>Reply-To: PMDAtropos >Date: Tue, 7 Jun 1994 10:46:02 -0400 [ Send replies to veteran@AGORA.RDROP.COM only ] On this day when many people are commemorating the myths of D-Day and its place in history as "the" turning point in the war against fascism, we must not forget the patriotic lesbian and gay men who FOUGHT ANOTHER WAR, a war against senior military officials who spewed forth propaganda against us. Traditionally the military never officially excluded or discharged gay people from its ranks. From the days following the Revolutionary War, the Army and Navy had targeted the act of sodomy (which they defined as anal and sometimes oral sex between men), not gay people, as criminal, as had their British predecessors and the original thirteen colonies. Any soldier or officer convicted of sodomy, whether he was gay or not, could be sent to prison. But in World War II a dramatic change occurred. As psychiatrists increased their authority in the armed forces, they developed new screening procedures to discover and disqualify homosexual men, introducing into military policies and procedures the concept of the homosexual as a personality type unfit for military service and combat--a concept that has determined a military policy for 5 decades after the war. Their success in shifting the military's attention from the sexual act to the individual had far-reqching consequences. It forced military officials to develop an expanding administrative apparatus for managing gay personnel that relied on diagnosis, hospitalization, surveillance, interrogatino, discharge, administrative appeal, and mass-indoctrination. So here we are, 5 decades later, continuing to fight the injustices injustices and tyrany within our own society, a society that speaks of freedom. Freedom for whom? Now, 5 decades later, we have a new military policy that can be termed "Hide and Seek". If offers no protections, only a rebuttable presumption of the fact that all gay men and lesbians will engage in behavior inappropriate to a work environment. With 7 district court decisions in our favor, the groundwork is being laid for the ultimate Constitutional challenge with the Supreme Court. While we wait, we're hunted and coerced by people who are unwilling to accept the fact that some people are different from them. That's our D-Day legacy. Anders Winther Defenders of LIBERTY! Veterans for Human Rights Promoters of full and equal recognition and Portland, Ore. protection for g/l/b active, reserve and veteran members of the U.S. Armed Forces