Hartman makes the big huge homophobic speech about how "Are you
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bossat2822 — 11 years ago(February 28, 2015 12:57 PM)
Nobody here watched mash? Cpl. Klinger used to dress in women's clothing to get sent home. Everybody ignored him because they knew he was full of sheet and tried to get out of Korea.
Considering the OP hypothetical, don't forget a gay male in THAT ultra testosterone environment wouldn't stood a chance. The alpha males would've gave him blanket parties til his skin fell off, and the others would go along, or at the least, been indifferent. No one would've raised a finger to assist and if this recruit tried to report antone, the higher ups would've turned it around and had him discharged under " failure to adapt" or something along these lines. -
Nice-Guy-Eddie — 11 years ago(March 20, 2015 12:00 PM)
If you were gay in the 1960s, aside from in a few communities in big cities, you kept schtum. Gay people were ostracised, harassed by the police and security agencies, quite often summarily or constructively dismissed from jobs, and walked a very fine line to stay out of prison.
Good times. -
delriosong — 9 years ago(November 26, 2016 02:27 PM)
I think the OP is falling into the trap of assuming modern attitudes prevailed in the past.
No the OP has fallen into the trap of not knowing a thing about a thing and deciding to believe whatever shyte he invents in his head.
I've lived upon the edge of chance for 20 years or more
Del Rio's Song -
delriosong — 9 years ago(November 26, 2016 02:25 PM)
Nobody here watched mash? Cpl. Klinger used to dress in women's clothing to get sent home. Everybody ignored him because they knew he was full of sheet and tried to get out of Korea.
Corporal Klinger was completely different. He wanted to get out for being insane not for being a homosexual. They were going to put him out as a homosexual one time. (I think it was the first episode the psychiatrist character appeared in.) Corporal Klinger denied emphatically that he was a homosexual and choose to stay in rather than get that discharge. It served as commentary to how screwed he would have been had he taken it. (No pun intended.)
I've lived upon the edge of chance for 20 years or more
Del Rio's Song -
delriosong — 9 years ago(November 26, 2016 02:20 PM)
knowing full well that they might be able to get discharged under the militaries morally corrupt policy in the past of not allowing homosexuals and lesbians to serve in the armed forces,
It wasn't the
military's
policy. It was federal law, as voted on by Congress and signed into law by the President. Strike one.
That would be a brilliant way to avoid the draft
After being discharged from the United States military a homosexual or one feigning homosexuality would be subjected to relentless discrimination for decades to come. Good luck trying to get a decent job. Strike two.
I do know a lot of gays and lesbians that would never deny being what they are at all, that would tell anyone to their face proudly that they are that way, even in boot camp or The Marine Corps which is as macho as you can possibly get, this culture encourages pride in such things and nobody cares enough to hide it, and in New York City and the northeast nobody did in the 1960s at all either,
So your contention is that there were no closeted homosexuals living in NYC or the entire northeast during the 1960's? You don't know a thing about the 1960's. Strike three idiot. You're out.
I've lived upon the edge of chance for 20 years or more
Del Rio's Song -
bigal_a — 10 years ago(November 07, 2015 01:01 AM)
It wasn't Joker's atheism that got him the squad leader position: it was sticking to his guns when harangued about it by Hartman.
The restitution of life is no great feat. A variety of deaths may well enter into your punishment -
Matthew7819 — 10 years ago(July 04, 2015 05:49 AM)
I dont think that a gay Marine would be treated very kindly during Vietnam, but Hartman liked people that had guts and might put him in the charge of other recruits because guts were a good thing, but it would have a negative backlash from him and the other DI's and recruits, there might be gay recruits in that era but they usually pretended to be straight or avoided bringing up their sexual orientation in front of their fellow Marines and Soldiers because the old Military was a hotbed full of testosterone and alpha male BS and chauvinism and being homosexual openly in those days was the opposite of that, it would be like wearing a dress and acting like a wimpy douche, it was considered feminine and girly and would be treated as such and those who acted like that would be punished or abused by the macho idiots that hated that lifestyle.
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stevekaczynski — 9 years ago(December 09, 2016 12:08 PM)
Homosexuality was sometimes claimed as a way of avoiding military service, as they were not supposed to be enlisted (those who made the claim were not necessarily gay in actuality). I think Hartman would have treated it as an attempt to avoid service and might just have beat on them harder.
"Chicken soup - with a beep straw."