Friday, September 24, 2010

Just Repeal it Already

“Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” has the same origins and ramifications as “Separate, but Equal,” and the former will ultimately go the way of the latter. They were both implemented as compromises to hotly debated issues. On one side, there was group that thought we should tolerate, accept, and love our fellow human beings regardless of how God made them. On the other side we had devoutly religious people. These pieces of legislation were steps taken to get a foothold for certain groups to get equal civil/human rights. At the time of implementation, the conservative opposition to empirical logic was too great, so progressives took what they could get. Ultimately however, all of us must realize on some level that neither of these policies were sustainable long term. The ban on openly gay Americans serving the military is going to lifted eventually, so how about we just get it over with an move on to other issues.

2 comments:

Reena Bostock said...

I couldn't agree more!

Sean Ackroyd said...

My life would sure be a hell of a lot easier now if they would. The only problem with repeal is most homosexual men and women (mainly men) still won't take advantage of their newly found status. There are still those intolerant biggots in the deep south that would sooner hang a black man (or even the occasional outsider that doesnt abide their "culture" than give him a fair trial. Knowing at leastt one gay man in the army, I have some insight into his plight. No matter how strenuously a law of tolerance is enforced, there will always be the back woods idiots or religous zealots (can equal the former in idiocy) who will make it impossible for gays men and women to serve openly and not have to watch their backs. It's a sad commentary on us as a nation or even as humans thaat this intolerance has and will exhist into perpetuity no matter what laws are passed. I'm all for it, don't misunderstand me, just don't expect a slew of men and women to suddenly feel the liberation we all think they should, the realitu is there is too much fear involved for most of them, espcially among the enlisted, to really be openly gay.