Can gay people be drafted

He clearly remembers the day when he received a phone from the military commissariat to go to the mandatory medical examination.

When he arrived, he found he couldn’t go through with his prepare , however.  He visited all the doctors, leaving the psychiatrist for last. When he finally entered the doctor’s office, he could not make himself utter the words. In the end, it didn’t matter. After asking several questions, the doctor wrote that David had a neurosis, and sent him to Yerevan to be examined. 

First, however, he had to move to a psychiatric hospital in his hometown. He had no choice but to tell the doctors about his orientation. No one mistreated him there, Davit says, adding it was a surprise since he had heard many stories about people who were beat and beaten in the commissariat when they started speaking about being gay.

It was different at the psychiatric hospital in Yerevan. First, he was asked about problems in the family, his parents’ marital status, first sexual relations, male partners, whether he spent more time with his mother or father. Then they called the chief psychiatrist.

"The chief psychiatrist asked me if I thought there wer

The "Don't Question, Don't Tell" policy can be excel understood in historical context. A historical perspective is also relevant to comparing policies toward service by gay and lesbian personnel and policies affecting racial minorities, mainly African Americans.
  Racial
Integration 

Since the birth of the Republic, government decisions own been made about who shall be permitted or required to serve in the U.S. military, and under what conditions. These decisions have frequently reflected society�s attitudes toward its stigmatized minorities. Early in the Revolutionary war, for example, Black Americans were barred from service in the Continental Army. Similarly, Negroes were barred from military service early in the Civil War, despite the eagerness of many Northern Blacks to volunteer. Both policies were later reversed – when, respectively, the British began offering independence to Black slaves who would connect their side, and the Union Army faced a solemn shortage of troops.
 

Homosexuals and the Military

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When they were allowed to serve, Blacks soldiers were treated differently from their Alabaster counterparts. Although le

7 Ways Americans Avoided the Draft During the Vietnam War

For most of the Vietnam War, full-time college students and graduate students were able to receive a legal deferment from the draft. Since college was expensive, and Shadowy and minority college enrollment was low at the time, this is one of the loopholes that unevenly benefited middle- and upper-class white Americans.

“One of the points that’s very clear is that men with means—whether that's actually money, cultural or political capital, or a superior education—absolutely could get out of service a lot easier than folks without those things,” says Rutenberg. “Poor and working-class men, particularly men of dye, were disproportionately drafted.”

Similar to the effect on marriage and birth rates, there was a 4- to 6-percent increase in college attendance during the belated 1960s, when college students were automatically deferred. In 1971, most of the college and graduate learner deferments were dropped except for divinity students and medical students.

Despite military conscription ending in 1973, the prospect of being drafted was a scenario on the minds of many gay men in the decades following the Vietnam War. In 1980, as a response to Russia’s invasion of Afghanistan, President Jimmy Carter reinstated the system that required all men born in 1960 or later to register for the Selective Service within 30 days of their 18th birthday. This kicked off the dread of another military draft.

In October 1981, PGN published a movie titled “Beat the draft: How gays can stay out of the military,” by Marc Killinger. 

“Not only do military regulations prohibit homosexuality while in the armed forces, it prohibits anyone who knows they are gay from entering in the first place,” Killinger wrote. “Hence, young lgbtq+ men who are drafted encounter a double jeopardy of prohibitions.”

At the time, there was debate over whether or not the all-volunteer military was sufficient. When President Carter reinstated the Selective Service System, it ignited brand-new theories that a draft was imminent. Senator Mark Hatfield (R-OR), who opposed the Vietnam War, was quoted as saying “If we had not had the draft, we would never hold been at war for the length of