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Gay in America

VIP-Blog de tpe-1l-gay-in-america
  • 17 articles publiés
  • 14 commentaires postés
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  • Créé le : 15/11/2010 07:34
    Modifié : 28/01/2011 15:43

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    [ Partie B ] [ Partie A ] [ intro ]

    marriage (part two)

    26/01/2011 19:18

    marriage (part two)


     

    image: where the same sex marriage is legal in the USA  (http://www.freedomtomarry.org/)

    Freedom to Marry

     

    Freedom to Marry is a campaign to win marriage nationwide. It is pursuing to win the freedom to marry in more

     states, growing the national majority for marriage, and ending marriage discrimination.

    In five states (Massachusetts, Connecticut, Iowa, Vermont and New Hampshire) and the District of Columbia the

     gay couples have the right to marry and there are three more states (Maryland, Rhode Island and New York)

    that have non-discrimination against marriages between same-sex couples from other states. Some other states

     offer other form of marriage, e. g. civil union. With these advances, about 14% of U.S. population lives in a state

     that either has the freedom to marry for gay couples or some form of civil union of gay couples. 25% lives in a

    state with either marriage or a broad legal status such as civil union or partnership. 37% of the US population

    (over 100 million Americans) lives in a state which provides some form of protections for gay couples

    .

    However, whilst there in general there shouldn't be discrimination, some forms of it can be objectively justified.

     Marriage is historically seen as the means to create an appropriate environment in which children can be brought

     up. As gay couples are unlikely to have children, it can be said that there is no real necessity for the right to

    marry. Many of the fiscal benefits enjoyed by married couples (for example child support payments) are not for

     encouraging marriages in itself, but to help the existence of the conventional, old-fashioned family.

     

    http://www.freedomtomarry.org/states/ (retrieved December 7th 2010)

    http://www.freedomtomarry.org/pages/why-marriage-matters (retrieved December 7th 2010)

    http://freemarry.3cdn.net/e6df5165c2fd7943d3_yvm6idfqd.pdf (retrieved December 7th 2010)

    http://www.christiananswers.net/q-aig/aig-c040.html (retrieved January 4th 2011)

    http://www.idebate.org/debatabase/topic_details.php?topicID=63 (retrieved January 13th 2011

    http://www.freedomtomarry.org/page/-/images/usa-marriage-map-2010-04-16.png (retrieved December 7th 2010)

    http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfaith/panelists/pamela_k_taylor/2009/07/marriage_both_civil_and_religious.html (retrieves January 14th 2011)

     






    2.2 Homosexuals in the Army

    26/01/2011 19:25

    2.2 Homosexuals in the Army


     

    image: The US Army's official comic book ( http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/documents/2010/07/the-us-armys-official-comic-book-on-dadt.php?page=6, retrieved 12.1.2011)

    Homosexuals were not allowed to serve in the army at all until 1993, based on president Harry S. Truman's the

     Uniform Code of Military Justice, which set up discharge rules for homosexual service members.

    However, in 1993 president Bill Clinton launched the ”Don't Ask, Don't Tell, Don't Pursue” policy. Don't Ask,

     Don't Tell (DADT) was a compromise that promised two things while appeasing the conservative opposition to

     openly gay service: first, that the safety of gay servicemembers would be better protected, and second, the law

    gave gays a means to dodge the traditional discrimination in order to enlist. In other words, the concept suggested

     that homosexuals could serve in the military as long as they didn’t say they were homosexuals.

     






    2.2.1 The History of ”Don't Ask, Don't Tell”

    26/01/2011 19:34

    2.2.1 The History of ”Don't Ask, Don't Tell”


    image: http://www.worldcorrespondents.com/dont-ask-dont-tell-policy-vote-repealed-in-senate-2/8811552

    The military’s current policy can be better understood in historical context. Since the birth of the Republic,

    government decisions have been made about who have been permitted or required to serve in the U.S. military,

     and under what conditions. These decisions have frequently reflected society’s attitudes toward its minorities.

    Historically, the military did not officially ban homosexuals from its ranks, although sodomy (usually defined as

    anal and sometimes oral sex between men) was considered a criminal offense as early as Revolutionary War

    times.

    As the United States prepared for World War II, psychiatric screening became a part of the induction process

     and psychiatry's view of homosexuality as an indicator of psychopathology was brought into the military.

    Instead of keeping its previous focus on homosexual behavior, which was classified as a criminal offense, the

    military shifted to eliminating homosexual persons, based on a medical point of view. In 1942, revised army

    mobilization regulations included for the first time a paragraph defining both the homosexual and ”normal” person

     and clarifying procedures for rejecting gay draftees.

    In the 1970s, a new movement emerged in the United States that pressed for civil rights for  gay men and

    lesbians. The military policy was one target of this movement. Similar challenges continued throughout the 1970s.

     By the end of the 1980s, reversing the military's policy was emerging as a priority for advocates of gay and

    lesbian civil rights. Several lesbian and gay male members of the armed services came out publicly and challenged

     their discharges through the legal system. In 1992, legislation to lift the ban was introduced in the U.S Congress.

     By the beginning of 1993, it appeared that the military's ban on gay personnel would soon be lifted. Shortly after

    his inauguration, President Clinton asked the Secretary of Defense to prepare a draft policy to end discrimination

     on the basis of sexual orientation, and he proposed to resolve ”the real, practical problems that would be

    involved” in introducing a new policy. Clinton's proposal, however, was greeted with intense opposition.

    After a lengthy public debate, a compromise was reached which was labeled ”Don't Ask, Don't Tell, Don't

    Pursue. Under its terms, military personnel would not be asked about their sexual orientation and would not be

     discharged simply for being gay. Engaging in sexual act with a member of the same sex, however, would still

    constitute grounds for discharge. In the fall of 1993, the congress voted to codify most aspects of the ban.

     

    The policy has remained in effect since 1993, although the Servicememners Legal Defense Network and other

     organizations monitoring its implementation have repeatedly pointed out its failures. Discharges have actually

    increased under the policy, and harassment of gay and lesbian personnel appears to have intensified in many

    locales.

     

    The failure of the policy was dramatized in 1999 by the murder of Pfc. Barry Winchell at the hands of Pvt.

    Calvin Glover, a member of his unit. Glover beat Winchell to death with a baseball bat while he slept.

    Prosecutors argued that Glover murdered Winchell because he was a homosexual. Glover was sentenced to life

    in prison. In the wake of the Winchell murder, Hilary Rodham Clinton, then Vice-President Al Gore, and even

    President Clinton labeled the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy a failure. Campaigning for the Democratic Party’s

    2000 presidential nomination, candidates Gore and Bill Bradley each promised to work to reverse the policy if he

     were elected.

     Meanwhile, candidates for the Republican nomination reaffirmed their support for the current policy (McCain,

    Bush) or declared that they would seek to completely prohibit military service by homosexuals (Bauer, Keyes,

    Forbes).






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