Aizle wrote:
I didn't say it was ok to bar chaplains from serving. I'm saying that they don't have a right to serve and say/do anything that they want. This is the part that folks seem to not understand.
I'm completely fine with chaplains serving in the military. I'm also completely fine with there being some rules around what things can be openly preached or diseminated. If any particular chaplain has a problem with that, then they can find another job, they don't have a right to be in the military.
I don't see why you're even bringing this up because regulations to this effect have existed for a very long time. It's not an issue.
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Really the ONLY thing that gays are looking for from the Military is to be openly gay. That doesn't mean walking around in underwear, sparkle glitter and a pink boa while on duty. It means being able to say the words, "I'm gay" and not immediately get booted out of the military. If they wanted to serve in the military, they would still need to follow all of the normal rules for proper decorum and appearance.
I don't think that's the only thing gays are looking for. It may be the only thing gays in the military are looking for, but the larger gay community that has no intention of serving has quite a few people chortling with glee at the idea of making the soldier-boy stereotypes they imagine the military is made up of squirm with discomfort.
In any case, the real issue is not and has never been about anyone's rights. Gays should be allowed to serve openly because it serves no useful purpose any longer to forbid it, and has numerous negative effects on the military. The purpose of a military is to defeat enemies, and decisions should be made on that basis.