Meanwhile, annoying Willow plotline continues to be annoying. Seriously, how did we go from "magic is an ethically grey area that can lead to toxic adventures with dark dark things" to "spells don't really do shit other than make you feel good, it's your birthday!"
1When I first dyed my hair black when I was 15 and spending the summer taking classes at Yale, my father got very angry, despite the fact that black hair isn't all that different from my natural color. In the ensuing argument, I used the Angry Teen Strategy of Petulant Kids Everywhere, and said "It's my hair!" My father replied "No, it's not." I have lived every moment of my life since then understanding, rightly or wrongly, that he considers me his property.
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Date: 2010-05-25 06:14 pm (UTC)So there's nothing STOPPING discrimination against GBLTs AND the Pentagon is free to enact policies according to what it believes is necessary for:
"military readiness, military effectiveness, unit cohesion, and recruiting and retention of the Armed Forces."
Which are all the excuses used by the anti-gay forces against gays in the military
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Date: 2010-05-25 07:39 pm (UTC)I mean, I grant that the trigger thing isn't good. Ideally this would be a clean repeal, with no conditions to be satisfied first. But let's say for the sake of discussion that the conditions are satisfied within some reasonable time frame -- say, 18 to 24 months.
I'm beginning to have the impression, though, that people have meant something by the words "repeal DADT" that goes beyond repealing DADT. Because if/when the trigger is satisfied here, unless I'm missing something crucial that I haven't seen explained yet, DADT will in fact have been repealed. No, this doesn't implement specific anti-discrimination provisions, but legally that's a separate argument: repealing DADT doesn't automatically carry any such provisions with it, just as repealing the ban on women in combat wouldn't.
But yeah: if you expected to see antidiscrimination provisions, this compromise doesn't do it.