To: glbpoc Subject: Campaign for Military Service response to Clinton's Gay Ban Policy -------- STATEMENT BY THOMAS B. STODDARD, COORDINATOR, CAMPAIGN FOR MILITARY SERVICE, IN RESPONSE TO PRESIDENT CLINTON'S GAY-BAN POLICY ANNOUNCEMENT July 19, 1993 "The Administration's new policy, announced today by the President, constitutes no advance whatsoever for this country's lesbian and gay servicemembers, and contradicts the President's own words. "Under the new policy, lesbian and gay servicemembers may still not acknowledge who they are. Under the new policy, lesbian and gay servicemembers may still not express affection toward a loved one. Under the new policy, lesbian and gay servicemembers may still not engage in private sexual conduct permitted heterosexual servicemembers. Under the new policy, lesbian and gay servicemembers must still lie and dissemble in order to serve their country. "In short, under the new policy, lesbian and gay service members may be gay only in the abstract -- only in their private, unarticulated thoughts. "The Administration labels its new policy "don't ask, don't tell, don't pursue." The policy is more aptly called "let's pretend" -- "let's pretend" gay people don't exist, even though we know they do. "James Carville, the President's spin doctor, asserted on television Friday night that the new policy "moved the ball forward." It does not. At most it moves the ball sideways. It merely infuses inconsistency and double-talk into the existing policy of discrimination. It says a lesbian may visit a gay bar, but not dance or touch the hand of another woman. It says a gay man may read a gay book, but not disclose his sexual orientation to a colleague, even his closest friend. It says that a gay person may have a photo of a domestic partner on a workdesk, but not identify the nature of the relationship with that person. Such absurdities do not represent an advance. They constitute hypocritical temporizing. "Moreover, the promise to end witch-hunts and unfair investigations is a hollow one. Even if the government refrains from the aggressive, formal investigations of the past, its underlying policy will continue to encourage informal investigations by vindictive or malicious colleagues. So long as lesbian and gay servicemembers are subject to discharge based on who they are, they will continue to be victimized by the system, and individuals within the system. "The President promised in January to issue an executive order "which would end the present policy . . . of the exclusion from military service solely on the basis of sexual orientation." Today he broke that promise. Let me be clear. The President did not promise to "move the ball forward." He did not promise to go as far as the Joint Chiefs permitted. He did not promise to consult Congress, and act accordingly. He promised to issue an executive order "ending" the present policy. "The President could have lifted up the conscience of the country. He could have fulfilled the country's yearning for moral leadership. Instead he acceded -- without a fight -- to the stereotypes and prejudices he himself had disparaged. "The President's surrender to prejudice does not bring an end to the debate of the past six months. It merely prolongs it. The debate will continue. The struggle will endure. And the ultimate goal will be realized: eventually, completely and universally, lesbians and gay men will achieve their right to equal treatment in the armed forces of the United States. "We thank today those who have stood with us. We note with particular gratitude the statements of Mrs. Coretta Scott King, Senator Barry Goldwater, Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Congressman Ronald Dellums, and Senator Bob Kerry. We will never forget your response to our call to conscience."