Sen. Joe Lieberman (seen here in a photo with repeal advocates on the front page of his Senate website) appeared on Andrea Mitchellâs show on MSNBC Monday morning and was asked about the repeal of Donât Ask Donât Tell, which Liberman supports but his fiend Sen. John McCain has been filibustering. Mitchell played video of McCain on Meet the Press where the Republican said he would only listen to military commanders, not the study conducted by the Pentagon on the impact of repealing DADT. Hereâs the exchange:
Mitchell: With all due respect, I was kind of stunned because â what about Mike Mullen â Admiral Mike Mullen is the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs. They [the commanders] report to him. If itâs good enough for him and for [Defense Sec.] Robert Gates and if this is the survey we understand is coming out in December â why isnât it good enough for John McCain?
Lieberman: Well, of course, in this case, I disagree strongly with my friend John McCain and I agree with you. The fact is that this is a policy â weâve had thousands of gay and lesbian Americans putting their lives on the line to protect our security and weâre telling them that basically theyâve got to lie about who they are.
I was so encouraged by the first indications of the study thatâs being done â thousands and thousands of our military personnel and their families questioned â more than 70 percent, apparently, have said, âNo Problemâ because in the classic situation when youâre in battle, you donât care what anybodyâs sexual orientation or race or gender or nationality or religion is. You care about whether theyâre going to fight well. And thatâs the way it ought to be.
And youâre right. The bill that â the measure that weâve put in doesnât automatically repeal Donâtâ Ask, Donâtâ Tell. It says that the President, the Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff have to certify â based on everything they know, including the study thatâs been done â that repealing Donâtâ Ask, Donâtâ Tell wonât compromise military effectiveness or morale. And thatâs pretty rationale so Iâm not giving up on us doing a repeal of Donâtâ Ask, Donât Tell during the lame duck session. To make that possible, I hope that the Defense Department can find a way to issue this report that theyâve got pretty much done â but theyâre going through clearance now â as quickly as possible. Certainly before December 1. Weâve got time to do this â and itâs the right thing to do.
DEVELOPING: 13 DADT repeal activists arrested at the White House. UPDATE: The arrests are underway; GE super-glued their handcuffs.

Here’s the GetEqual press release:
Washington, DC â This afternoon, three generations of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender veterans and advocates went back to the White House fence to call for the U.S. Senate, Majority Leader Harry Reid, and President Obama to make good on their promises to secure the repeal of âDonât Ask, Donât Tellâ during the abbreviated, lame-duck session of Congress that started today.â¨â¨During the direct action organized by GetEQUAL â a national lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) civil rights organization â and local activists, 13 veterans and advocates handcuffed themselves to the White House fence in an act of non-violent, civil disobedience protesting the un-American, discriminatory law yet to be repealed by Congress — regardless of the numerous promises by President Obama, Congressional leaders and national LGBT leaders that they would do so by the end of this year.â¨â¨Photos and video of the three generations of veterans and repeal advocates taking part in an act of civil disobedience today at the White House will soon be available online at www.getequal.org. Also, you can visit GetEQUALâs Facebook page (www.facebook.com/getequal) to stay up-to-date regarding the well-being and release of the 13 veterans and advocates arrested today.â¨â¨The 13 veterans and repeal advocates arrested today include:
â˘Â               Five veterans (Lt. Dan Choi, Petty Officer Autumn Sandeen, Cpl. Evelyn Thomas, and Cadet Mara Boyd) who were arrested back in March during the GetEQUAL organized âDonât Ask, Donât Tellâ act of civil disobedience at the White House fence demanding President Obama show leadership on repeal.
â˘Â               Robin McGehee, co-founder and director of GetEQUAL, and Dan Fotou, action strategist for GetEQUAL.
â˘Â               Former U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Miriam Ben-Shalom, who was discharged in 1976 for declaring and admitting she was a lesbian. She became the first-ever LGBT servicemember reinstated to her position in the U.S. Military, by a U.S. Federal District Court. On July 30th, 1993, Miriam and 26 other protesters were arrested at the White House fence for protesting then-President Bill Clintonâs broken promise to repeal the gay ban â instead signing the âDonât Ask, Donât Tellâ bill into law.
â˘Â               Former U.S. Marine Corps Sergeant Justin Elzie who, in 1993, became the first Marine ever investigated and discharged under the âDonât Ask, Donât Tellâ law. Elzie was also the first soldier to be discharged under “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” to fight his discharge and win â resulting in his service as a Marine for four years as an openly gay man.
â˘Â               Former U.S. Army Arabic Linguist Ian Finkenbinder, who was discharged from the Army in December 2004 after announcing to his superiors that he was gay. Finkenbinder is an Iraq war veteran and was about to return for a second tour of duty when he was discharged.
â˘Â               U.S. Army Veteran and Repeal Advocate Rob Smith, who was deployed to both Iraq and Kuwait before being honorably discharged after deciding not to re-enlist in the U.S. Army due to the added pressure of living under the âDonât Ask, Donât Tellâ law.
â˘Â               Father Geoff Farrow, a Catholic priest who spoke out against the churchâs official stance in support of Californiaâs Proposition 8, removing the rights of same-sex couples to marry. Because of his courageous stance against Prop 8, Father Geoff Farrow was removed as pastor of St. Paulâs by his bishop and suspended as a priest.
â˘Â               Scott Wooledge, a New York-based LGBT civil rights advocate and blogger who has written extensively on the movement to repeal âDonât Ask, Donât Tellâ at Daily Kos and Pam’s House Blend.
â˘Â               Michael Bedwell, long-time LGBT civil rights advocate, close friend of Leonard Matlovich, and administrator of the site www.leonardmatlovich.com.
âOn the White House fence today, and in a jail cell this evening, are thirteen American patriots,â said Robin McGehee, co-founder and director of GetEQUAL. âIncluded in the thirteen arrested are veterans and advocates spanning three generations of brave and courageous Americans, who sacrificed their careers and lives to see the day this discriminatory ban on openly gay and lesbian service in the military finally goes into the history books. Today, we have sent a loud and clear message to the U.S. Senate and President Obama that we expect them to make good on their promises to end this inhumane law this year, during the lame-duck session of Congress.â
âToday, I stand again at the White House fence â 17 years later â still protesting the injustice and hypocrisy of a failed law,â said former U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Miriam Ben-Shalom. âAnd with us today is not only the spirit of Lieutenant Enslin, the first to be discharged from the U.S. Military for being gay, but also standing here in spirit are every young woman and man awaiting discharge under the shameful âDonât Ask, Donât Tellâ law. Â They are here and we are here, all together still America’s daughters and sons, still willing to serve and protect this country. I sincerely pray our countryâs elected leaders in Congress and the White House will have the courage to repeal this law and make this the last time I have to come back to this fence and be arrested in protest of a law in direct contrast with our values and beliefs as Americans.
Earlier today at the National Congressional Cemetery, GetEQUAL â along with veterans and other âDonât Ask, Donât Tellâ repeal advocates â held a vigil at the gravesite of Sgt. Leonard Matlovich. Matlovich, a recipient of both the Purple Heart and Bronze Star, made headlines in the 1970s after he came out as openly gay and fought to stay in the U.S. Air Force â landing him on the cover of Time Magazine. Matlovichâs tombstone at the Congressional Cemetery is meant to be a memorial to all gay veterans and is inscribed with the well-known phrase: “When I was in the military, they gave me a medal for killing two men and a discharge for loving one.” The vigil, held to coincide with the start of the lame-duck session of Congress, sent a clear and frank message to the United States Senate â repeal âDonât Ask, Donât Tellâ now!â¨â¨To view photos and video from the vigil earlier today, please go to www.getequal.org or www.facebook.com/getequal.â¨â¨GetEQUAL will continue to engage throughout the week in actions pressuring the Senate to repeal the discriminatory âDonât Ask, Donât Tellâ law. The lame-duck session began today, and is expected to run approximately two weeks â or until leadership has the votes to call adjournment. With Congressional leaders such as John McCain and Carl Levin in discussions over the “Donât Ask Donât Tell” policy, national activists across party lines are making their voices heard.â¨â¨GetEQUAL is a national, direct action lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender civil rights organization. Emphasizing direct action and people power, the mission of GetEQUAL is to empower the LGBT community and its allies to take action to demand full legal and social equality, and to hold accountable those who stand in the way. For more information on GetEQUAL, please visit: http://www.getequal.org. You can follow GetEQUAL on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/getequal, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/GetEQUAL, or on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/getequal.

{ 2 trackbacks }
{ 0 comments… add one now }