home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!optilink!walsh
- From: walsh@optilink.COM (Mark Walsh)
- Newsgroups: ba.politics
- Subject: Re: Gays, the military and "privacy"
- Message-ID: <13741@optilink.COM>
- Date: 29 Dec 92 19:38:05 GMT
- References: <1992Dec29.053709.18258@netcom.com>
- Organization: Optilink Corporation, Petaluma, CA
- Lines: 40
-
- From article <1992Dec29.053709.18258@netcom.com>, by phil@netcom.com (Phil Ronzone):
-
- > Well, since I don't think that the paperwork you fill out on joining the
- > military has a sexual preference section, or, if homosexuals were
- > accepted, that there wouyld be such a section, and since we are not about
- > to have homosexuals wear pinkl triangles, we still have the problem that
- > as most men would be uncomfortable with homosexuals, there would be strong
- > pressure to not come out. And that makes a blackmail situation.
-
- Phil, do you really believe that "most men would be unconfortable
- with homosexuals?" I mean, you don't live in Northern Idaho.
- Really, most of us are live and let live when it comes to the
- sexuality of others. There are gay people in just about every
- occupation (including yours and mine), and that doesn't seem to
- disrupt us too severely.
-
- While I agree with you on most issues, using your logic above
- would imply that many other groups of people would have trouble
- "coming out." Should we therefore ban these folks (e.g. members
- of unpopular religious or other groups) from military service?
- Your phobias (and mine as well) about various groups of people
- shouldn't be the basis of governmental discrimination.
-
- > Men, women, blacks do not have this problem because they effectively wear
- > their "pink triangles" on their very persons. As an interesting side, I
- > remember an early 1950's book I read (fact or fiction I don't remember)
- > about a man who was very very light skinned black passing as white in
- > OCS. Most of it was obvious and predictable, but the description of
- > the tension and emotional problems was rather good.
-
- I bet it was! Have you read "Black Like Me" about a guy
- who disguised himself as black and went back to the
- community that he had lived in years earlier? It was most
- enlightening (no pun intended). And then there was Eddie
- Murphy's take off called "White Like Me." Hilarious, but
- then I stray...
- --
- Mark Walsh (walsh@optilink) -- UUCP: uunet!optilink!walsh
- AOL: BigCookie -- Amateur Radio: KM6XU@WX3K -- USCF: L10861
- "What, me worry?" - William M. Gaines, 1922-1992
-