Gays in the Military? I honestly don't see the problem...

Will you help me?

I remember "Don't ask, don't tell". I've heard people complain about gays in the military, and people complain about the people who complain about gays in the military. I've heard people give excuses to why gays should not be allowed in the military, but honestly? I don't understand.

I am not in the military, so I don't know how that life is different from mine. I don't see why it would be a problem, but apparently it is.

So, what's the deal? Can anyone explain it to me? Does homosexuality bring down morale? Is the military full of homo-phobes?

I'm honestly looking for answers here. Arguments are encouraged. I want to see all sides of this issue.
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Reply #1 Top
Today it is simply a political hot potato. Unfortunately. In years past, the rationale was that if you were gay, and the enemy found out, they could use it to blackmail you (as if we all dont have enough of that even if we never saw the same gender person we liked). But that was the feeling.

Later, after the "gay" revolution, it turned to "did the guy in the fox hole need to watch out for you AND the enemy?". That one I cant speak to. As I have never been in the military.

But I have had gay friends, and do have a brother who is gay. I think once they understand you are not, and are not interested, there is no problem. But then I have never been the object of anyone's dreams.

In time, I dont think it will be a problem. At least for the mainstream gays. Flaming ones is another story - but then there are a lot of straights that are not welcome in the military either, so I dont see that as a real issue.
Reply #2 Top

The don't ask, don't tell policy is basically saying...Don't discuss your sex life at work.  It's unprofessional.  And we won't ask you about it.

Simple.

The only people complaining in my mind are the ones who feel the need to let everyone know what they like in bed.

Who cares?

Reply #3 Top

I wouldn't be against Gay people serving in just about any job I can think of... except the military.

It's simple, there is no difference between putting a gay man in a barracks with other men than there would be to put a heterosexual man in a barracks with a bunch of women.  Until women are willing to shower, change clothes and other activities where some privacy is afforded them, then why should we allow a man who is attracted to men do the same in our barracks?

To everyone who says, "I honestly don't see the problem" I ask, if you learned that your wife, daughter or sister would be ordered to shower with men, would you support them joining the military?  If the answer is no, then you do see the problem.

 

Reply #4 Top
Having been in situations where I've changed clothes with the help of male peers, slept in the same rooms... I didn't see the problem. We had a job to do. We weren't leering at each other. It was work, plain and simple.

I've also roomed with gay women. Same room and everything. We changed in front of each other, and ran around in nothing but our towels from the shower. (Get your heads out of the gutter) They never made me feel uncomfortable.

I would have a problem showering with anyone, though... so I leave that one out.

So, basically, it is, in part, operating under the assumption that gay men and women would be unable to control their urges? That they would "get off" on watching their mates shower and sleep?

I'm asking this because I really want to know. I want the facts, I want opinions.
Reply #5 Top
Technically its called "Don't ask, Don't tell, Don't harass" in the military. Adopted by the DOD in 1993.
Reply #6 Top
Here's a great link ...

WWW Link

Some of the info from it....

There is no constitutional right to serve in the armed forces.

The powers conferred by section 8 of article I of the Constitution of the United States, lies within the discretion of the Congress to establish qualifications for and conditions of service in the armed forces.

Military life is fundamentally different from civilian life in that—

(A) the extraordinary responsibilities of the armed forces, the unique conditions of military service, and the critical role of unit cohesion, require that the military community, while subject to civilian control, exist as a specialized society; and

(B) the military society is characterized by its own laws, rules, customs, and traditions, including numerous restrictions on personal behavior, that would not be acceptable in civilian society.
Reply #7 Top

No, I don't think gay people have any easier or harder time controlling their urges as straight people.  However, it isn't a question of whether they "make each other feel comfortable" or not.  I didn't ask if you would be ok with your daugher, son or husband being ordered to changing around or walking around in a towel in front of your friend, I'm talking about being ordered to shower, change and otherwise live with little privacy around just anyone.

Just as an example.  When I was in the Artillery the only shower we hoped to get while in the field was a "bucket shower" hung from the end of the barrel.  No privacy, just 9 guys, a bucket shower and nature.  Now, I'll ask again, would you have a problem with your daughter living like that... for weeks at a time.

People also seem to think that gay people are somehow supposed to be stronger than straight people.  I ask you, if you were the one woman in the above situation, how long would you be able to "be strong", keeping your interests to yourself for weeks at a time, so you wouldn't make the others in the section "uncomfortable".

If you were in the Artillery, would you ask the guys in your section to go weeks without a shower, so you wouldn't have to see them shower?  Would you mind if one of the guys took a peek while you took your shower?  Well, what is the difference between a guy taking a peek at you and a gay man taking a peek at a fellow soldier who has what he likes?

Reply #8 Top

Actually, Tova said it better.. Good topic btw!;~)

Reply #9 Top
My solution - Spartan regiments. Every man or woman in it is gay. No one has to worry about communal showering then, and relationships within the regiment will make them better fighters.

As I said on that other thread you can staff them with straight officers if you think the gays aren't capable of leading themselves (god only knows the blacks need white officers...) and, if necessary, keep them away from the straights who might be terrified of them.

But at least give them a chance to prove themselves as capable soldiers.
Reply #10 Top
My solution - Spartan regiments. Every man or woman in it is gay. No one has to worry about communal showering then, and relationships within the regiment will make them better fighters.
I applaud the idea actually but I think that current gay culture int he Us would actually tend to blow the second part of it out of the water. Even units with large percentage of single men and women serving together are crippled by relationships and fights.. not strengthened by them. the Spartans regarded the bodn between a man and his Shield as sacred and inviolate. Infidelity resulting in unti discipline problems would have been punished by expulsion from Spartan society or death in many cases. this isn't the set of rules we operate under.
Having been in situations where I've changed clothes with the help of male peers, slept in the same rooms... I didn't see the problem. We had a job to do. We weren't leering at each other. It was work, plain and simple.
This changes dramatically after 6 months in the desert or so... actually it tends to change in as little as 2-3 weeks when young men and women are under stress. Apples and oranges on this one honestly. It just doesn't compare. Young men + Young women + stress + mortal danger = a totally different sexual atmosphere then anything you have ever seen even if the mortal danger is removed.
Reply #11 Top
Oh I posted a longer response here.
Reply #12 Top
Cacto:
It has nothing to do with capabilities or not. I'm a capable instructor, but because of my medical condition I'm not allowed to serve anymore.

(god only knows the blacks need white officers...)


Quit trying to make me out to be a bigot simply because I disagree with you.

and, if necessary, keep them away from the straights who might be terrified of them.


Thanks for the condescending crap... (Pats Cacto on the head and says he's a good boy anyway). ;~D
Reply #13 Top
Young men + Young women + stress + mortal danger = a totally different sexual atmosphere then anything you have ever seen even if the mortal danger is removed.


What you get is what we had in Desert Storm...

An average of 20 females redeployed to home station every week due to pregnancy. ;~D

Reply #14 Top
Also tends to result in an unfortunate increase in sexual assaults as well. It sucks but it is true...
Reply #15 Top
Quit trying to make me out to be a bigot simply because I disagree with you.


Sorry, I couldn't resist, but it wasn't aimed at you per se, more the stereotype of the "We can't have fags in the army because they'll be a distraction!" argument. People have pushed the same line for blacks and women over the years, but in the end soldiers just learnt how to play nice.

I mean let's face it - we don't want psychopaths in the mainstream army. Considering the amount of police actions involved in modern warfare tolerance of difference is practically one of the most important attitudes a soldier can have.

Bigotry and ignorance of how to manipulate others (the two are closely linked) are horrible weaknesses in police officers and really cripple their effectiveness. Having gays in the military won't really save this, sure, but getting the military to deal with difference quickly and easily is an absolute necessity unless you plan on fighting genocidal wars.

Of course if gays really are disruptive they should be kicked out altogether. Strip all recruits and force them to watch half an hour of gay porn. If they get aroused during that time, refuse them entry. That's probably the easiest way of ensuring straights-only. Otherwise there'll always be the suspicion, and surely that's almost as bad for morale?

Even units with large percentage of single men and women serving together are crippled by relationships and fights.. not strengthened by them. the Spartans regarded the bodn between a man and his Shield as sacred and inviolate. Infidelity resulting in unti discipline problems would have been punished by expulsion from Spartan society or death in many cases. this isn't the set of rules we operate under.


You've got a point. The sexual slavery aspect of Sparta is certainly not what anyone wants. But there must be ways of controlling this without executions or exile. How does the army normally deal with mixed units?
Reply #16 Top
But there must be ways of controlling this without executions or exile. How does the army normally deal with mixed units?


They deal with it poorly. In fact most of the time it is policy that if you get married to another soldier in the unit one of you has to move and work somehere else on post. Domestic disputes are horrible for the workplace.

BF/GF stuff really gets out of hand even in units with a 70% male 30% female spilt 9which is high for many Army units.
Reply #17 Top
This changes dramatically after 6 months in the desert or so... actually it tends to change in as little as 2-3 weeks when young men and women are under stress. Apples and oranges on this one honestly. It just doesn't compare. Young men + Young women + stress + mortal danger = a totally different sexual atmosphere then anything you have ever seen even if the mortal danger is removed.


Oh, I know it doesn't. That's why I don't know why it's such a big deal. I, personally, will never understand because I couldn't handle the war situation. The closest I've come is a three-week hike through the desert (Arizona). Males and females did the shower in a bucket thing. We stripped to various levels and used sponges. We weren't feeling very sexual. I know the guys looked... I know the girls looked. I guess we just didn't even care. However, no one was pointing guns at us... we had a few scorpions, but that's not quite the same thing. Not by a long shot.

So... how does the military deal with men and women?

Would it work to have gay men living with the women? (this is, btw, more of a joke statement)
Reply #18 Top

So... how does the military deal with men and women?

 

They keep them seperate. It is a big logistics issue.

Reply #19 Top
They keep them seperate. It is a big logistics issue.


How often do they interact? What kind of problems did they have when women first came into the military?
Reply #20 Top
The WACs were officially disbanded in 1978, which means the Army has been trying to come to terms with "coed" units ever since... the success has been varied. In terms of men and women just doing their jobs, in most cases it has worked fine. In administrative and other support units, it works about as well as it does in the business world. The more the unit deploys and goes to the field though, the more problems there are.

I'll use your time in the desert as an example. You said you know the guys looked and you knew the girls looked. You were in a hurry and besides, you only have to see these people for another couple of weeks. Now take that same situation, except when you are done with that three weeks you will be headed back to the barracks and your daily routine when you aren't in the field. In fact, you will spend a few years with them. Long enough to know who you trust and who you don't trust, and who gives you the creeps and who your "buddies" are.

Now head back to another three weeks in the field... or 18 months on a deployment. Now think about that bucket shower, you know someone is looking, and you find out it's one of the guys who gives you the creeps. Do you feel just as comfortable as you did before?

The thing is, comfort and modesty are important, but not as important as unit cohesion. Unit cohesion is kind of important in support units, but it is all important in combat arms. Unit cohesion is what makes one troop willing to put his life on the line for the guy in the next foxhole. Would you put your life on the line for the peeping Tom who gives you the creeps? (I know, unfair question). The thing is, if the guy in the next foxhole gives the infantryman the creeps, he isn't as likely to go out of his way for him... which costs lives, battles and entire wars.

Social experiments may sound good to politicians and activist groups, but only one thing should matter when it comes to the military... strength! You can have the largest, most well equipped military in the world, but if social experiements and "inclusion" takes precedence over unit cohesion, then there will be more fighting within ranks than against the enemy.
Reply #21 Top
I read a statistic on the DOD website (can't find it now) that said from 1993-2000 85% of the people kicked out on "don't ask don't tell"...went directly to their commander and "came out."

So they obviously wanted out.

I don't understand the whole...the world has to know...thing.

When I was military, and single.... I worked in a squadron as the only female with 500 guys. It was GREAT!  

But frankly imho, there are just some fields in the service women shouldn't even be in.....I wouldn't want to be in a fire and have some girl come in to carry me out, same goes for infantry...and a lot of other fields.

That's my two cents.
Reply #22 Top
As an addendum to this.. many of the linguists getting ut out for being gay are then immediately snapped up by civilian firms filling military positions with contractors. Same guy or gal ends up filling the position at a much higher cost.
Reply #23 Top
As an addendum to this.. many of the linguists getting ut out for being gay are then immediately snapped up by civilian firms filling military positions with contractors. Same guy or gal ends up filling the position at a much higher cost.


True, just like there are people who were put out because they got too fat, couldn't pass a PT test, popped hot on a piss test, or simply just ETS'd who turn around and get jobs with civilian firms to do the same job they did in uniform.
More power (and pay) to them. ;~D
Reply #24 Top
Cacto, while it is true that Para is (a) against gays in the military and (b) also happens to strongly disapprove of this perverted lifestyle for religious reasons, any connection between these two facts is completely coincidental and, yes, it really is all about the showers...

Back on planet Earth, there are gays in the military, there always have been - probably always will be. You know this, I know this, he knows this. End of story.
Reply #25 Top
(Get your heads out of the gutter)


But you put it there so easily!

That reminds me . . . SHE, look me up on myspace. Same name as my handle here.

I would look you up, but I don't know your handle.