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Homosexuals In Military Essay Research Paper Homosexuals

Homosexuals In Military Essay, Research Paper


Homosexuals have been excluded from our society since our country’s beginning,


giving them no equal protection underneath the large branch of the law. The


Emancipation Proclamation gave freedom to blacks from slavery in the 1800’s and


women were given the freedoms reserved for males in the early 1900’s with the


women’s suffrage movement. But everyone still knows the underlying feeling of


nation in dealing with minorities and women, one of contempt and disgust. Hate


crimes are still perpetrated to this day in this country, and most are


unpublicized and "swept underneath the rug." The general public is


just now dealing with the struggle of Homosexuals to gain rights in America,


although this persecution is subtle, quiet and rarely ever seen to the naked eye


or the general public. The big question today in Homosexuals rights struggles


are dealing with the right to be a part of our country’s Military Forces. At the


forefront of the struggle to gain access to the military has been Female’s who


have tried to gain access to "All Men" facilities and have been


pressured out by other cadets. This small group of women have fought hard, and


pressured the Government to change regulations dealing with the inclusion of all


people, whether female or male, and giving them all the same opportunities they


deserve. The Homosexual struggle with our Nation’s Armed Forces has been


acquiring damage and swift blows for over 60 years now, and now they too are


beginning to fight back. With the public knowledge of "initiation


rights" into many elite groups of the military, the general public is


beginning to realize how exclusive the military can be. One cadet said after


"hell week" in the Marines, "It was almost like joining a


fraternity, but the punishments were 1000 times worse than ever imagined, and


the Administration did not pretend to turn there back, they were instrumental in


the brutality." The intense pressure of "hell week" in the


Marines drove a few to wounding themselves, go AWOL, and a few even took there


own life. People who are not "meant to be" in the Military are usually


weeded out during these "initiations" and forced either to persevere


or be discharged dishonorably. The military in the United States has become an


elite society, a society where only few survive. In a survey taken in 1990, the


United States population on a whole is believed to consist of 13-15%


Homosexuals. This figure is believed to have a margin of error on the upward


swing due to the fact that most homosexuals are still "afraid" of


their sexuality and the social taboos it carries along with it. With so many


Homosexuals in the United States, how can the military prove its exclusion


policy against Homosexuals correct and moral? Through the "long standing


tradition and policy," says one Admiral of the U.S. Navy. But is it fair or


correct? That is the question posed on Capitol Hill even today, as politicians


battle through a virtual minefield of tradition and equal rights. Historically,


support for one’s military was a way to show one’s patriotism, if not a


pre-requisite for being patriotic at all. Society has given the military a great


deal of latitude in running its own affairs, principally due to society’s


acknowledgment that the military needs such space in order to run effectively.


The military, in turn, has adopted policies which, for the most part, have lead


to very successful military ventures, which served to continually renew


society’s faith in the military. Recently, however, that support has been


fading. The Vietnam War represented both a cause of diminishing support for the


military by society as well a problem. The Vietnam War occurred during a period


of large-scale civil disobedience, as well as a time where peace was more


popular than war. Since the effectiveness of the military depends a great deal


upon society’s support, when society’s support dropped out of the war effort,


the war effort in turn suffered. The ultimate defeat of the United States in the


Vietnam War effort only lead to less faith in the military’s ability. This set


the stage for society becoming more involved in how the military was run. The


ban on homosexuals serving in the military, was originally instituted in 1942.


Though some of the reasons that were used to justify it at the time have been


debunked since-that homosexual service members in sensitive positions could be


blackmailed, for instance ("Gays and the Military" 54)-the policy was


largely an extension of the military’s long-standing policy against homosexual


acts. At the time, the prevailing attitude was that homosexuality was a


medical/psychiatric condition, and thus the military sought to align itself with


this school of thought. Rather than just continuing to punish service members


for individual acts of sodomy, the military took what was thought to be a kinder


position-excluding those people who were inclined to commit such acts in the


first place, thus avoiding stiffer penalties (including prison sentences) for


actually committing them. As society and the military came to be more


enlightened about the nature of homosexuality, a redefinition of the policy


became necessary. In 1982, the policy was redefined to state that "a


homosexual (or a lesbian) in the armed forces seriously impairs the ability of


the military services to maintain

discipline, good order and morale.’"


Essentially, it was reasoned that homosexuality and military service were


incompatible, and thus homosexuals should be excluded from the military. Only in


1994 was this policy changed, and then only the exclusion of homosexuals-acts of


homosexuality or overt acknowledgment of one’s homosexuality are still forbidden


in the military. But we must ask ourselves, why was this ban upheld for so long?


The primary reason that the military upheld its ban against gay service members


was that it was necessary for the military to provide "cohesiveness."


Society bent to accommodate homosexuality. The military, however, cannot bend if


it is to effectively carry out its duties. The realities of military life


include working closely while on duty, but the true intimacies "are to be


traced to less bellicose surroundings-to the barracks, the orderly room, the


mess hall. If indeed the military can lay claim to any sense of `organic unity,’


it will be found in the intimacy of platoon and company life." The military


demands an extreme amount of cohesiveness, and this is very much reinforced in


barracks life. You must sleep with, eat with, and share facilities with your


fellow platoon members. Life in the barracks is extremely intimate. Men must


share rooms together, and showers are public also. Having homosexuals be part of


this structure violates this cohesiveness. Men and women are kept in separate


barracks much for the same reasons. However, the true purpose behind barring gay


service members is how the individuals who are part of the military feel about


them. Members of the military are more conservatively minded people, but,


moreover, they are overwhelmingly opposed to having homosexuals among their


ranks. To then force these individuals to serve with gays only undermines the


morale of the military. And when morale is undermined, the effectiveness of the


military drops as well. The leadership of the military has always been


persistent in its position-"Up and down the chain of command, you’ll find


the military leadership favors the ban.". And, as one navy lieutenant put


it: "The military is a life-and-death business, not an equal opportunity


employer." No one is doubting that gays have served in the military. Ever


since Baron Frederich von Steuben (a renowned Prussian military-mind and known


homosexual) served as a Major General in the Continental Army, there have been


homosexuals serving in the military. Even today there exists a Gay American


Legion post in San Francisco. However, the general consensus is that allowing


them in the service represents a rubber-stamping of their existence rather than


a concerted effort to discourage it. Though the homosexual lobby often cites the


fact that gays have always served in the military as a justification for lifting


the ban, this sort of reasoning is wrong. There are many other types of behavior


that the military has been unable to completely eradicate, such as discharge and


use of illegal substances. No one would ever deny that these things happen in


the military. But the point is that if they were made legal, there would be more


instances of them. To use the lack of perfect implementation as a pretext for


legalization is equally absurd in the civilian world: Do we legalize criminal


behavior on the grounds that "people have always done it"? Another


parallel that is frequently drawn with gays in the military is that of the


situation of women in the military. Though largely a male


institution-"Symbolically, the military represents masculinity more than


any institution other than professional sports?-women have been a part of the


military since World War II and the women’s support units have been abolished


since 1978.But, like that of race to homosexuality, the comparison is invalid.


Women are not permitted in combat units -an exclusion that for homosexuals would


be hard to implement, at best. They also have separate barracks and facilities,


which would be equally as unpractical to homosexuals. If the admission of


homosexuals into the military causes adverse effects on the morale of the


soldiers, then the debate should be re-opened there. The military’s function is


to protect democracy. The sacrifices associated with military service may be


very great-up to giving up one’s life. Excluding homosexuals from military


service seems petty, everyone should be allowed to defend their country.


Moreover, the politicizing of such issues undermines the military’s faith in the


civilian leadership that guides it. The military is quickly loosing its


prestige, its traditional conservative values, and that is a good thing for most


Americans. Reinstating the ban would be a gesture of utter and sheer


digustedness in our military. Having homosexuals in the military is a matter of


military effectiveness-not of the homosexuals’ ability to perform military


duties, but of the morale of the military as a whole. And, in the military, it


is always the good of the whole which must be considered before the good of the


individual. The ending of the Cold War and the re-definition of the military’s


mission does not mean that we should make the military less effective. If a


policy in regards to the military does not improve its effectiveness, then it


should not be implemented. But when the implementation means giving a chance to


few who would like to serve out great nation, than it should be considered


legal.

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