First, Pace on gays:
Chicago Tribune:
"I believe homosexual acts between two individuals are immoral and that we should not condone immoral acts," Pace said in a wide-ranging discussion with Tribune editors and reporters in Chicago. "I do not believe the United States is well served by a policy that says it is OK to be immoral in any way.
"As an individual, I would not want [acceptance of gay behavior] to be our policy, just like I would not want it to be our policy that if we were to find out that so-and-so was sleeping with somebody else's wife, that we would just look the other way, which we do not. We prosecute that kind of immoral behavior," Pace said.
A ban on adultery may strike some people as a little 19th century. But consider that military personnel have access to guns -- and RPGs and tanks and jets, etc. You kind of want to avoid situations that would make one person angry at another. However, a ban on homosexual activity lacks that sort of actual, real world reason. It exists only because some people find the idea distasteful. It's hard to think of a situation where it would cause a problem. At least, not a problem caused by gays.
Any problem serving with gays would be caused by bigots. Homophobia is the problem, not gays. It's like blaming minorities for racism -- it's bass ackward thinking. Pace is only reinforcing that backwards, blame-the-victim reasoning.
Meanwhile:
Helen Benedict, Salon:
As thousands of burned-out soldiers prepare to return to Iraq to fill President Bush's unwelcome call for at least 20,000 more troops, I can't help wondering what the women among those troops will have to face. And I don't mean only the hardships of war, the killing of civilians, the bombs and mortars, the heat and sleeplessness and fear.
I mean from their own comrades -- the men.
I have talked to more than 20 female veterans of the Iraq war in the past few months, interviewing them for up to 10 hours each for a book I am writing on the topic, and every one of them said the danger of rape by other soldiers is so widely recognized in Iraq that their officers routinely told them not to go to the latrines or showers without another woman for protection.
Women are warned not to go out alone at night at Camp Arifjan, Kuwait. "They call Camp Arifjan 'generator city' because it's so loud with generators that even if a woman screams she can't be heard," said Abbie Pickett, 24, a specialist with the 229th Combat Support Engineering Company...
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