June is LGBT Pride Month
Seven years later, Clinton declared June as National Gay and Lesbian Pride Month, though people were celebrating long before. This past summer, President Barack Obama added a few more words to reflect increased openness: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgendered Pride Month continues to be celebrated through the month of June.
This June, the LGBT community has even more reason to celebrate: in late May of this year, Congress voted to repeal DADT with a 234-194 vote, and the Senate is expected to debate the bill this summer. These are monumental steps in civil liberties, a change President Obama vowed to make during his 2008 campaign.
He said in an interview:
The U.S. stands nearly alone among developed nations in banning the service of openly gay troops. Among the original members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, only the U.S. and Portugal ban gay and lesbian service personnel. Nine of the countries with troops fighting along side American forces in Iraq and twelve of our allies fighting in Afghanistan allow gays to serve. Countries that have lifted the ban since the 1970s include Australia, Britain, Canada, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and Spain.
The recent House vote is a sign of positive change for the minority LGBT community. Senator Joseph Lieberman (I-CT), who voted in favor of DADT in 1993, said in May, “My strong belief is that if Americans seek to put their lives on the line to serve this blessed country of ours, we should not deny those patriots that opportunity because of their sexual orientation. The action which the Committee took today makes our country stronger and better.”
Both books are essential for learning about the issues encompassed by gays serving in the military. The authors examine the problems from the inside out, with interviews and stories from veterans who were in the military as homosexuals before and after the 1993 federal law. We’ll be looking forward to what the Senate says this summer.
-alyssa