STATE
OF THE UNION
Did you watch? If not, you can now. Everyone
will see it through his own eyes. To mine, it was filled with
grace, good will, intelligence, quiet determination, and hope for the future.
WHAT
SHOULD BE DONE TO FIX OUR FINANCIAL SYSTEM
One of the areas the President addressed was the need to
reform our financial system. He might not agree with everything in this analysis from
John Hussman, but most of it is spot on.
THE REPUBLICAN RESPONSE
“All Americans – unless they are gay – should
have the opportunity to find and keep meaningful work, and the dignity that
comes with it,” intoned the newly elected Governor of Virginia, offering
the official Republican response.
Well, okay, he did not literally add “unless they are gay,” but
Republicans vote overwhelmingly against extending employment nondiscrimination laws
to cover LGBT Americans, which amounts to much the same thing; and John McCain
issued an immediate statement disagreeing with the President’s call for lifting
the ban on our “finding and keeping meaningful work, and the
dignity that comes with it,” in the military.
Speaking of which . . .
GENERAL
SHALIKASHVILI
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs when “don’t
ask/don’t tell” was enacted, he yesterday issued this statement:
Thank you for the opportunity to share my thoughts
about the Policy Concerning Homosexuality in the Armed Forces. When I was
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, my support of the current policy was
based on my belief that implementing a change in the rules would have been too
burdensome for our troops and commanders at the time.
The concern among many at that time, was that letting
people who were openly gay serve would lower morale, harm recruitment and
undermine unit cohesion. “Don’t ask, don’t
tell” was seen as a useful measure that allowed time to pass while our
culture continued to evolve. The question before us now is whether enough
time has gone by to give this policy serious reconsideration. I believe that it
has.
Recently, Army Secretary John McHugh said that
“The Army has a big history of taking on similar issues
[with]…predictions of doom and gloom that did not play out.”
His conclusion echoes substantial scholarly and official military research
which finds that allowing gays and lesbians to serve openly would not
jeopardize readiness.
Studies have shown that three-quarters of service
members say they are personally comfortable around gays and lesbians.
Two-thirds say they already know or suspect gay people in their units. This
raises important questions about the assertion that openly gay service would
impair the military. In fact, it shows that gays and lesbians in the
military have already been accepted by the average soldier.
Additionally, at least twenty-five foreign militaries
now let gays serve openly, including our closest ally, Britain. Although
we lead rather than follow these militaries, there is no evidence suggesting
that our troops cannot effectively carry out the same policy change as those
nations did.
In 2008, a bi-partisan panel of retired General and
Flag officers carefully reviewed this matter for a year and concluded that
repeal would not pose a risk to the military's high standards of morale,
discipline, cohesion, recruitment, or retention. Interestingly, an increasing
number of active-duty officers who have reviewed “don’t ask,
don’t tell” indicate that the policy, not the presence of gays, is
detrimental to the armed forces’ need for skilled personnel who are able
to serve without compromising their integrity and, by extension, that of the
armed forces as a whole.
As a nation built on the principal of equality, we
should recognize and welcome change that will build a stronger more cohesive
military. It is time to repeal “don’t ask, don’t
tell” and allow our military leaders to create policy that holds our
service members to a single standard of conduct and discipline.
☞ The gay thing was
only half a minute in a 71-minute speech, which was a reasonable ratio when you
consider the enormity of the other challenges we face.
Do try to find time to watch the speech if you haven’t already.