E
ERose
Guest
If your brother worked with women that means that he wasn’t in combat arms but rather support. Combat arms is a different lifestyle than support. Being in a support unit is more like a job and as such not as big of an issue since most of these units supply one or two man barrack rooms. In combat arms, if you are lucky to have barracks it is usually 4 men to a room and most of the time it is a open squad bay with communal showers. When on ship it an open room with absolutely no privacy. Being a Grunt (Infantryman) is a lifestyle and not a job. There are no women only men. We did everything together. We trained, ate, worked out, fought, showered, slept, etc. We were true brothers because we ate the same dirt and bled the same blood.My brother was a Marine. And he always told me that everyone knew who was gay and didn’t have a problem with them, because they were all brothers (and sisters!). It was one of those things for him that he noticed that the gay Marines were better at organising than he was, as well as asserting situations. And trust me, he wasn’t saying it to pamper me. He said it because it was true.
I also think that gay soldiers find it easier to treat everyone equally, because they know how it feels to be discriminated against.My brother told me about when one of his fellow Marines started making jokes of one of the women that was there. The gay Marine in the group grabbed him by the back of the neck and told him that it wasn’t a woman in front of him, but a Marine, and if he called a Marine those things he would end up with a beating. The man apologised and after that started taking that attitude…that gender didn’t matter as much as the uniform.
Here is one of the main problems that I see here. Everybody is equating serving in the military as just another job. Well it isn’t. It isn’t a job, especially in combat arms. It is a life and a sacrifice. The men that serve this country in combat arms are giving up years of their life and their health to insure that there is an America.
All of the pro-gay people on this board are only thinking of the gay men who may want to serve. No where are you even considering the men, who are fighting for your rights everyday. What about their rights? Don’t you think they have the right and the privilege to not have to deal with this mess? If you don’t shame on you.
I served 4 years in the Marine Corps as a grunt. In the entire regiment, I never met a gay man. Many were married and the rest hanged out together as a squad or platoon. No one hardly ever did anything by themselves.
Also the way all the pro-gay people are talking you would think that 50% of all men are gay. The truth of the matter is about 2% tops and it is probably closer to less than 1%.