Steve T. May, an Arizona legislator and openly gay Army reserve lieutenant, spoke to students on Saturday about his personal fight against the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy.
May was honorably discharged from the Army Reserve last month for allegedly violating the "don't ask, don't tell" policy. He is appealing the decision.
About 40 students gathered in the Kirkland House Junior Common Room to hear the Republican state representative speak about the challenges he encounters as a gay public figure.
The event was sponsored by Beyond Our Normal Differences (BOND).
May discussed everything from fighting for domestic partnership benefits to flaws in "don't ask, don't tell" policies.
"When you have a law which says that gays and lesbians are inferior to serve their country, you're institutionalizing discrimination....The law has to change," May said.
He described the policy as unethical and impractical.
"This policy is beneath who we are as American people," he said, pointing to the nation's philosophy of individual rights. He also cited the impracticality of the policy. "We fire three to four soldiers everyday because of something they have said, 'I am gay,'" he said.
Read more in News
What's the scariest thing that's ever happened to you?Recommended Articles
-
BGLTSA Discusses Recent ViolenceStudents and leaders in the local gay community discussed violence against gays and at a monthly community meeting of the
-
A Moral ObligationIt has not been a good year for gay rights. The vicious murder of Matthew Shephard in Wyoming last fall
-
House Bill Banning Gay Marriage Draws Fire From ActivistsCITY & REGION In a hearing that brought religious leaders against gay-rights activists, the Massachusetts House Judiciary Committee discussed the
-
Liberal IntoleranceBeing an openly gay student and a member of the senior staff of The Harvard Salient, I've had to take
-
More Tolerance, EducationA pril is Queer Month at Harvard--and queer has been the response. Since Queer Month began, numerous events have been
-
Anti-Gay DiscriminationTo The Editors of The Crimson: I was distressed to find that your otherwise good article on anti-gay discrimination at