Originally posted by danacara
4. This I vehemently disagree with. I don't think an increased risk of blackmail is a reason I've ever heard cited for discriminating against gays in security or in the military? That's a stretch, I don't think gays have cause for concern on that front. All of us are in a position to be blackmailed, for something that may or may not even be true. If you were a public figure, and someone threatened to say that you and your female best friend were lesbian lovers, could you really refute it? Could you prove that you weren't? No way. We're all at risk of being blackmailed.
Sexual orientation actually is a factor in jobs that require high security clearances--I think it's a mischaracterization to call it discrimination. All sorts of things can comprise what makes a person a security risk. Financial problems and drug use are on par--but you wouldn't say someone has been discriminated against because they have financial problems or use drugs.
Yes, we all could be blackmailed for one reason or another--the question is, to what lengths would we go to keep that information from getting out there? Would you steal classified documents and pass them on to a terrorist group because they're threatening to say you and your best friend are lesbian lovers? Not likely, I'm guessing.
When you take a polygraph for security clearances, it can last a day or two--they'll ask extensive and detailed questions about
everything. They don't care if you're gay. They care if you're trying to hide it.
The issue will be less and less of a problem, fortunately, as many more people are open about their sexual orientation. I didn't get the impression for a second that the governor was resigning because he's gay, though I thought that he might be trying to portray it that way to get a little sympathy or support. I do get the impression that it's beyond the lawsuit and beyond the cushy job, since it was already out there that he's gay and he gave the guy a cushy job.
I do think that if the lawsuit is the extent of it, the governor should be given credit for ending it and recognizing that his political career is not worth going deeper and deeper into illegal means to try to cover it up. If the lawsuit is the extent of it, he should have called the guy's bluff, told the people of his state what was going on, and not resigned--I think a lot of people would support him for standing up to the schmuck blackmailer. But I wonder if there's more to it since he didn't do that. Guess we'll see.