theprestige
Penultimate Amazing
I disagree.Firing people based on transgender status by painting every single transgender servicemember as negatively impacting "readiness, lethality, cohesion, honesty, humility, uniformity, and integrity" is irrationally prejudicial; basing policy on our irrational prejudices is an actual social problem.
Look, either it's a mental health issue that causes distress and impairs performance without certain accommodations, in which case a blanket ban on service is reasonable...
Or it's an optional affectation, and a denial of accommodation as a condition of service is reasonable.
As they say, "keep it simple". Bespoke, nuanced accommodations for a tiny demographic that will become depressed and suicidal without them isn't worth the effort.Had the policy been something more neutral like "Soldiers requiring regular injections cannot serve at forward operating bases" then we'd be having a nuanced argument about where to draw the line in terms of operational goals, but this policy is just a blanket ban on service.
Basic training, MOS training, 6 years reserve service, first as a file clerk, then as an intel analyst. Assigned to a PSYOP battalion HQ, in both MOS's. Also assigned for most of that time as a section driver, responsible for maintaining and operating the section HMMWV. Also got to chauffer the BN commander around in his POV once or twice. All of this during the peak of Clinton-era "don't ask, don't tell". Why do you ask?What's your experience with military service?
