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August 1,
2006
Profiles
in Patriotism:
Pain
in the Present: One Year Later
T.
M. Smith
Introduction
by Jim Maloney, Executive Director of Military
Equality Alliance:
"Tim Smith
is a Marine who was discharged under the
military's "don't ask, don't tell" law
because he is gay. His sexual orientation was
reported to the Marine Corps by his minister, just
before he was to deploy to Iraq as a leader of his
unit. He was held in high regard by his fellow
Marines and would prefer to still be serving
today. Tim was a regular contributor to Military
Education Initiative's "Service Member
Stories" - read his essays under Michael/T.M.
at http://www.military-education.org/stories/index.html."
On 15
June 2005, a young Marine boarded a plane from
Yuma, AZ on a trip that would eventually return
him to his home base in Beaufort, SC. He boarded
the plane in the same daze that had overtaken him
two days earlier, when he was told that he could
no longer be a Marine. Gone were his dreams of
becoming a "career" Marine. Gone were
the hopes of leading his unit in Iraq. The
Sergeant chevrons he carried around in his breast
pocket would never make their way onto his collar.
His crime was not related to drug use,
misappropriation, or failure in training. His
crime was far more obtuse, yet just as much a
violation of the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
He was gay.
Though
only a Corporal, the young Marine had been the
supervisor for his unit’s Logistics and
Embarkation section. His peers and superiors all
looked to him not only for the safe transportation
of equipment and personnel but housing, food, and
other miscellaneous day-to-day concerns that kept
the unit functioning. He had been finishing the
final plans for the unit’s departure to Iraq in
just under a month, when he was summoned by the
Commanding Officer. The conversation and actions
that followed would mark the beginning of the end
for the promising young Corporal’s career in the
military.
Onto the
plane, he carried with him a Discharge Package,
the contents of which consisted of all the legal
paperwork for his out-processing, the evidence
presented against him, and letters of
recommendation for an Honorable Discharge. His
commander’s letter closed with the sentence,
"Corporal Smith will be near impossible to
replace." The words both comforted and cut
him to the core.
The
Moonlighters, his unit’s nickname, had not
wanted to see him discharged. However, their hands
were forced by the dreadful determination of a
former Naval Chaplain to see the young man
discharged from the military. The Naval Captain had come to possess a hard copy of an
online Yahoo personals ad declaring the Marine’s
sexuality. After confronting the young Marine and
being rebuffed in his offers to "help
change" the young man, the now Southern
Baptist minister took the evidence to the Marine
Corps.
As he was
being processed from the military into
"civilian life," the young man battled
the mix of rage and desperation welling within
him. He had a home and bills to pay. More
importantly, he was losing the one thing in his
life about which he truly cared. He knew the ethos
that said, "Once a Marine, Always a
Marine," but this brought little comfort to
the widening gap of misery deep within his spirit.
A little more than two months later on 16 August,
the young man signed the final paperwork
effectively ending his time in the United States
Marine Corps.
I know
the details of this young man’s story so well
because I am that young man. A year has not
changed much. I watch a flag wave in the breeze or
hear the national anthem played, and I feel the
numbing cold sting of rejection and injustice
creep back into the core of my being. I would love
to say that my story was one-of-a-kind: a freak
anomaly in the overall system of military
governance. Unfortunately, mine is not a unique
story.
In 2005,
almost two service members per day were discharged
from the United States military under the
"Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell" policy. Even
as our military’s manpower is stretched nearly
to the breaking point due to international
commitments, those in charge still find it
necessary to discharge fully qualified, trained,
and seasoned veterans. This policy of intolerance
and prejudice fostered by the Department of
Defense is the only one of its kind among the
various entities of our, American government, and
applies only to members of the armed forces.
Senators, Secret Service agents, even civilian
contractors entrenched with our fighting forces
are not discriminated against simply due to their
sexual orientation.
The
Military Readiness Enhancement Act sponsored by
Massachusetts Congressman Marty Meehan has slowly
but consistently built support in the House.
Though even with 119 co-sponsors, representatives
are still reluctant to add their names to the
list. Citing everything from lack of constituent
input on the issue to a recent remark by Arizona
Senator John McCain that "…Don’t Ask, Don’t
Tell works," our elected officials continue
to find other means for recruitment and retention
of service members. Officials have even gone so
far as to revamp Army training so that fewer
enlistees fail out, as noted in the July 13th, USA
Today article by Tom Vanden Brook.
On August
16th 2005, my career as a United States Marine
ended. The country, whose freedom’s I had bled
and fought for to protect, had shut me out. A job
anywhere else was fine. But to be an active duty
soldier was above the "gay" ceiling.
What must we, who want to defend our country but
are blocked by antiquated and unnecessary
policies, do in order to have that freedom? Being
trapped inside of the proverbial closet is not
acceptable. With Korea, Lebanon, and Iran at the
boiling point, who will be left to answer the call
when all other options have been taken?
We are
not the last resort! Many of us have already
passed through the fire. We know what it takes to
be a war-fighter and we have proved such in our
training and careers. Many more stand ready to do
so. Our time has come, yet still, we are the ones
waiting. One year has passed in my wait, how much
longer will I have to? How much longer will you?
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