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The Daily Dish - 2006-2011 archives for The Daily Dish, featuring Andrew Sullivan

Stephanopoulos and Don't Ask, Don't Tell

By The Daily Dish
Jun 10 2007, 3:24 AM ET

A reader writes:

I just watched This Week with George Stephanopoulos on ABC. Stephanopoulos asked the roundtable whether the next Democratic president should try to abolish DADT right away and risk the same backlash that Bill Clinton experienced in the opening days of his presidency.

Stephanopoulos was a leading advisor to Bill Clinton when a wave of homophobia swept the nation on the issue of gays in the military. Stephanopoulos was clearly reliving that nightmare in his mind in asking this particular question. To my disappointment, almost every member of the roundtable immediately agreed that a Democratic president should wait before tampering with DADT. Most of these journalists were young and should know better that a sea change in attitudes toward gay people has taken place since the early '90s.

The only person who was aware of this major transformation was George Will, the oldest one sitting at the table. He explained how his 26 year old daughter and all her friends view being gay as no different than being left handed. This accepting attitude is shared by a majority of Americans under 30, the age group that fills the ranks of the military. As he often does on the This Week roundtable, George Will put the other  journalists in their place, this time in support of an immediate lifting of the noxious Don’t Ask Don’t Tell policy, a policy that actually puts our nation’s security at risk, contrary to what its supporters claim.

Stephanopoulos represents a certain class of Clintonite Democrat: still so spooked by the 1990s that they cannot move forward. He also promoted Clinton's anti-gay policy initiatives as a wedge against the Republicans. Alas, many tired Democratic pros are encouraged in their cravenness by the conviction-free HRC and big gay donors, many of whom are also old, and have come to believe their own permament defensive crouch is political realism. George Will remains the class of the conservative punditocracy. Over the last few years, he has put the rest of us to shame.

The truth is: anyone who is serious about winning this war will not be throwing good soldiers on the scrap-heap to cater to fear. It seems to me we should cede anti-gay bigotry to our Islamist enemies. We're better than them. Or aren't we?



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