Posted by Eugene Volokh:
Gay Arabic Speakers in the Military:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_05_03-2009_05_09.shtml#1241803104


   I assume from his last name that [1]Dan Choi, the Arabic-language
   specialist who is being dismissed because he's openly gay, is not of
   Middle Eastern extraction. But I take it that many Arabic-language
   specialists, including the gay ones, are.

   So my question (which I'm sure is not original): Wouldn't the gay
   Arabic speakers be especially likely to be loyal to us, and hostile to
   Islamic fundamentalists? As between a gay Arabic speaker who has ties
   to, say, Iraq or Saudi Arabia, and the straight Arabic speaker, whom
   would you trust more to lack hidden sympathies with violent Islamic
   extremism?

   Just to be clear -- I think it's entirely reasonable to worry about
   possible loyalty issues when it comes to selecting people for
   sensitive military or national security positions (whether high level
   or low), especially when the candidates are culturally, ethnically, or
   religiously linked to our enemies. For instance, I take it that the
   government should rightly have worried about this with regard to
   Russian immigrants like my family and me when the Cold War was still
   on, even though on balance the Russian immigrants were highly hostile
   to the country that they left. The normal antidiscrimination rules,
   important as they are, don't in my view apply equally to the military
   or national security, just as the normal sex discrimination laws don't
   apply equally to the military, and just as the normal free speech and
   search and seizure rules don't apply equally to the military or
   national security.

   This doesn't itself tell us what the government should do based on
   those worries. I think the answer depends on many factors, including
   the degree of harm that comes to people because of these connections
   (e.g., internment vs. some extra investigation, exclusion from the
   military vs. placing Japanese-American soldiers predominantly on the
   European front during World War II, a tendency to exclude from a vast
   range of military jobs vs. a tendency to exclude from the most
   security-sensitive jobs). But it does suggest that we should avoid
   policies that end up excluding those people as to whom the risk of
   disloyalty seems especially low. And that's entirely independent of
   your stand on whether sexual orientation discrimination is wrong in
   principle, or counterproductive in general (setting aside our current
   enemies' extreme hostility to homosexuality).

References

   1. 
http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/05/08/politics/politicalhotsheet/entry5001396.shtml

_______________________________________________
Volokh mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.powerblogs.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/volokh

Reply via email to