[Vision2020] A Salute to Women in the Military: Veterans Day 2010
keely emerinemix
kjajmix1 at msn.com
Fri Nov 12 16:17:17 PST 2010
Thank you, Nick. There isn't one woman reading Vision 2020 today who hasn't been inspired by the courage and example of women like those you describe here. I echo your thanks to Tom and other Vision 2020 veterans for their bravery then and their integrity now.
Keely
www.keely-prevailingwinds.com
Date: Wed, 10 Nov 2010 17:47:24 -0500
From: nickgier at roadrunner.com
To: vision2020 at moscow.com
Subject: [Vision2020] A Salute to Women in the Military: Veterans Day 2010
Hail to the Vision!
This is my radio commentary/column for the week. The full version is attached as a PDF. I would be interested in Wayne Price's observations (or Tom's) observations on this topic.
One of my first grievances as a faculty union officer involved “command” rape. A department head had deliberately recruited a woman with the understanding that she be his lover. When the relationship turned sour, her evaluations went south. This was the late 1970s and the best I could offer I could get from a very reluctant administration (I had to deliver the love letters before they would take it seriously!) was a positive recommendation for another job. The department chair was not punished in any way.
Thanks to Tom and all other veterans on the Viz. for your service,
Nick
A SALUTE TO WOMEN IN THE MILITARY: VETERANS DAY 2010
On November 16, 1943, the New York World-Telegram ran a story with the title “Nation’s Only Feminine Test Pilots.” Three members of the Women's Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) were assigned to test fly Gruman Hellfire fighters and Avenger torpedo bombers at Gruman’s Long Island plant. By the end of the war over 1,000 women pilots had tested all types of aircraft (including the first jet in 1944), and they had ferried over 12,650 fighters and bombers to bases around the world.
Fast forward to August of 1972, when Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Elmo Zumwalt instructed his officers to "eliminate any disadvantage to women resulting from either legal or attitudinal restrictions." This led to female sailors being assigned to ships, trained as fighter pilots, and just recently, given submarine duty.
The Army started training female helicopter pilots in 1974, and in 1976 the Air Force allowed women to enter pilot training programs. Still, female military pilots were barred from combat until 1993. As a sign of progress, Major Nicole Malachowski was the first female pilot to join the Air Force’s premier Thunderbirds in 2006, and in 2008 Commander Sara Joyner was the first woman to head up a F-18 squadron. She is in charge of a dozen Tom Cat fighters as well as 245 pilots and support crew.
In Iraq and Afghanistan army patrols now routinely include women soldiers, primarily because they are needed to calm, frisk, and provide medical care to the Muslim women in the houses that are searched. In one instance a Special Forces unit needed an experienced .50 caliber machine gunner and the best available recruit was a woman.
While performing their duties very well, women in the military face a number of problems. The most serious is constant sexual harassment, which is largely responsible for a higher number of cases of Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome among women soldiers and sailors. Strong sexual harassment policies have been in place since 1980, but military women, about one third according to a 2008 survey, are still being intimidated and assaulted. The lower civilian rate of 1 in 6 is still not to be tolerated.
The most dramatic case is that of Suzanne Rich, who was court-martialed for refusing to re-deploy to Iraq. Interviewed on NPR, her mother Sarah Rich said that her daughter described her situation as one of prey being hunted down by predators. The alleged rape by her own sergeant was never prosecuted.
A recent study has revealed that more women than men are leaving military service because of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell (DADT). Even though the number of gays and lesbians discharged is going down, the percentage of lesbians leaving is increasing. The Associated Press (10-8-09) reports that “the disparity was particularly striking in the Air Force, where women represented 20 percent of all personnel but 61 percent of those expelled.”
Calling it “lesbian baiting,” former Marine Anuradha Bhagwati is quoted by the AP: “Often times the lesbians under my command were under scrutiny by the same men who were also sexually harassing straight women, so it was this kind of sexist undercurrent of ‘You don't belong here.’”
Desperately needed pilots, linguists, nurses, and doctors--many of them decorated officers--are being forced out because of DADT, which has now been found to violate the 14th Amendment.
Marine Corps Captain Julie Sohn, after having served seven months in the Iraq’s hot-spot Falluja, was fired out after criticizing Pentagon policy on guys and lesbians. She said that she simply got tired to questions about why she did not have a boyfriend.
On September 25, 2010, former flight and lesbian nurse Margaret Witt won reinstatement from a district court judge. Witt’s colleagues testified that rather than hinder “unit morale and cohesion”—a common charge by those opposed to homosexuals in the military—her presence enhanced it.
The Obama Administration believes that DADT should be overturned by the will of the people through Congress (the repeal is stalled in the Senate), but equal rights under the Constitution is not an issue for a majority vote. As John Stuart Mill wrote in his famous essay On Liberty, the rights of a minority of one must be protected under the law.
Nick Gier taught philosophy at the University of Idaho for 31 years.
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