I am going into full pit bull mode on this story, so if it does not interest you, then the k+b wont be the place for you for a while.
A little back ground. Lt Choi is a West Point Grad and an ARAB LANGUAGE LINGUIST in the Army. Gosh, you would think we would need more of these, but nope. He is being kicked out of the Army because he is black , Jewish , uses a wheel chair , gay. Has not done ANYTHING wrong. Is just gay.
But this West Point grad is not simply going the old solider route. This West Point grad is fighting back.
By Lt. Daniel Choi
Open Letter to President Obama and Every Member of Congress:
I have learned many lessons in the ten years since I first raised my right hand at the United States Military Academy at West Point and committed to fighting for my country. The lessons of courage, integrity, honesty and selfless service are some of the most important.
At West Point, I recited the Cadet Prayer every Sunday. It taught us to “choose the harder right over the easier wrong” and to “never be content with a half truth when the whole can be won.” The Cadet Honor Code demanded truthfulness and honesty. It imposed a zero-tolerance policy against deception, or hiding behind comfort.
Following the Honor Code never bowed to comfortable timing or popularity. Honor and integrity are 24-hour values. That is why I refuse to lie about my identity.
I have personally served for a decade under Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell: an immoral law and policy that forces American soldiers to deceive and lie about their sexual orientation. Worse, it forces others to tolerate deception and lying. These values are completely opposed to anything I learned at West Point. Deception and lies poison a unit and cripple a fighting force.
As an infantry officer, an Iraq combat veteran and a West Point graduate with a degree in Arabic, I refuse to lie to my commanders. I refuse to lie to my peers. I refuse to lie to my subordinates. I demand honesty and courage from my soldiers. They should demand the same from me.
I am committed to applying the leadership lessons I learned at West Point. With 60 other LGBT West Point graduates, I helped form our organization, Knights Out, to fight for the repeal of this discriminatory law and educate cadets and soldiers after the repeal occurs. When I receive emails from deployed soldiers and veterans who feel isolated, alone, and even suicidal because the torment of rejection and discrimination, I remember my leadership training: soldiers cannot feel alone, especially in combat. Leaders must reach out. They can never diminish the fighting spirit of a soldier by tolerating discrimination and isolation. Leaders respect the honor of service. Respecting each soldier’s service is my personal promise.
When Sam Nunn put the fear of brave American boys being in the shower in freaking submarines with creepy gay guys and got the insipid DON'T ASK DON'T TELL put into law, He nor anyone else ( INCLUDING PRESIDENT CLINTON.... that is not forgotten here , at all..) NEVER expected a strong, brave solider like Lt. Choi to fight them.
2009..... UN-BELIEVABLE , and UN-ACCEPTABLE.
I am going to be calling and writing my all lefty Congressman, ANNAPOLIS grad ,Eric Massa about this.
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