Last week Defense Secretary Gates and Joint Chiefs Chairman Admiral Michael Mullen indicated strong support for a repeal of DADT. Sec. Gates, to the consternation of some, said that the military would conduct an 11-month review that, as Rep. Barney Franks later stated, would dictate how (but not whether) DADT would be repealed.
In what may be the most recent salvo in the fight to repeal DADT, word comes today that Daniel Choi, the gay military rights advocate, is back doing regular drill duty (that one weekend a month thing).
In a telephone interview Lt. Choi told The Advocate,
he felt welcomed back by his fellow guardsmen in his infantry unit.
“Initially, I sensed a feeling of territorialism,” he said. “They were like, ‘That’s right, he came back to us!'”
Lt. Choi was scheduled to appear at the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force’s Creating Change Conference, but a telephone call from his commander had him rejoining his unit instead.
It is not clear what precipitated Lt. Choi’s return, but Spencer Ackerman believes
relaxed enforcement of the policy is already in place.
As many of you may be aware, this is personal for me. As someone who was discharged in the run-up to DADT for “admitting to being a homosexual”, I am intimately aware of the scars left behind when you are forced to hide very real and natural feelings. Lt. Choi has been much braver than I — most of my family still doesn’t know after all this time the exact nature of my discharge. I had medical reasons as well, so that’s the story they get.
Others, though, have come forward to tell their stories. Sen. Gillibrand decided, after a meeting with Lt. Choi, to highlight the difficulties LGBT servicemembers face under the current system. She announced on Rachel’s show last week a website www.dadtstoryproject.com where servicemembers can tell their stories in their own words. Sen. Gillibrand also has a petition seeking to repeal DADT.
As someone whose military career was cut short by the bigotry of Congress and the President in the early 1990s, and as someone who believes it is past time to throw DADT into the trash heap of history, I applaud Lt. Choi for coming forward and for going back to his unit. I applaud his commander and his unit for welcoming him back. I applaud the Obama Administration for getting us to a place where Lt. Choi is allowed to serve openly as a gay servicemember. And I applaud our military leaders for heeding the wishes of their Commander in Chief and working to see DADT repealed.
While I am pleased with this turn of events, this does not mean we can let our guard down. I believe that we need to keep the pressure on our elected officials to see that DADT is repealed. I would urge all of us to contact our Congressional delegations. A handy link is here: Rally Congress
It should also be noted that the Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on DADT originally scheduled for this Thursday has been canceled and will be rescheduled later. The apparent reason for the cancellation is inclement weather. Something about a couple of inches of snow.
I hope Lt. Choi is just the first of many LGBT welcomed to active duty.
A new Quinnipiac poll of 2,500 (is that a decent sample?) fouond that 66% call DADT “discrimination” and 57% think gays should be able to serve openly. Not surprisingly, Republicans oppose the repeal 53-40%. Independents back repeal 56-37. Those most opposed to repeal? Why, that would be evangelical Christians. The article goes on to say that military families are split 48% for and 47% oppose repeal. I am still looking to see if there is an ideological breakdown of these families.
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