Ian Thompson, ACLU
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Posts by Ian Thompson, ACLU
Thanks Bill O’Reilly, From Your Friends at the ACLU
0We were pleasantly surprised – indeed, delighted – to have seen that none other than Bill O’Reilly came out in support of ending the counterproductive and discriminatory policy known as “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” (DADT) in an appearance on the Tonight Show on Monday night.
On this point, we could not agree with O’Reilly more strongly. DADT has cost nearly 14,000 committed men and women in the armed forces their military careers. President Obama’s administration and Congress have taken very positive steps toward the goal of finally ending this senseless discrimination once and for all, and it is critically important that they complete that work by passing a repeal of the policy this year.
We hope that Bill O’Reilly’s opposition to DADT serves to make the point that embracing open (and honest) service for all those in this country willing to risk their lives serving in the military is not a right vs. left, conservative vs. liberal issue: it’s a matter of simple fairness and equality.
The Final Push – Imminent House Vote to Reform Broken Crack Sentencing Law
0Advocates who have been working for years to reform one of the most dysfunctional aspects of our criminal justice system – the infamous and discriminatory 100-to-1 sentencing disparity between crack cocaine and the powder form of the drug – have finally arrived at the critical final stage. The House will vote this week on a measure known as the Fair Sentencing Act (S. 1789), which passed the Senate unanimously earlier this spring. If the House succeeds in passing the legislation, it will be sent to President Obama for a final signature and become the law of the land.
While stopping short of fully eliminating the disparity – the ACLU’s preferred course – the legislation will bring much needed reform, indeed justice, to a federal law that has been particularly devastating to African-Americans and a source of this country’s massive rates of incarceration.
The Continuing Need to Protect LGBT Students Across the Country
0As you may already know, yesterday we announced the settlement of Constance McMillen’s lawsuit against her Mississippi high school for canceling the prom rather than allowing her attend with her girlfriend as her date and wear a tuxedo.
- A female student in a northern California school faced daily anti-gay harassment and discrimination from teachers and school staff and was required to participate in a school-sponsored “counseling” group designed to discourage students from being lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender.
- A male freshman at a high school in Tennessee was sent home from school for wearing a T-shirt that said, “I [Love] Lady Gay Gay.” Before that, he had long been subjected to daily anti-gay harassment at school, including threats of physical violence. He was not only unable to get help from the school, he was told by school employees that he had “brought it on himself by coming out.”
- A female student in a public high school in Orange County, California was repeatedly singled out for discipline (including a one-week suspension), had her sexual orientation revealed to her family without her permission by school officials, and was forced to transfer to another school in the middle of the second semester. The student, who previously had straight-A grades and a spotless disciplinary record, was punished for occasionally showing affection towards her girlfriend, even though heterosexual students were routinely allowed to hold hands, hug and kiss on campus.