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- From: jbuck@forney.berkeley.edu (Joe Buck)
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.misc
- Subject: Re: Not more on Gays in the Military
- Date: 28 Jan 1993 02:51:50 GMT
- Organization: U. C. Berkeley
- Lines: 34
- Message-ID: <1k7ho6$hjh@agate.berkeley.edu>
- References: <C1It7I.LEo@apollo.hp.com> <1k6elnINNlre@titan.ucs.umass.edu> <1993Jan27.184227.5196@linus.mitre.org>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: forney.berkeley.edu
-
- In article <1993Jan27.184227.5196@linus.mitre.org> m23364@mwunix (James Meritt) writes:
- >Amusing thought: It is not only not allowed, but right-down illegal to
- >beat someone to death. It does not appear to be the case that legislating
- >morality did a great deal to stop the death of a homosexual from shipmates
- >in Japan. If people are not deterred by a law that has penalties of life
- >imprisonment, why do you think that a "allowed" type law would work?
-
- In 1948, Truman issued an executive order desegregating the military.
- Around that time, incidents like you describe were common in certain parts
- of the country: blacks who were found in places they "didn't belong" were
- summarily lynched. Similar dire predictions were made about what would
- happen if white and black soldiers were forced to live side by side. But
- the military was given an order, and they carried it out. Those who
- resisted were punished severely or drummed out of the service.
-
- Now, the US military is probably the least bigoted institution in the US;
- in fact, a black man is in charge of the whole thing. And the most
- amazing irony to me is that this man is arguing against Clinton issuing a
- similar executive order based on many of the same arguments that were used
- against a similar order in 1948.
-
- BTW, did you know that it wasn't illegal for a homosexual to be in
- military service until 1982? (Reagan issued an order to this effect).
- Before that, some effort was made to screen gays out, but exceptions were
- made and there was no active effort to hunt down and kick out closeted
- gays from the service, and there was no absolute rule forbidding their
- presence.
-
-
-
-
-
- --
- Joe Buck jbuck@ohm.berkeley.edu
-