TeaSea
SOH-CM-2014
I've been doing a bit of reading around the issue as I was unaware what the USAF's policies were on the subject of gay relationships. Isn't this whole "don't ask, don't tell" policy rather archaic and liable to cause more problems than it solves?
A persons sexuality has no more bearing on their ability to do a job than their skin colour.
Apologies for the thread creep, but I was genuinely shocked when I found out that the USAF have such an apparently ludicrous policy in place.
Not really that ludicrous...the military is unique in that it can and does discriminate on a daily basis on almost everything: Height, weight, intellect, strength, endurance, vision, moral turpitude, political disposition, eye-hand coordination, memory....the list goes on and on....the military is one organization where all those things you've been told don't matter -- Matter.
(Now, onto my "barracks lawyer" mode...)
In any case, "don't ask don't tell" was imposed by the Clinton Administration, not the services (People seem to have short memories). The previous policy was that homosexuality was simply not allowed. To engage in homosexual activity was a violation of the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ). Note, I said "engage"...you could actually be a confessed homosexual, but you could not "engage" in homosexual behavior. As a result homosexuality was only addressed to a minor degree and commanders were given a lot of options on how to deal with it. Oddly enough, there were fewer cases of homosexuals being put out of the service back in those "dark ages" than under the current policy.
"Don't Ask, Don't Tell" codified specific actions that commanders are now obliged to take regarding homosexual activity. Options previously available are now gone....the irony of course is that a change to that previous policy is exactly what various homosexual rights organizations pushed for. Sometimes you need to be careful what you ask for, because you'll get it.
Still, my own personal experience after 24 years of active service is that when a commander takes action to chapter (discharge) or discipline someone for homosexual activity, there is always something else involved. Gay rights activists like to point to "witch hunts". I never saw any.
You will note that in this example, as in every example I've run across....there's always a back story that somehow doesn't get told.