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Don't Ask, Don't Tell... Don't Blow It

With an impressive first 100 days under his belt, Obama appears to be a friend and ally. But we've been here before with "don't ask, don't tell" -- and Joan M. Garry says this time, we must win.


Unlike his predecessor, Barack Obama does not see himself as "the Decider." He is at heart a community organizer. And in these first 100 days, Americans have seen the tenets of community organizing in action. The president has reminded us time and again that we are all in this together, that each of us has a voice and a responsibility. He is also demonstrating that decision-making is a process.

In 1993, we saw what happens when the process is wrong. Nobody wins. Bill Clinton signed "don't ask, don't tell" into law that year, and since then over 13,000 gay and lesbian members of our armed services have lost. Lost their jobs, their careers, their dignity.

And so here we are, 16 years later. The gay community has a friend in the White House again and it looks like we are going to get another turn at bat.

We absolutely must win this time.

Now I am not a patient person when it comes to equality. I spent nearly a decade running a gay rights organization. I spent much of last year raising money for the Obama campaign because I am impatient. I needed to do what I could to ensure the election of someone I know stands with us.

Aubrey Sarvis, the executive director of Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, is impatient too. He illustrated his impatience last week with a full-page open letter to the president in a Capitol Hill publication, calling on him to incorporate the repeal of DADT into the Defense budget he brings to the Pentagon next week.

In his letter, he indicates that this is the "logical" opportunity to be done with it.

Logical? Not from where this fellow impatient activist sits.

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FILE UNDER:  DADTDon't Ask Don't Tell

Reader Comments
  • Name: Mark
    Date posted: 5/5/2009 9:10:00 PM
    Hometown: Wappingers Falls

    Comment:

    Articles like this are why gay/lesbian Americans/taxpayers/voters don't have equal civil rights. A gay/lesbian writer actually writes in FAVOR of using millions of our tax dollars to fund the unconstitutional/discriminatory Don't Ask Don't Tell which has strongly crippled and weakened our military and destroyed 13,000 gay/lesbian lives. With friends like this writer, who needs Bill O'Reilly and Rush Limbaugh? During time of war the President can repeal Don't Ask Don't Tell. The Congress does not have to fund it. The Democrats now have a fillibuster proof majoirty in the House and Senate. NOW is the time. We must stop taking the position of those who hate us. We must DEMAND equal civil rights as taxpayers and full citizens NOW.

  • Name: Rob
    Date posted: 5/5/2009 12:29:00 AM
    Hometown: Los Angeles, CA

    Comment:

    The main reason that we don't yet have sixty votes in the Senate is that the Commander in Chief hasn't made an aggressive push to change the policy. This is an ideal moment to overturn DADT. President Obama is wildly popular, both houses of Congress are overwhelmingly Democratic, and it's not an election year. If we can't get sixty votes now, will we be able to get them next year, when conservative Democrats in the Senate are waging reelection campaigns? Will we be able to get sixty votes in 2011, when the Democratic majorities in the both the Senate and the House will probably not be as strong? I understand that the military is reluctant to make any policy change without doing extensive study on its effect on combat readiness. If the President feels that the military brass would be more likely to support a policy change after a formal study, I can respect that. But can't we at least get the study underway?

  • Name: Bill Shipley
    Date posted: 5/4/2009 10:56:00 PM
    Hometown: Sanford, NC

    Comment:

    Maybe I'm just not educated on this. Did we have to pass a law with congress for women and blacks to serve in the military?? I don't agree, we have spent enough time being silent and nice. The blacks and women were not silent and nice, see where they are. I'm really tired of this crap and think we need to bump it up. Yes, I spent 20 years in the Coast Guard and have been featured in Advocate Magazine with my gay son who considered the military. I think the president can approve gays to serve with a stroke of a pen. This is a human rights issue as we all know. Did other countries have to go through this carp. I called the White House just the other day. I'm not going to sit back and be nice about this anymore.

  • Name: ZAK
    Date posted: 5/4/2009 7:48:00 PM
    Hometown: Clover SC

    Comment:

    to block funding of DADT would be disastrous for us. for starters, its a very un-American thing to do, even against one of the worse discriminatory laws around. If President Obama decided to 'starve' this law, it would cause an uproar of blame against the homosexual community and labeling us (and him) as communist. this is what the radical right whats us to do. there is a vote process that must be followed, and we ARE going to make it through this. like the article's title, lets not blow this. we will prevail.

  • Name: Lorraine E.
    Date posted: 5/4/2009 7:04:00 PM
    Hometown: San Diego, CA

    Comment:

    "I don't want that victory blurred by an aggressive push on DADT that we simply may not be ready for. " -- Well if not now then when? And who is this "we" you speak of? As far as I'm concerned you must be refering to your LGBT party of 1. Why must our movement be relegated to whatever handouts Congress decides to give us today? There was an interesting article in the NY Times today about DADT and it seems to me that this author is completely out of step with the rate of this particular LGBT movement. Two-thirds of the nation would like to see DADT overturned, and countless numbers of both active and retired (read: younger) service men and women have said they would like to see DADT repealed as well. I understand the desire to relish this (knock on wood) hate crimes victory, but for someone who claims to be impatient your stance on breaking the momentum of DADT is entirely ridiculous. I for one refuse to wait for a "non-agressive" push that would be more pallatable.



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