The Inanity and Insanity of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell

Written by Jill Chapin. Posted in Opinion, Politics

Published on November 09, 2010 with 3 Comments

By Jill Chapin

November 9, 2010

General James Amos, the new commandant of the Marine Corps recently told reporters that he was concerned about a possible loss of unit cohesion and combat readiness if we don’t uphold Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. Really? How much unit cohesion and combat readiness was lost with the inclusion of blacks and women into our military?

What kind of leadership needs to worry about their troops disobeying them if they are given specific orders, no matter the sexual orientation of those fighting alongside them? Have our leaders lost the control of our fighting men and women more than we realize?

And what kind of convoluted logic implies a risk of having well qualified, loyal patriots fighting to protect each other from harm? General Amos’ explanation, which can only be described as homophobic, said that combat is an intimate experience, with young men laying out, sleeping alongside of one another. Apparently, the general believes that homosexuals are physically unable to keep their hands to themselves. Further, he fails to acknowledge that gays have been serving incognito in the military since forever, apparently without straights in the foxholes ever knowing of their existence.

In the past, banning gays in the military actually was necessary for national security, because they could be blackmailed with threat of exposure, thus forcing otherwise patriotic soldiers to turn on their own country in order to preserve the facade of their double lifestyle. Ironically, allowing gay men and women to serve openly would actually strengthen our military and keep us safer, because no one could be blackmailed if the status of one’s sexuality was openly acknowledged.

Having a volunteer army means we can only choose from those who wish to enlist. After a decade of war, the best and the brightest are not as numerous as they used to be. So we have had to lower our standards and accept high school dropouts and those with criminal records. It is puzzling how our government has no problem recruiting the substandard. But they are determined to exclude the competent, the bright, and the well educated with highly skilled qualifications, based solely on their sexual identity. This policy has forced out critically needed linguists in our fight against terror. Does this kind of logic make us safer? If someone were to foil an imminent terrorist attack because he or she was able to decipher a communication plot, would anyone care what plumbing parts this hero prefers?

Except for the production of adult films, sex on the job anywhere is not allowed during working hours. This policy is prudent and logical. The same should hold true for our armed services; heterosexuals should be forbidden to engage in sex while on duty, and so should gays. What they do on leave is none of our business as long as they aren’t passing on state secrets to protect themselves from blackmail because of our homophobic military.

Why hasn’t our top brass investigated the armed forces of twenty-five countries currently allowing gays to serve openly in their military, from Australia to Uruguay with most of the alphabet in between? I doubt they would find the unrelenting harassment and pressure to switch teams as they seem to envision.

There are countless numbers of straight guys who admit to being hit upon by gays, yet are comfortable enough with their own sexuality to simply feel amused, but in no way threatened. Why then would our supposedly bravest and strongest and most macho of men in our military feel so undone by the idea of a guy flirting with them? If homophobic guys say they would be sickened by such an advance, we women would encourage them to get over it. You don’t know the meaning of sickening until you have been slobbered on by a drunken, macho, rude guy, and if we can handle it, then so can you. Women have been turning down male come-ons for eons, usually with nothing more serious than a bruised ego to show for it. If you can fight our formidable foes, then surely you can easily defuse an unwanted pass.

We are living in truly dangerous times. Our enemies are not as obvious as they used to be, they don’t subscribe to the Geneva Conventions, they have no one leader with whom we can negotiate, they can enter our society with a bomb strapped to their bodies. We’ve never had to fight such an ever-changing and evolving force. We are fighting a twelfth century mentality with twenty-first century weapons. Now is not the time to surrender to a fear of sexual orientation while these greater, more tangible and immediate threats surround us. We need every resource at our disposal in our efforts to keep us safe.

We really need to understand what it means to deny homosexuals from openly serving our country. With our growing vulnerability to terrorism, it is simply disgraceful, dangerous, and counter-productive to our national security.

Jill Chapin

Jill Chapin has been a guest writer and columnist in several Los Angeles area papers for over fifteen years. She has written a bilingual parenting book titled, "If You Have Kids, Then Be a Parent!" and a children's book entitled, "My Magic Bubble."

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3 Comments

Comments for The Inanity and Insanity of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell are now closed.

  1. I agree with Anne Garrison’s comment, and I appreciate her courage for stating what should be obvious.

    Most people, I fear, are incapable of uncovering their eyes long enough to question the premises that keep them mired in a consensus of pedestrian logic.

    Symbolic identity-driven issues are ideal for limiting imagination: notably, gay marriage, DADT. I encourage people to explore Tommi Avicolli-Mecca’s thoughts on the total sellout of gay liberation (see Part Two):

    http://soulpowered.tumblr.com/tagged/Tommi_Avicolli-Mecca

  2. As you remember, the U.S. House of Representatives voted, 229 to 186, to pass a defense bill approving more than $700 billion for military programs and containing an amendment overturning the 1993 law allowing gays to serve in the military only if they hide their sexual orientation. The legislation is now pending in the U.S. Senate. This is the infamous “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” law” (DATD). Unfortunately, the current proposal for repeal will go into effect only after the $5 million Pentagon study is received on December 1 and after the President, the Secretary of Defense, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff certify the repeal. With a Republican House majority and a weakened Senate, even if the study recommends repeal, it is doubtful that the new Congress will repeal DADT. The pending lawsuits challenging DADT may in the end be the best chance of repealing DADT.

  3. It’s deeply depressing to read such an embrace of the faux War on Terror in Fog City Journal. E.g.:

    “Our enemies are not as obvious as they used to be, they don’t subscribe to the Geneva Conventions, they have no one leader with whom we can negotiate, they can enter our society with a bomb strapped to their bodies. We’ve never had to fight such an ever-changing and evolving force. We are fighting a twelfth century mentality with twenty-first century weapons.”

    Yoo hoo!!! Ever heard of Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib, or Bagram Air Force Base? The extradition of torture, to Uganda? “We,” meaning the U.S. Armed Forces, including the Commander-in-Chief, don’t subscribe to the Geneva Conventions.

    Is the ongoing, covert U.S. War on Africa, which has, since the end of the Cold War, cost roughly 10 million innocent African lives, “obvious” to native and indigenous Africans? How about the assassination of Patrice Lumumba, the first democratically elected president of D.R. Congo, in 1961, by U.S. and Belgian operatives? Was the enemy–us–“obvious” to the Congolese people, whose lives have been truncated by that assassination ever since?

    What about the assassination of Iranian Mohammad Mosaddegh, by US and UK intelligence in 1953, which your “beloved candidate,” Barack Obama, acknowledged in his speech last year in Cairo? Was the enemy–us–obvious to Iranians at the time?

    Overthrow of the Guatemalan Arbenz government organized by the CIA in 1954? Enemy obvious to indigenous Guatemalan Mayan peasants and banana plantation laborers, at the time, or, even now?

    I’m just getting started, but I’ll stop, hoping I’ve made my point that “the enemy”–the state terrorist U.S–was not ‘obvious’ to these innocent people.

    And I’m far more afraid, now, of your candidate Barack Obama and the rest of the U.S. national security state, and the corporatocracy it defends, than I am of any foreigner of any sort. I’ve certainly never had a sleepless night, or even a moment’s worry, about Al Qaeda or the Taliban or the FDLR.

    And I think 09.11 was an inside job, in one way or another, or several. 09.11 isn’t one of my areas of expertise; I can’t cite chapter, bible and verse of what’ wrong with this story, like so many 09.11 Truthers, but I’ve seen Building 7 collapse, over and over, seen Fahrenheit 09.11, Loose Change, Treason, Inc. and 09.11 Witness, and listened to the architects and engineers for 09.11 truth, and that’s all quite enough to make me ask how so many people can keep lyin’ about this for so long, and how much longer Americans will agree to fight a phony War on Terror that has no conceivable end because Terror is stateless; there are no heads of state to sign a treaty.

    This is War Without End, Amen, and I couldn’t care less whether LGBT people are allowed to fight it or not.

    I do care that Fog City Journal is publishing its rhetoric. That’s depressing.