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A week after a federal judge in Riverside declared the U.S. government’s ban on gays serving openly in the military unconstitutional, attorneys for the Republican organization that filed the lawsuit asked the court to permanently and immediately ban defense agencies from enforcing the "don’t ask, don’t tell" policy. The U.S. Department of Justice has seven days to respond to the proposed injunction. Agency officials could not be reached for comment Thursday.
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In her opinion, Phillips said the evidence presented showed that the policy had a detrimental effect on the armed services, including leading to the dismissal of “critical” military personnel. She noted that the Pentagon also violated the policy when it saw fit, routinely delaying the discharge of service members suspected of violating the law until they completed their deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan.
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Log Cabin Republicans attorney Dan Woods, from the White & Case law firm in Los Angeles, said leaders of the organization have been invited to discuss the case with members of the Obama administration in the next few days.
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Justice officials and other legal experts have questioned whether the federal judge has the legal authority to issue an injunction prohibiting the policy from being enforced worldwide throughout the military, as opposed to just her judicial district in California. Woods, however, argued that past federal court rulings show that Phillips clearly possesses that authority.
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Clearly, this case has put the fire to the feet of Obama and the Congressional Democrats. As I have noted before, courts of law and the rules of evidence and prescribed burdens of proof will show that DADT is unconstitutional and when stripped of all else arises from one thing: illegal religious based discrimination.
1 comment:
Hello my friend.
A little harsh with the Jew/Nazi comparsion I would say.
I would hazard a guess for most Jews who joined the Nazi party and/or aided and abetted the Nazis during that time did so for survival.
They, if they did survive, had to answer to their own people when the war was over and I daresay lived with that guilt for the rest of their life.
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