
drummers
and fifers in the Army never to return." Barack Obama is no George Washington. He and a like-minded
gaggle of
congressional liberals have pledged to repeal the federal law, Section 654,
Title 10,
which stipulates that homosexual practice is incompatible with military
service. Furthermore, they intend to do away with Bill Clinton's "Don't Ask,
Don't
Tell" administrative compromise. The president has asked Congress to pass and send to his desk
H.R. 1283,
which, for the first time in American history, would homosexualize the
military. To wit, he seeks to supplant military vitality with San
Francisco
vice. Whereas George Washington put a premium on combat readiness and
national
security, these indispensable safeguards play last fiddle to liberals'
obtuse
fixation with political correctness. In the deadly game of war it's dangerously irresponsible to
place extreme
social ideology above national security. In combat, even the slightest
disruption or distraction can spell the difference between victory and
defeat
– life and death. The left fails to understand this grave reality. The boots on the ground, however, do understand. In a March
31, 2009, letter addressed to President Obama and members of
Congress, over
1,100 of the military's highest ranking and most distinguished
commanders
warned that they were "greatly concerned" by movement toward military
homosexualization. They expressed fear that a DADT repeal would
"eventually break the All-Volunteer Force." It seems their fears are justified. A 2009 Military Times poll
determined
that nearly one in 10 of those currently serving would not re-enlist if
the
policy were repealed. In today's highly perilous global political
climate, such
a plummet in service could be devastating to national security. I'm speaking from personal experience. I served 12 years in
the Army National
Guard. During basic training a young man who later turned out to be
homosexual
was discharged after making unwanted advances toward other soldiers and
for
inappropriately touching several while they slept in the barracks. A lengthy investigation ensued. Troops were pulled away from
their regular
training to answer questions. It was a tremendous distraction for our
entire
platoon. This incident most definitely disrupted unit cohesion and
harmed troop
morale. But none of this matters to liberals. Obama is the
un-Washington. The left
– of which Obama sits on the fringe – loathe the armed services.
Rather than viewing the military as a noble and necessary institution
designed
as our last line of defense, they consider it a giant petri dish ripe
for radical
social experimentation. Move over Army National Guard; make way for the
smarmy
avant-garde. But it's not just the military that Obama seeks to "remake";
it's
the entire social construct. On June 1, 2009, he unilaterally and
arbitrarily
issued an official
Presidential Proclamation smugly declaring that all Americans
should
celebrate sexual deviancy. He dubbed June "Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and
Transgender Pride Month." Rather than regarding homosexual practice with "abhorrence"
and
"detestation" – as did George Washington and most everyone
until recent years – Obama has euphemistically vowed to "outlaw
discrimination" (read: criminalize traditional morality). Included
within
his proclamation – and among a host of equally radical social pledges
– was yet another promise to "[end] the existing 'Don't Ask, Don't
Tell' policy. …" Well, the federal courts have rejected the notion that DADT
constitutes
"discrimination." In recent weeks the U.S. Supreme Court was not
persuaded to hear an appeal from a lower court ruling which determined
that the
policy is "rationally related to the government's legitimate interest
in
military discipline and cohesion." In an age of rampant judicial activism, it's refreshing to
witness some
common-sense judicial restraint. This decision by the Supreme Court
should once
again remind everyone that, contrary to the propaganda fomented by the
organized homosexual lobby, Barack Obama and liberals in Congress,
homosexual
temptation and the destructive but changeable homosexual lifestyle must
not be
confused with neutral and immutable characteristics such as race or
gender for
purposes of assigning special government minority status. That is to say, it's properly illegal, for instance, to ban
African-Americans from serving in the armed forces. It is neither
illegal nor
discriminatory, however, to disallow any American who "loudly and
proudly" opts to practice what George Washington would have called
"the sin that dare not speak its name." Hands off the military, Mr. Obama; we can't afford the
"progress."
© 2009 Matt Barber |