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Conduct Unbecoming: Gays & Lesbians in the U.S. Military

Conduct Unbecoming: Gays & Lesbians in the U.S. Military

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Courage Unbound
Review: I bought this book because my Great Aunt is a retired Colonel in the US Army, and she is a Lesbian. She was interviewed for this book and is quoted in the book. Therefore, I wanted to have a copy of this book because I feel it holds a part of my family history.

I got my copy while at work, and immediately flipped through to find the sections that spoke about my Aunt. I started reading out loud to my co-workers, and pretty soon, a small group had gathered and was raptly listening to me read aloud. I was amazed that they were interested in the stories in the book as well as touched at their outrage at the discrimination I was reading to them.

This book is very interesting and talks about a part of history many people do not realize. I'd always been so proud of my Aunt for being one of the FEW women Colonels in her day, yet I never realized the scrutiny she lived under in the Army and the constant fear of being "outed" as a Lesbian.

Gay people have contributed greatly to our United States Military, and this book recognizes that fact as well as opens our eyes to the discrimination that gay women and men fighting for our country had to face, an added burden that didn't fall on the shoulders of the heterosexual soldiers.

I would strongly recommend this book.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Conduct unbecoming a professional journalist
Review: I knew one of the Navy men detailed in this book and the author nailed this one on the head. I was a Navy wife for many years, until my husband retired. In the great witchhunt years, when no stone was left unturned and no method nasty enough, I saw sailors who did their jobs well and with honor, but who were systemically chased and hunted down until they were forced out of service because they chose to care for someone of the same sex. I also saw innocent heterosexuals threatened and blackmailed in order to help NIS make a charge against their potential targets. There was nothing mean enough or underhanded enough that the NIS wouldn't do to make a charge stick, even resorting to lies and innuendo to force someone to entrap a suspected gay or lesbian. It shouldn't matter who you love or desire...as long as a person does his or her job with professionalism and honor. Try telling that to investigators who work without honor. The military policy is deeply flawed and I believe it has to change. Amazing, isn't it...the military swears to defend its' people, yet will go to great lengths to destroy a selected few, because of ignorance of its' own making.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Whose Conduct Is The Question !
Review: I knew one of the Navy men detailed in this book and the author nailed this one on the head. I was a Navy wife for many years, until my husband retired. In the great witchhunt years, when no stone was left unturned and no method nasty enough, I saw sailors who did their jobs well and with honor, but who were systemically chased and hunted down until they were forced out of service because they chose to care for someone of the same sex. I also saw innocent heterosexuals threatened and blackmailed in order to help NIS make a charge against their potential targets. There was nothing mean enough or underhanded enough that the NIS wouldn't do to make a charge stick, even resorting to lies and innuendo to force someone to entrap a suspected gay or lesbian. It shouldn't matter who you love or desire...as long as a person does his or her job with professionalism and honor. Try telling that to investigators who work without honor. The military policy is deeply flawed and I believe it has to change. Amazing, isn't it...the military swears to defend its' people, yet will go to great lengths to destroy a selected few, because of ignorance of its' own making.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This book flew off the shelves
Review: I was overseas when this book came out, and the on-base bookstores could not keep enough on the shelves! Every "family" member would snap it up as soon as more were put out. An outstanding read...On a whole, the book IS factual. It just makes a better read is all.
I was returning from overseas and had a layover at Westover AFB, MA, site of one of the most intense witch hunts in military history. After everyone got settled in for the night, I walked around the dorms and tried to imagine what it must of been like for those being grilled by OSI. I got a real sense of history then. I was lucky. I got my 20 years in without a hitch, not even being offially questioned, thought I knew of several who were thrown out. Things are getting better in a way that most of the young troops now don't really care one way or another. And eventually some of those troops will be Generals and have influence over policy. The United States is one of only 2 nations in the western world who activly seeks to discharge those who are gay and lesbian (no, "don't ask, don't tell" doesn't work!). Some day that will change, and I hope I'm around to see it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: ....important....
Review: Randy Shilts has written what can only be described as the most important book regarding the issue of gays and lesbians in the United States military. In a concise and fluid style, Shilts presents an issue that has been an ongoing problem for every branch of the military since the policy barring openly gay men and women from serving was first enacted.

He presents individual stories of servicemen and women who have been harrassed, verbally abused, assaulted and ultimately drummed out of the military for being gay. More often than not, those forced out have had stellar service records as well as numerous commendations from their superiors. The issue has also stretched to include heterosexual personnel who have been mis-identified as gay or lesbian.

Shilts is able to present an even look at an outdated policy that has not only cost the Pentagon millions to enforce, but has ultimately cost the military some of its best and brightest soldiers, sailors and airmen.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: ....important....
Review: Randy Shilts has written what can only be described as the most important book regarding the issue of gays and lesbians in the United States military. In a concise and fluid style, Shilts presents an issue that has been an ongoing problem for every branch of the military since the policy barring openly gay men and women from serving was first enacted.

He presents individual stories of servicemen and women who have been harrassed, verbally abused, assaulted and ultimately drummed out of the military for being gay. More often than not, those forced out have had stellar service records as well as numerous commendations from their superiors. The issue has also stretched to include heterosexual personnel who have been mis-identified as gay or lesbian.

Shilts is able to present an even look at an outdated policy that has not only cost the Pentagon millions to enforce, but has ultimately cost the military some of its best and brightest soldiers, sailors and airmen.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Conduct unbecoming a professional journalist
Review: Randy Shilts was a liar. So was Lt. Gerald L. Rosanbalm.

Why do I say that?

Because the facts prove Shilts bought a fairy tale from Rosanbalm, who's story Shilts tells in this book.

Shilts starts on page 52 telling the ridiculous story of Rosanbalm, who claims he started a love affair with a G.I. named Donald Winn, during basic training at Ft. Ord , CA.,,,,,,OOPS!....Donald Winn didn't go to basic training at Ft. Ord. He went to basic at Ft Leonard Wood, MO, in 1967, when Rosanbalm claimed he was already in Vietnam since 1966! But he wasn't. Rosanbalm himself arrived in Vietnam in late 67.

Shilts writes on p. 58 that Rosanbalm and Winn also went to OCS together, until Winn "washed out".,,,, OOPS! Wrong again. Winn never went to OCS. Winn was a high school drop out and wasn't eligible for OCS. Shilts also writes Rosanblam and Winn would sneak out of the barracks to "make love" during OCS training. Only an ignoramous wouldn't see a red flag in that story. Shilts clearly had no real knowledge of how military schools work. That would have been extremely difficult to do, #1, and #2, even if you could, you are so damn tired during those rigorous training schedules, the last thing you want to do is sneak out somewhere and have sex.

Shilts says Rosanbalm was stationed near Quang Nagh. OOPS! He did it again! There is no place in Vietnam called Quang Nagh.

Rosanbalm's whole story on ppg. 55-57 is also likely phony. Fact is, Rosanblam had left his post during the crucial Tet offensive, leaving his enlisted men to fend for the themselves. No one could account for him.His commanders felt he was in an area he had no business in. Records show there was only sporadic fighting in that entire area, (which was really Quang Ngai)not the heavy fire fight Rosanbalm claimed he was in. Although Rosanbalm did get a Purple Heart, it is unclear how it happened.

Shilts writes that Donald Winn died in combat on Jan. 1, 1971. Wrong once again. He did die on that date, but of a heart attack in his barracks. He had a weakened heart condition.

Shilts writes Donald Dean Winn is "one of the many gay men named on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial." Shilts has zero evidence Winn was a homosexual. Winn's fiance(yes, a woman) begs to differ. So does his whole family as well as his friends.

Military records show Donald Dean Winn and Lt. Gerald Rosanbalm were never stationed on the same post. Mr. Winn's reputation has been smeared while he lies in his grave, because Randy Shilts was too lazy to do some simple research to check out Rosanbalm's story.

Shilts, in the paperback edition of this book, claimed this information I have written here was all brought out by a "right-wing magazine", which is irrelevent. The facts and the military record show Shilts wrote a false story.

All of what I have written is available in a book called "Stolen Valor" by B.G. Burkett, which debunks this story. These falsehoods of Mr. Shilts call into question the validity of his book, even if some gays have been persecuted in the military. Unfortunately, both Shilts and Rosanbalm have died of AIDS and count be held accountable, but they were confronted when they were both alive and still stuck by their lies. Shameful.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Stunning Epic Masterpiece
Review: Randy Shilts's third nonfiction novel chronicling the struggles and triumphs of the gay movement, culture, and lifestyle is perhaps the most in-depth of all his works. Exhaustively researched, and impeccably detailed, Conduct Unbecoming reads like a textbook (albeit a very interesting one) on how one of the most established institutions in the United States harassed and interrogated U.S. citizens, destroyed careers of literally thousands of men and women in uniform, and maliciously and ruthlessly discriminated against persons based upon their sexual orientation.
The Chicago Tribune essentially called this book a "series of short stories." Horror stories. What Randy Shilts unearthed in this stunning, massive tome is the betrayal, disloyalty, dishonesty, hypocrisy, and dishonesty faced by gay and lesbian men and women who fight and die for this country. And indeed, the history of these injustices dates back many hundreds of years. The opening pages are filled with the stories of some of the very first issues of homosexuality brought up in this country by soldiers in the Continental Army during the American Revolution.
However, as so eloquently told by Mr. Shilts, these transgressions by the military and government are not a thing of the distant past. They continued to happen: throughout the years of the Korean War, the distraught era of the 60s and the Vietnam conflict, the social upheaving of the 70s, the regressive epoch of the 80s under Reagan, and even the first few years of the 90s when Clinton's widely ineffective and over-rated "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy was put into effect. However, whereas the book ends, the injustice, bigotry, and ignorance among our troops and all our people continues to grow and spread.
This is not merely a history of gay and lesbian soldiers in the U.S. military, as the subtitle states. This is a history of the entire gay movement. However, because the main focus of the story is that of gays and lesbians in the Armed Forces, the reader is not afforded every intricate detail of other social changes occurring at the same time. To ask that of Shilts would have been to ask for an entire set of encyclopedias.
With only three books, Randy Shilts is most likely my favorite nonfiction author. How unfortunate that we lost this great man and his words to a disease he spent so much of his career reporting on. We have only the legacy of his works to remind us of what a great man he was, and of all that he did for humanity.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Stunning Epic Masterpiece
Review: Randy Shilts?s third nonfiction novel chronicling the struggles and triumphs of the gay movement, culture, and lifestyle is perhaps the most in-depth of all his works. Exhaustively researched, and impeccably detailed, Conduct Unbecoming reads like a textbook (albeit a very interesting one) on how one of the most established institutions in the United States harassed and interrogated U.S. citizens, destroyed careers of literally thousands of men and women in uniform, and maliciously and ruthlessly discriminated against persons based upon their sexual orientation.
The Chicago Tribune essentially called this book a ?series of short stories.? Horror stories. What Randy Shilts unearthed in this stunning, massive tome is the betrayal, disloyalty, dishonesty, and hypocrisy, faced by gay and lesbian men and women who fight and die for this country. And indeed, the history of these injustices dates back many hundreds of years. The opening pages are filled with the stories of some of the very first issues of homosexuality brought up in this country by soldiers in the Continental Army during the American Revolution.
However, as so eloquently told by Mr. Shilts, these transgressions by the military and government are not a thing of the distant past. They continued to happen: throughout the years of the Korean War, the distraught era of the 60s and the Vietnam conflict, the social upheaving of the 70s, the regressive epoch of the 80s under Reagan, and even the first few years of the 90s when Clinton?s widely ineffective and over-rated ?Don?t Ask, Don?t Tell? policy was put into effect. However, whereas the book ends, the injustice, bigotry, and ignorance among our troops and all our people continues to grow and spread.
This is not merely a history of gay and lesbian soldiers in the U.S. military, as the subtitle states. This is a history of the entire gay movement. However, because the main focus of the story is that of gays and lesbians in the Armed Forces, the reader is not afforded every intricate detail of other social changes occurring at the same time. To ask that of Shilts would have been to ask for an entire set of encyclopedias.
With only three books, Randy Shilts is most likely my favorite nonfiction author. How unfortunate that we lost this great man and his words to a disease he spent so much of his career reporting on. We have only the legacy of his works to remind us of what a great man he was, and of all that he did for humanity.


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