So, on Thursday, breaking news was cybered to me and, most
probably, to many of you. Chuck Wolfe, president and CEO of the Gay and Lesbian
Victory Fund, wrote that Barack Obama will honor Harvey Milk with the
Presidential Medal of Freedom, celebrating Milk’s “incredible power of being
out, speaking out and demanding the equality we all deserve.” Milk was a man
who “gained real power and used it to expand freedom and equality.”
Barack Obama, at one time, spoke out on behalf of gays. When
he was transformational.
Remember that Barack Obama -- the senator on the path to the
presidency who was committed to ending discrimination of gays in the military?
He was searing in his criticism of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell (DADT), describing it
as:
. . . a policy that is antithetical to
the values of honor and integrity that our military holds most dear. Patriotic
gay and lesbian Americans are now told that they may serve their country only
if they hide their true identities. They are forced to live a lie as the price
of risking their lives for their country.
Candidate Obama pledged to fully repeal DADT by developing
procedures -- a broad plan of action:
[This] will require the implementation
of anti-harassment policies and protocols for dealing with abusive or
discriminatory behavior as we transition our armed forces away from a policy of
discrimination. The military must be our active partners in developing those
policies and protocols. That work should have started long ago. It will start
when I take office.
But it hasn’t.
Yet, it would be so easy. In less time than it takes Barack
Obama to toss back a Budweiser -- really, DADT could be history. By simply
picking up a pen and signing an executive order, Obama could make it
irrelevant.
But he hasn’t. And it isn’t.
Unlike Harvey Milk, Barack Obama is a man who gained real
power and is using it, not to expand freedom and equality, but to continue the
oppressive policies of the Bush/Cheney demolition.
The nation’s highest civilian honor, also, will be awarded
to tennis luminary Billie Jean King who is openly gay and a tireless civil
rights activist. Fourteen other “agents of change” will receive the medal from
the president who was supposed to be an agent of change.
I can’t help wondering if Harvey Milk would want to be a
member of the club that includes these George Bush war criminals: General Tommy
(We Don’t Do Body Counts) Franks, George (Slam Dunk) Tenet, Paul Bremer, and
Tony Blair.
Seems the gold medal that hangs from a blue velvet ribbon
has been sullied.
Missy Beattie
lives in New York City. She’s written for National Public Radio and Nashville Life Magazine. An outspoken
critic of the Bush Administration and the war in Iraq, she’s a member of Gold
Star Families for Peace. She completed a novel last year, but since the death
of her nephew, Marine Lance Cpl. Chase J. Comley, in Iraq on August 6,’ 05, she
has been writing political articles. She can be reached at: Missybeat@aol.com.