Being gay and having sex are two different things.

Discrimination and animus against gays is homophobia.

You are homophobic.

On 10/19/10, Keith In Tampa <[email protected]> wrote:
> No homophobia Tommy, but its time for some true reality to set in here.
> The military is not a place for folks to have sex.  They do....All Humans
> do, but the military is a place of discipline; of a chain of command and
> following orders.   People are put in harms way.   The military is not a
> place for homosexual liasons and love quests.   It's just not.
>
> The more that I think about it, and after looking at the studies,  I am now
> opposed to lifting the ban on Gays in the military.  I'm also opposed to
> Adultery, and Bigamy in the Army too, but these regulations are not under
> attack right now.
>
> http://dailycaller.com/2010/02/01/polls-show-service-members-oppose-gays-in-military-as-gates-and-mullen-prepare-to-testify-on-dont-ask-dont-tell/
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Oct 19, 2010 at 8:12 PM, Tommy News <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Homophobia is conduct unbecoming!!!!
>>
>>
>> On 10/19/10, dick <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > What happens to these people if the court finds against the judge's
>> > decision.   Do these new military just get kicked out then?
>> >
>> > On 10/19/2010 08:03 PM, Keith In Tampa wrote:
>> >> This must be stopped, post haste.
>> >> Over 85 percent of our servicemen have made it clear that they do not
>> >> wish to serve with openly gay individuals.
>> >> We have a far left extremist judge, who on her own volition, has
>> >> decided to "modify/halt/make" military policy?
>> >> What is wrong with this picture?  What in the Hell is wrong with our
>> >> Nation!
>> >> Wake Up America!!
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> On Tue, Oct 19, 2010 at 7:56 PM, Tommy News <[email protected]
>>  >> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>> >>
>> >>     Military Recruiters Told to Accept Gays
>> >>     By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
>> >>     Published: October 19, 2010
>> >>     Sign In to E-Mail
>> >>
>> >>     Print
>> >>
>> >>     Single Page
>> >>
>> >>      Filed at 7:44 p.m. ET
>> >>
>> >>     SAN DIEGO (AP) — The military is accepting openly gay recruits for
>> the
>> >>     first time in the nation's history, even as it tries in the courts
>> to
>> >>     slow the movement to abolish its "don't ask, don't tell" policy.
>> >>
>> >>     At least two service members discharged for being gay began the
>> >>     process to re-enlist after the Pentagon's Tuesday announcement.
>> >>
>> >>     Meanwhile, a federal judge in California who overturned the 17-year
>> >>     policy last week was likely to reject the government's latest
>> >> effort
>> >>     to halt her order telling the military to stop enforcing the law.
>> >>
>> >>     The Justice Department will likely appeal if she does not suspend
>> >>     her order.
>> >>
>> >>     The Defense Department has said it would comply with U.S. District
>> >>     Judge Virginia Phillips' order and had frozen any discharge cases.
>> >>     Pentagon spokeswoman Cynthia Smith said recruiters had been given
>> >>     top-level guidance to accept applicants who say they are gay.
>> >>
>> >>     Recruiters also have been told to inform potential recruits that
>> >> the
>> >>     moratorium on enforcement of the policy could be reversed at any
>> time,
>> >>     if the ruling is appealed or the court grants a stay, she said.
>> >>
>> >>     Gay rights groups were continuing to tell service members to avoid
>> >>     revealing that they are gay, fearing they could find themselves in
>> >>     trouble should the law be reinstated.
>> >>
>> >>     "What people aren't really getting is that the discretion and
>> caution
>> >>     that gay troops are showing now is exactly the same standard of
>> >>     conduct that they will adhere to when the ban is lifted
>> permanently,"
>> >>     said Aaron Belkin, executive director of the Palm Center, a think
>> tank
>> >>     on gays and the military at the University of California Santa
>> >>     Barbara. "Yes, a few will try to become celebrities."
>> >>
>> >>     An Air Force officer and co-founder of a gay service member support
>> >>     group called OutServe said financial considerations are playing a
>> big
>> >>     role in gay service members staying quiet.
>> >>
>> >>     "The military has financially trapped us," he said, noting that he
>> >>     could owe the military about $200,000 if he were to be dismissed.
>> >>
>> >>     The officer, who asked not to be identified for fear of being
>> >>     discharged, said he's hearing increasingly about heterosexual
>> service
>> >>     members approaching gay colleagues and telling them they can come
>> out
>> >>     now.
>> >>
>> >>     He also said more gay service members are coming out to their peers
>> >>     who are friends, while keeping their orientation secret from
>> >>     leadership. He said he has come out to two peers in the last few
>> days.
>> >>
>> >>     "People are coming out informally in their units," the officer
>> >> said.
>> >>     "Discussions are happening right now."
>> >>
>> >>     An opponent of the judge's ruling said confusion that has come up
>> >> is
>> >>     exactly what Pentagon officials feared and shows the need for her
>> >> to
>> >>     immediately freeze her order while the government appeals.
>> >>
>> >>     "It's only logical that a stay should be granted to avoid the
>> >>     confusion that is already occurring with reports that the Pentagon
>> is
>> >>     telling recruiters to begin accepting homosexual applicants," said
>> >>     Tony Perkins, the president of the Family Research Council, a
>> >>     conservative advocacy group based in Washington that supports the
>> >>     policy.
>> >>
>> >>     The uncertain status of the law has caused much confusion within an
>> >>     institution that has historically discriminated against gays.
>> >>
>> >>     Before the 1993 law, the military banned gays entirely and declared
>> >>     them incompatible with military service. There have been instances
>> in
>> >>     which gays have served, with the knowledge of their colleagues.
>> >>
>> >>     Twenty-nine nations, including Israel, Canada, Germany and Sweden,
>> >>     allow openly gay troops, according to the Log Cabin Republicans, a
>> gay
>> >>     rights group and plaintiff in the lawsuit before Phillips.
>> >>
>> >>     The Pentagon guidance to recruiters comes after Dan Woods, the
>> group's
>> >>     attorney, sent a letter last week warning the Justice Department
>> that
>> >>     Army recruiters who turned away Omar Lopez in Austin, Texas may
>> >> have
>> >>     caused the government to violate Phillips' injunction. Woods wrote
>> >>     that the government could be subject to a citation for contempt.
>> >>
>> >>     The White House has insisted their actions in court do not diminish
>> >>     President Barack Obama's efforts to repeal the ban.
>> >>
>> >>     In their stay request, government lawyers argue Phillips' order
>> would
>> >>     be disruptive to troops serving at a time of war. They say the
>> >>     military needs time to prepare new regulations and train and
>> >> educate
>> >>     service members about the change.
>> >>
>> >>     Phillips has said her order does not prohibit the Pentagon from
>> >>     implementing those measures.
>> >>
>> >>     Douglas Smith, spokesman for U.S. Army Recruiting Command based at
>> >>     Fort Knox, Ky., said even before the ruling recruiters did not ask
>> >>     applicants about their sexual orientation. The difference now is
>> that
>> >>     recruiters will process those who say they are gay.
>> >>
>> >>     "If they were to self-admit that they are gay and want to enlist,
>> >> we
>> >>     will process them for enlistment, but will tell them that the legal
>> >>     situation could change," Smith said.
>> >>
>> >>     He said the enlistment process takes time and recruiters have been
>> >>     told to inform those who are openly gay that they could be declared
>> >>     ineligible if the law is upheld on appeal.
>> >>
>> >>     "U.S. Army Recruiting Command is going to follow the law, whatever
>> the
>> >>     law is," he said.
>> >>
>> >>     The message, however, had not reached some recruiting stations.
>> >>
>> >>     In Pensacola, Marine Sgt. Timothy Chandler said he had been given
>> >> no
>> >>     direction. "As far as we are concerned everything is the same. The
>> >>     policy hasn't changed," he said, as others in the office nodded.
>> >>
>> >>     Chandler said no one had come to the small office questioning the
>> >>     policy or asking about being openly gay and serving.
>> >>
>> >>     Recruiters at the Navy office next door referred all media
>> >> questions
>> >>     to the Pentagon. Air Force recruiters said they were not authorized
>> to
>> >>     talk to the media. Army recruiters referred questions to another
>> >>     office in Mobile, Ala.
>> >>
>> >>     In New York's Times Square, Dan Choi, a 29-year-old Iraq War
>> >> veteran
>> >>     who was discharged for being gay, began the process to enlist in
>> >> the
>> >>     Army. In San Diego, recruiters took an application from Will
>> >>     Rodriguez, a former Marine who was discharged under the policy in
>> >>     2008.
>> >>
>> >>     Phillips said at a hearing Monday that she was learning toward
>> denying
>> >>     the Obama administration's request to delay her order. That would
>> send
>> >>     the case to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco.
>> >>
>> >>     After Phillips' ruling last week, Lopez — discharged from the Navy
>> in
>> >>     2006 after admitting his gay status to his military doctor — walked
>> >>     into an Army recruiting office in Austin and asked if he could
>> >>     re-enlist.
>> >>
>> >>     He said he was up front, even showing the recruiters his Navy
>> >>     discharge papers. But they told him he couldn't re-enlist because
>> they
>> >>     had not gotten word from the Pentagon to allow openly gay recruits.
>> >>
>> >>     Smith was unable to confirm the account. She said guidance on gay
>> >>     applicants had been issued to recruiting commands on Oct. 15.
>> >>
>> >>     On Tuesday, upon hearing of the changes to recruiting, Lopez said,
>> >>     "Oh, my God! I've been waiting for this for four years."
>> >>
>> >>     Lopez said he'll try again Friday and will go to a Navy recruiting
>> >>     office in Austin to see if he can enroll in ROTC as an officer. He
>> is
>> >>     currently studying hospitality services at Austin Community
>> >> College.
>> >>
>> >>     "I'm hoping they'll let me in because I was able to switch over
>> >> from
>> >>     an enlistment to an officer. I'm really hoping they can accept me,"
>> he
>> >>     said.
>> >>
>> >>     ___
>> >>
>> >>     Flaherty reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Kristin
>> M.
>> >>     Hall in Nashville, Tenn., Lisa Leff in San Francisco, Melissa R.
>> >>     Nelson in Pensacola, Fla., and Brian Witte in Annapolis, Md.,
>> >>     contributed to this report.
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>     More:
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2010/10/19/us/AP-US-Gays-in-Military.html?hp
>> >>     --
>> >>     Together, we can change the world, one mind at a time.
>> >>     Have a great day,
>> >>     Tommy
>> >>
>> >>     --
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>> >>
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>>
>> --
>>  Together, we can change the world, one mind at a time.
>> Have a great day,
>> Tommy
>>
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>
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Together, we can change the world, one mind at a time.
Have a great day,
Tommy

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