In
April 1987 Joseph C. Steffan,
one of the ten highest ranking
midshipmen in his class at the
U.S. Naval Academy, and only
six weeks from graduation, was
denied his diploma and forced
to resign his commission because
he answered "Yes, sir" to
the question,
"I'd like your word, are you
a homosexual?" Six years later
his cause, and that of other gay
men and lesbians seeking to serve
their country by enlistment in
the military, has become the subject
of intense national controversy.
This unusual and innovative work,
based on the litigation strategy
and court papers filed in the case
of Joseph C. Steffan v. Richard
Cheney, Secretary of Defense, et
al., brings the resources of
clinical psychiatry, clinical and
social psychology, cultural history
and political science to bear upon
the fundamental questions at issue:
How is sexual orientation determined?
How and why have socially prejudiced
stereotypes about male and female
homosexuals developed? Why have
gays faced special obstacles in
defending themselves against discrimination?
How much political power do gays
have?.
Marc
Wolinsky and Kenneth Sherrill
argue that gays constitute a
politically powerless class that
has been unjustly deprived of
its constitutional right to equal
protection under the law. They
have collected here the affidavits
filed on behalf of Joseph Steffan
in his suit against the United
States government, together with
the counter-arguments of the
Department of Defense and the
extraordinary opinion of the
U.S. District Court for the District
of Columbia. Whatever the outcome
of the case, presently on appeal
to the United States Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit, this book will stand
as a lasting and indispensable
guide to the sources of sexual
discrimination. |