Frontlines: The Latest from OutServe-SLDN

Guest Blog: LGBT Literature a Cornerstone of Equality

As OutServe-SLDN begins a new chapter in the fight to secure equal opportunity, equal protection and equal benefits for LGBT service members and veterans, I want to recognize the role that authors, publishers and readers of LGBT literature have played – and will continue to play – in winning the freedom to serve.

Groundbreaking books like Allan Berube’s Coming Out Under Fire (1990) and Randy Shilt’s Conduct Unbecoming: Lesbians and Gays in the Military from Vietnam to the Persian Gulf Wars (1993) focused attention on the inequities in our military and helped set the stage for the fight against DADT. Heart-wrenching autobiographies like Joe Steffan’s Honor Bound (1992), Jose Zuniga’s Soldier of the Year (1995) and Grethe Cammermeyer’s Serving In Silence (2005) garnered public support by putting a human face on the issues. Dozens of other works helped advance the debate and galvanize support.

And this year’s The End of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell: The Impact In Studies and Personal Essays By Service Members and Veterans (Huffman and Schultz, eds) published by the Marine Corps University Press shows just how important the victory over DADT was to our Armed Forces – and our nation. Like so many other fans of LGBT literature and of fairness and justice, I look forward to reading the next wave of books about the lives of our brave service members and the continuing fight for full military equality.

About the Author: Former SLDN Interim Executive Director Kathleen DeBold is the Administrator of the Lambda Literary Awards, a signature program of the Lambda Literary Foundation whose mission is to nurture, celebrate, and preserve LGBT literature. For more information: www.lambdaliterary.org.

By Kathleen DeBold, former SLDN Interim Executive Director | Comment (0)

“This is the White House Calling”

“This is the White House calling, can you join us for a Veterans Day breakfast?” That was last Friday morning in San Diego and Veterans Day was two days away, but I didn’t hesitate to accept!

As a 23-year Navy veteran and national co-chair of OutServe-Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, I was thrilled to join leaders from four dozen veterans service organizations, military service chiefs and senior political appointees to celebrate Veterans Day with the president.

Arriving at the White House gate, we were all checked against the official guest list, quickly processed through security and whisked into the East Wing where we were greeted by uniformed military White House aides. Passing through a gourmet buffet line, we entered the east room which was arranged with seating for approximately 200 guests, and I found a seat facing the entrance so as not to miss anything! I was not disappointed because in addition to other veterans leaders I was honored to shake hands with the Honorable Eric Shinseki, Secretary of Veterans Affairs (and former Chief of Staff of the Army) and the Honorable Ray Mabus, Secretary of the Navy, who joined my table for breakfast.

Following breakfast we were all escorted into the adjacent room to meet President Barack Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and Dr. Jill Biden in a receiving line. With a firm handshake and a warm smile, President Obama thanked me for my service and I thanked him for all he had done for veterans and encouraged him to do a little more!

Our next stop was Arlington National Cemetery and the Tomb of the Unknowns. After a short bus ride over the Potomac River, we all joined the audience in the amphitheater while President Obama laid a wreath at the tomb at precisely eleven o’clock on the eleventh day of the eleventh month. This time commemorates the Armistice that ended World War I. A 21-gun salute rang out across the quiet hills and a lone bugler played “Taps” in honor of our fallen heroes. The president and official party then joined us inside the amphitheater for a parade of flags by veterans groups, patriotic music, a prayer and official remarks by Shinseki and the president.

The president’s address and Veterans Day Proclamation reminded us that, “The freedoms we cherish endure because of their [veterans] service and sacrifice and our country must strive to honor our veterans by fulfilling our responsibilities to them and upholding the sacred trust we share with all who have served.”

I left the amphitheater filled with a great deal of pride, yet humbled by those who sacrificed so much more than I. In a quiet moment alone, I watched the changing of the guard at the Tomb of the Unknowns and then veterans groups pay their respects by laying their own wreaths at the tomb. Standing high on that hill, overlooking neat rows of headstones, the Capitol and the Pentagon, was a somber reminder that our freedom is not free.

 

By Captain April Heinze, USN (Retired), Co-Chair, OS-SLDN Board of Directors | Comment (0)

An Honor to Serve

I've been surprised and incredibly humbled by all those who have sent me notes and messages today thanking me for my military service. I remember my father, a Vietnam veteran, telling me how strange receiving such thanks felt to him and not knowing how to respond. Like him, I've found myself at a loss for words several times today.

A song, written by Ray Boltz (a Christian musician and proud gay man), captures best what I wish I could say to all those who've so kindly expressed their gratitude to me. It tells the story of Jeremiah Denton, a naval aviator who spent almost eight years in a POW camp and survived unspeakable torture before being freed in 1973. When he arrived in the Philippines, he said,

"We are honored to have had the opportunity to serve our country under difficult circumstances. We are profoundly grateful to our Commander-in-Chief and to our nation for this day. God bless America." 

That's how I feel about my service - it was an honor.

I'm grateful to have had the opportunity to serve in the U.S. Army. I'm grateful for the example of service above self set for me by my father, Command Sergeant Major (retired) Donald Robinson, my grandfathers, Technical Sergeant Elston Robinson and Sergeant George Conley, and so many others. I'm grateful to have served with so many exemplary soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines, especially my classmates in the West Point class of 1994. Among them, I'm particularly grateful for the example of my wife, Captain Danyelle Robinson, who served under more difficult circumstances than I with courage and distinction. Finally, I'm grateful for the friendship and camaraderie of my fellow LGBT veterans, and particularly my transgender brothers and sisters who proudly wore our nation's uniform.

To my former comrades in arms with whom I disagree on many of the issues of the day, on this day I thank you, too, for your service. I'm grateful to have stood alongside you in the defense of our country, a country where our freedom to disagree is enshrined in the law. Like many of you, I have stood on the soil of countries where this is not the case. Like you, I'm so grateful to have had the chance to return home, especially when so many of our friends did not. We honor their memory, I believe, when we strive to make America an even better place to live, even when that striving pits us against one another.

Recently my eldest son has been talking about attending the United States Naval Academy and becoming a sailor. I will confess the thought of him in harm's way frightens me in ways I've never known before, and losing him - or any of my children - would be a loss I don't know how I would bear. And yet, I believe he is beginning to feel in his heart the same stirring of the call to selfless service that I first felt at his age - the call that led my grandfathers to the skies over Europe and to the Pacific, that led my father to Vietnam and to Kosovo, and that led me to Korea, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait. For that, too, I am grateful.

Thank you, friends, for your kindness today. It was truly an honor to serve.

It's an honor to serve, to join in the fight,
To lift up my voice, to lay down my life.
Giving glory to God, seeking none in return,
It's an honor, an honor to serve.

By Allyson Robinson, OutServe-SLDN Executive Director | Comment (0)

Let’s Celebrate… Then Let’s Make History Again

By Allyson D. Robinson

This week our LGBT community helped make history, as voters across the nation rejected homophobia practically en masse to protect our civil rights and affirm out humanity. We've listed our wins so often since Tuesday that they now roll like a litany off our tongues: President Obama, reelected; marriage equality's disheartening record of defeat at the ballot box, reversed; America's first openly gay Senator on her way to Washington and a cadre of lesbian, gay and bisexual representatives stepping up to take her place in the House. (By the way: well done, LGBT community.)

Some commentators declared that I'd made history myself just two weeks ago when I was named the first Executive Director of the new OutServe-SLDN, the nation's advocacy organization for LGBT service members, veterans and their families. When asked how it felt, becoming the first transgender person to lead a national LGBT civil rights organization, all I could say was that it was unbelievably humbling, a little overwhelming, and that I was glad to be joining a team that has become accustomed to making history. 

To read the entire article click here.

 

 

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Group seeks to clean up paperwork for outed troops

By Leo Shane

Stars and Stripes

WASHINGTON — For the last 18 years, Ross Peterson was reluctant to share his military discharge paperwork with anyone.

“For job interviews, for veterans preference, for veterans benefits, they all want to see your DD-214,” the Army veteran said. “But mine was stamped less-than-honorable with ‘engaged in homosexual acts’ across it. So every time I had to show it, I was outing myself.”

To read the entire article click here

 

By Leo Shane
Stars and Stripes
WASHINGTON — For the last 18 years, Ross Peterson was reluctant to share his military discharge paperwork with anyone.
“For job interviews, for veterans preference, for veterans benefits, they all want to see your DD-214,” the Army veteran said. “But mine was stamped less-than-honorable with ‘engaged in homosexual acts’ across it. So every time I had to show it, I was outing myself.”
To read the entire article click hereBy Leo Shane
Stars and Stripes
WASHINGTON — For the last 18 years, Ross Peterson was reluctant to share his military discharge paperwork with anyone.
“For job interviews, for veterans preference, for veterans benefits, they all want to see your DD-214,” the Army veteran said. “But mine was stamped less-than-honorable with ‘engaged in homosexual acts’ across it. So every time I had to show it, I was outing myself.”
To read the entire article click hereBy Leo Shane
Stars and Stripes
WASHINGTON — For the last 18 years, Ross Peterson was reluctant to share his military discharge paperwork with anyone.
“For job interviews, for veterans preference, for veterans benefits, they all want to see your DD-214,” the Army veteran said. “But mine was stamped less-than-honorable with ‘engaged in homosexual acts’ across it. So every time I had to show it, I was outing myself.”
To read the entire article click hereBy Leo Shane
Stars and Stripes
WASHINGTON — For the last 18 years, Ross Peterson was reluctant to share his military discharge paperwork with anyone.
“For job interviews, for veterans preference, for veterans benefits, they all want to see your DD-214,” the Army veteran said. “But mine was stamped less-than-honorable with ‘engaged in homosexual acts’ across it. So every time I had to show it, I was outing myself.”
To read the entire article click 

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OutServe & SLDN Issue Uniform Guidance for Upcoming Conference

We are looking forward to the upcoming OutServe-SLDN International Leadership Conference taking place in Orlando, FL, October 25-28. A number of attendees have asked for dress and uniform guidance for the conference, and we are happy to provide the following. 

For the conference itself, including associated meals and side events, attendees should dress in casual to business-casual attire. Service members should wear civilian attire. For the gala dinner on Saturday night, attendees should be in business attire. Service members may wear the equivalent uniform if they choose. For each service, the equivalent uniform is:

  • United States Army - The Army Service Uniform (ASU), or equivalent Class A (“greens”) if you do not have the ASU.
  • United States Navy - Service Dress Blues
  • United States Air Force - Service Dress Uniform
  • United States Marine Corps - Blue Dress “B”
  • United States Coast Guard - Service Dress Blue

All uniforms should be worn with appropriate ribbons and badges, if permitted. We look forward to seeing you in Orlando later this month! If you haven't yet registered, there's still time. Just visit www.outserve.org to reserve your space.

By David McKean, SLDN Legal Director | Comment (0)

Coming Out: Muted Reflections

By Brynn Tannehill

Despite leaving the Navy twoyears ago, my life still revolves around the military. I work with my adopted Air Force brothers and sisters, and my involvement with OutServe keeps me in touch with a wide variety of people from different branches. Some are enlisted, some are officers, and they come from many different career fields.
In an online discussion, the topic of what we all loved about our jobs came up, and I couldn’t help but reminisce about the almost Zen-like feeling of a good day flying the helo. Others chimed in, and it wasn’t hard to see the pride, passion, and dedication everyone found in what they did and who they worked with. What they wrote put me right there in the moment, and helped me see why they love being a part the profession of arms. My spouse suggested I share these stories in my blog, and I agreed others should hear them. Some are funny. Some are about camaraderie. Some are about being good at what you do. They all make you proud to have such dedicated Sailors, Soldiers, Airmen, and Marines out there “standing on the wall.”

Despite leaving the Navy twoyears ago, my life still revolves around the military. I work with my adopted Air Force brothers and sisters, and my involvement with OutServe keeps me in touch with a wide variety of people from different branches. Some are enlisted, some are officers, and they come from many different career fields.

In an online discussion, the topic of what we all loved about our jobs came up, and I couldn’t help but reminisce about the almost Zen-like feeling of a good day flying the helo. Others chimed in, and it wasn’t hard to see the pride, passion, and dedication everyone found in what they did and who they worked with. What they wrote put me right there in the moment, and helped me see why they love being a part the profession of arms. My spouse suggested I share these stories in my blog, and I agreed others should hear them. Some are funny. Some are about camaraderie. Some are about being good at what you do. They all make you proud to have such dedicated Sailors, Soldiers, Airmen, and Marines out there “standing on the wall.”

To read the entire article click here

 

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‘Tis the Season for the Combined Federal Campaign!

The Combined Federal Campaign (CFC) season is upon us. This means military personnel, as well as federal and state employees, have the opportunity to help organizations like SLDN through this once-a-year initiative. You can find us under the Military, Veteran & Patriotic Service Organization section, #12111.

If you are currently using the CFC to make your charitable donations, we urge you to list Servicemembers Legal Defense Network and help fund our ongoing work to ensure full LGBT equality in our military. With “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” (DADT) now in the history books, we need your help more than ever as we continue our work on behalf of the nation’s LGBT service members. That includes:

- Advocating for legally married service members to receive the same family support and benefits as their straight married counterpart
- Litigating in the courts, as necessary and timely, to advance equality
- Assisting veterans to correct or upgrade their discharge paperwork
- Representing and defending those who may face harassment or discrimination as we oversee implementation of DADT repeal
- Fighting for full LGBT equality in America’s military

But remember, the CFC is just one way to support the work of equality. You can also make a direct gift to help us today by clicking here.

Regardless of how you choose to support SLDN as we head into the final months of 2012, we thank you for your continued support.

By David Hall, SLDN Development Director | Comment (0)

‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’: Transgender Officers On Secretly Serving In The U.S. Military (VIDEO)

"Don't Ask, Don't Tell" may have been repealed a year ago, but transgender people are still banned from serving in the military. Tackling the issue is HuffPost Live's Marc Lamont Hill, who is joined by former U.S. Navy pilot Brynn Tannehill, legal director for Service Members Legal Defense Network David McKean, President of Transgender American Vetrans Association Monica Helms, Communications Director at Outserve Sue Fulton, and Olivia, who is a transgender service member currently serving in the U.S. Navy.

Brynn, a transgender former U.S. Navy Pilot, noted, "I always really, really, really wanted to fly...I felt like I could fake it until I make it, and unfortunately it doesn't work out that way."

"Don't Ask, Don't Tell" may have been repealed a year ago, but transgender people are still banned from serving in the military. Tackling the issue is HuffPost Live's Marc Lamont Hill, who is joined by former U.S. Navy pilot Brynn Tannehill, legal director for Service Members Legal Defense Network David McKean, President of Transgender American Vetrans Association Monica Helms, Communications Director at Outserve Sue Fulton, and Olivia, who is a transgender service member currently serving in the U.S. Navy.

Brynn, a transgender former U.S. Navy Pilot, noted, "I always really, really, really wanted to fly...I felt like I could fake it until I make it, and unfortunately it doesn't work out that way."

To read the entire article click here.

 

 

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OutServe & SLDN Announce October Conference Panel Topics

From October 25-28, 2012, OutServe and SLDN will come together to host the Second Annual International Leadership Conference in Orlando, Florida. Registration numbers have already surpassed those of last year's conference, and we are looking forward to a great event.

Today, we are excited to unveil the topics for our conference panel sessions. Many of these topics were submitted by OutServe members or by organizations who are supporting the conference. Those are noted. We will be providing additional detail in the coming weeks about participants, but today, I wanted to share the topics with you. They are listed below.

- "One Year Out: Has DADT Repeal Impacted Readiness" by The Palm Center
- "Health and Mental Health Needs of LGBT Military Families" by Military Partners & Families Coalition
- "LGBT Military Families" by American Military Partners Association
- "Out Front (Of Change)" by Military Families Research Institute
- "2012 Electoral Landscape" by Human Rights Campaign
- "Diversity in the Military Chaplaincy and What It Means for LGB Troops" by Forum on the Military Chaplaincy
- "Collateral Damage: How DADT Caused LGBT Military to Circumvent Healthcare” by Memphis PFLAG Chapter
- "LGBT Workplace Inclusion: Trend Lines in Corporate America and Their Impact on You" by Human Rights Campaign
- "So you want to get married at a military chapel?" by Forum on the Military Chaplaincy
- "Deployed and Gay" by OutServe BAF
- "From Six to Nine: US Marriage Equality" by Human Rights Campaign
- "Lessons from our International Allies"
- "Suicide Prevention"
- "Transgender Service: What's Next and How Do We Win?"
- "A Discussion with OutServe & SLDN Leadership"

As you can see, it promises to be a robust and engaging conference. If you haven't already registered, I urge you to do that as soon as possible. See you in Orlando!

To register and attend the conference, click here

By Josh Seefried, OutServe Co-Director | Comment (0)

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