Sources: AOLNews and NYTimes.com
Senior aides to the chairman of the military Joint Chiefs of Staff said Tuesday that Marine Gen. Peter Pace won't apologize for calling homosexuality immoral -- an opinion that gay advocacy groups deplored. In a newspaper interview Monday, Pace had likened homosexual acts to adultery and said the military should not condone it by allowing gays to serve openly in the armed forces.
''General Pace's comments are outrageous, insensitive and disrespectful to the 65,000 lesbian and gay troops now serving in our armed forces,'' the advocacy group Servicemembers Legal Defense Network said in a statement on its Web site. The group has represented some of the thousands dismissed from the military for their sexual orientation.
Pace's senior staff members said Tuesday that the general was expressing his personal opinion and had no intention of apologizing. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not allowed to speak on the record.
Rep. Martin Meehan, who has introduced legislation to repeal the current policy, criticized Pace's comments. ''General Pace's statements aren't in line with either the majority of the public or the military,'' said the Massachusetts Democrat. ''He needs to recognize that support for overturning (the policy) is strong and growing'' and that the military is ''turning away good troops to enforce a costly policy of discrimination.''
Apparently, Rep. Martin Meehan is NOT in touch with the majority of the public as poll results CLEARLY show that citizens AGREE with General Pace. An AOL News poll showed nearly 275,000 votes as of 2:10pm EDT. [Updated @ 2:13pm] The margin is approx. two to one in favor of support for General Pace's comments regarding gays in the military.
How do you feel about Pace's comments? | |
Agree | 64% |
Disagree | 33% |
Not sure | 3% |
I fully expect the numbers to change as the networked homosexual community finds this poll and works hard to skew the results. Total Votes: 274,780 |
Louis Vizcaino, spokesman for the gay rights group Human Rights Campaign, said Pace's comments were ''insulting and offensive to the men and women ... who are serving in the military honorably.''
''Right now there are men and women that are in the battle lines, that are in the trenches, they're serving their country,'' Vizcaino said. ''Their sexual orientation has nothing to do with their capability to serve in the U.S. military.''
''Don't ask, don't tell'' was passed by Congress in 1993 after a firestorm of debate in which advocates argued that allowing homosexuals to serve openly would hurt troop morale and recruitment and undermine the cohesion of combat units. John Shalikashvili, the retired Army general who was Joint Chiefs chairman when the policy was adopted, said in January that he has changed his mind on the issue since meeting with gay servicemen. ''These conversations showed me just how much the military has changed, and that gays and lesbians can be accepted by their peers,'' Shalikashvili wrote in a newspaper opinion piece.
3 comments:
Hey Charlie,
Looks like we are in agreement on this one, thanks for stopping by and leaving your comment.
Just curious - why is it at all relevant whether people agree with Pace or not? If those are his personal opinions, then it shouldn't matter if all or none of America agrees with him. No?
Insurgent,
In the realm of truth and morality, it doesn't matter whether people agree with Pace or not. It doesn't matter whether you or I agree -- or not. The truth is the truth and God's moral law is definite.
I was merely pointing out that the majority of people agree with his opinions -- even though the gay activist community would have the general population believe otherwise.
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