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[News] Homosexuality and the Armed Forces.



Nobby Cybergoat

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2021
8,770
I served in the RAF from 1980 to 1992. I joined when I was 18 I am gay, I knew it at the time. I also was asked if I was gay before I signed on, and it was made perfectly clear to me that being gay in the Military were simply not allowed and anyone found later would suffer severe consequences (Thrown out, Jail time, dishonourable discharge). During the first week at Basic Training, during one of the induction briefings (Held in the station cinema) with a couple of hundred recruits in attendance, one of the SNCO in charge came on stage and said "If any of you is a f***ing poof, get up and leave now, your enlistment will be cancelled , nothing on your record. This is the last chance, and to be clear, I dont want any f***ing poof in my Air Force".

I stayed and did not declare I was gay! I was bloody good at my job, and after 10 years or so, having served perfectly well in various locations (UK, Falklands, Cyprus) . I was promoted to JNCO level and was on the board for consideration as a SNCO

About this time I was "investigated" for homosexuality. I was pulled from my shift by RAF Police, shoved in an interrogation room, and basically given the third degree . My locker at work was searched, in full view of everyone, my room in the accom block was literally pulled apart

Being a JNCO I had younger airman under my command, 17 yr olds and up. They were all interviewed and basically "encouraged" to out me- my colleagues, friends and just about everyone else was interviewed by the RAF equivalent of CID. Thing Regan on a bad day from " The Sweeny"

The RAF Police couldn't find any "evidence" , no one outted me-mainly because I had never done anything with anyone. After a couple of weeks I was told no charges were being brought against me. I then had to go back to work as normal -not fun when the entire station knows what had just occured.

I then decided that enough was enough and I had to leave before I was found out. I had to work 18 months notice before I could leave. Less than a month before I left, one of my friends told me that a particularly nasty RAF Policeman had interviewed him saying "I want to get that gay bastard before he leaves"

Had I been charged it would have meant Court Martial , SIX months in military prison, dishonourable discharge, loss of 12 years pension

I was a lucky one, I managed to leave before being found out. I lost a career I loved and , was very good at, a way of life, friends and gave over a decade of Service

However, I KNEW before I signed up that i was not allowed, it was made very clear to me at the time and all the way through my time in the RAF.

Should I be entitled to compensation ? I wasn't thrown out, I left on my own accord, so I doubt I am included in the scheme anyway-though I will look into it. In my mind part of me says I knew what I was getting into, therefore I shouldnt be entitled to compensation. Anyone else who was gay also knew what they were signing up for. Another part of me thinks , especially for those servicemen and women who were jailed, , lost pensions , have criminal records(-the BBC news has a report on one guy was regestered as a sex offender for decades as he had kissed another guy) ,f*** em- get every penny you can. We served our Country, put our lives on the line and were treated as criminals, deviants, and third class citizens
That's fascinating. Thanks for sharing
 




TugWilson

I gotta admit that I`m a little bit confused
Dec 8, 2020
1,866
Dorset
It surprises me that anyone would claim to be gay just to get out, when it’s so much easier now, ie shorter terms of deployment and being able to buy themselves out.
I really don`t know how things are now , i was just referring to what the OP had said , being cynical i would not trust some people not to use this as an excuse .
 


Insel affe

HellBilly
Feb 23, 2009
24,497
Brighton factually.....
I served in the RAF from 1980 to 1992. I joined when I was 18 I am gay, I knew it at the time. I also was asked if I was gay before I signed on, and it was made perfectly clear to me that being gay in the Military were simply not allowed and anyone found later would suffer severe consequences (Thrown out, Jail time, dishonourable discharge). During the first week at Basic Training, during one of the induction briefings (Held in the station cinema) with a couple of hundred recruits in attendance, one of the SNCO in charge came on stage and said "If any of you is a f***ing poof, get up and leave now, your enlistment will be cancelled , nothing on your record. This is the last chance, and to be clear, I dont want any f***ing poof in my Air Force".

I stayed and did not declare I was gay! I was bloody good at my job, and after 10 years or so, having served perfectly well in various locations (UK, Falklands, Cyprus) . I was promoted to JNCO level and was on the board for consideration as a SNCO

About this time I was "investigated" for homosexuality. I was pulled from my shift by RAF Police, shoved in an interrogation room, and basically given the third degree . My locker at work was searched, in full view of everyone, my room in the accom block was literally pulled apart

Being a JNCO I had younger airman under my command, 17 yr olds and up. They were all interviewed and basically "encouraged" to out me- my colleagues, friends and just about everyone else was interviewed by the RAF equivalent of CID. Thing Regan on a bad day from " The Sweeny"

The RAF Police couldn't find any "evidence" , no one outted me-mainly because I had never done anything with anyone. After a couple of weeks I was told no charges were being brought against me. I then had to go back to work as normal -not fun when the entire station knows what had just occured.

I then decided that enough was enough and I had to leave before I was found out. I had to work 18 months notice before I could leave. Less than a month before I left, one of my friends told me that a particularly nasty RAF Policeman had interviewed him saying "I want to get that gay bastard before he leaves"

Had I been charged it would have meant Court Martial , SIX months in military prison, dishonourable discharge, loss of 12 years pension

I was a lucky one, I managed to leave before being found out. I lost a career I loved and , was very good at, a way of life, friends and gave over a decade of Service

However, I KNEW before I signed up that i was not allowed, it was made very clear to me at the time and all the way through my time in the RAF.

Should I be entitled to compensation ? I wasn't thrown out, I left on my own accord, so I doubt I am included in the scheme anyway-though I will look into it. In my mind part of me says I knew what I was getting into, therefore I shouldnt be entitled to compensation. Anyone else who was gay also knew what they were signing up for. Another part of me thinks , especially for those servicemen and women who were jailed, , lost pensions , have criminal records(-the BBC news has a report on one guy was regestered as a sex offender for decades as he had kissed another guy) ,f*** em- get every penny you can. We served our Country, put our lives on the line and were treated as criminals, deviants, and third class citizens
Wow, just wow, what strength of character you have, as someone else said, thank you for your service.

I wonder if this will extend to the other services such as the police, my uncle had to leave the met due to bullying in the mid 80s for being gay. I hope he does not get anything though, despite being gay I was shocked at some of his racist comments the last time I saw him, shocked (probably picked that up in the force back in the 80s)
 


rippleman

Well-known member
Oct 18, 2011
5,032
I served in the RAF from 1980 to 1992. I joined when I was 18 I am gay, I knew it at the time. I also was asked if I was gay before I signed on, and it was made perfectly clear to me that being gay in the Military were simply not allowed and anyone found later would suffer severe consequences (Thrown out, Jail time, dishonourable discharge). During the first week at Basic Training, during one of the induction briefings (Held in the station cinema) with a couple of hundred recruits in attendance, one of the SNCO in charge came on stage and said "If any of you is a f***ing poof, get up and leave now, your enlistment will be cancelled , nothing on your record. This is the last chance, and to be clear, I dont want any f***ing poof in my Air Force".

I stayed and did not declare I was gay! I was bloody good at my job, and after 10 years or so, having served perfectly well in various locations (UK, Falklands, Cyprus) . I was promoted to JNCO level and was on the board for consideration as a SNCO

About this time I was "investigated" for homosexuality. I was pulled from my shift by RAF Police, shoved in an interrogation room, and basically given the third degree . My locker at work was searched, in full view of everyone, my room in the accom block was literally pulled apart

Being a JNCO I had younger airman under my command, 17 yr olds and up. They were all interviewed and basically "encouraged" to out me- my colleagues, friends and just about everyone else was interviewed by the RAF equivalent of CID. Thing Regan on a bad day from " The Sweeny"

The RAF Police couldn't find any "evidence" , no one outted me-mainly because I had never done anything with anyone. After a couple of weeks I was told no charges were being brought against me. I then had to go back to work as normal -not fun when the entire station knows what had just occured.

I then decided that enough was enough and I had to leave before I was found out. I had to work 18 months notice before I could leave. Less than a month before I left, one of my friends told me that a particularly nasty RAF Policeman had interviewed him saying "I want to get that gay bastard before he leaves"

Had I been charged it would have meant Court Martial , SIX months in military prison, dishonourable discharge, loss of 12 years pension

I was a lucky one, I managed to leave before being found out. I lost a career I loved and , was very good at, a way of life, friends and gave over a decade of Service

However, I KNEW before I signed up that i was not allowed, it was made very clear to me at the time and all the way through my time in the RAF.

Should I be entitled to compensation ? I wasn't thrown out, I left on my own accord, so I doubt I am included in the scheme anyway-though I will look into it. In my mind part of me says I knew what I was getting into, therefore I shouldnt be entitled to compensation. Anyone else who was gay also knew what they were signing up for. Another part of me thinks , especially for those servicemen and women who were jailed, , lost pensions , have criminal records(-the BBC news has a report on one guy was regestered as a sex offender for decades as he had kissed another guy) ,f*** em- get every penny you can. We served our Country, put our lives on the line and were treated as criminals, deviants, and third class citizens
Thanks for telling your story. It was truly shocking the trauma you were put through when all you wanted to do was serve your country. I wish you every success should you decide to make a claim.
 


Skuller

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jun 3, 2017
353
Professor Andrew Hartle was interviewed this morning on the Today programme. He was a medic in the RAF and in 1996 he was outed by the News Of The World and had to leave the forces. Yes, 1996. 1996! The editor of the NOTW (or “Britain’s biggest selling newspaper” as he prefers to call it in his bio) at the time was Phil Hall who now, surprise surprise, runs a PR company.
 




Milano

Well-known member
Aug 15, 2012
4,050
Sussex but not by the sea
Firstly I think that the law at the time was wrong, very wrong.
However it WAS the law.
As the very moving reply above about the RAF stated, he knew what the law was, yet still chose to join.
Therefore as harsh as it sounds, why almost 25 years after this law was rightly changed are people now seeking compensation? Whether the law was right or wrong, they KNEW that they were breaking it. My guess is that it is because this has reached the top of a never ending list of retrospective 'justice'. Lawyers will be getting richer, they always do.

I am completely against re-judging a legal situation decades later by using current law or views. This is not a miscarriage of justice, like the Postmasters, this is a law being imposed which was law at the time. Whether the law is deemed wrong today (it clearly is) is irrelivent IMO.
 


Westdene Seagull

aka Cap'n Carl Firecrotch
NSC Patron
Oct 27, 2003
21,585
The arse end of Hangleton
Personally I find it disgusting that within my life time gay people were persecuted by the military for their sexuality - it had no affect on their ability to do the job.

Many who were bullied, dismissed or/and imprisoned have ended up in poverty with no pensions and a criminal record meaning they couldn't get decent jobs. I'd equate their right to compensation to that of the Post Masters and Mistresses who are now due far more compensation.

I'd be happy for every one of the persecuted to get £500k and full 30 years served military pension. £70k is misery to compensate them for their suffering.
 


marlowe

Well-known member
Dec 13, 2015
4,345
Firstly I think that the law at the time was wrong, very wrong.
However it WAS the law.
As the very moving reply above about the RAF stated, he knew what the law was, yet still chose to join.
Therefore as harsh as it sounds, why almost 25 years after this law was rightly changed are people now seeking compensation? Whether the law was right or wrong, they KNEW that they were breaking it. My guess is that it is because this has reached the top of a never ending list of retrospective 'justice'. Lawyers will be getting richer, they always do.

I am completely against re-judging a legal situation decades later by using current law or views. This is not a miscarriage of justice, like the Postmasters, this is a law being imposed which was law at the time. Whether the law is deemed wrong today (it clearly is) is irrelivent IMO.
The point you are making is a little contradictory. As you yourself state the law then was "wrong", but then your argument for not awarding compensation is because despite the law being "wrong" it was the law.

Surely if the law was "wrong" then those directly affected by it were "wronged" and are therefore deserving of compensation.
 




Insel affe

HellBilly
Feb 23, 2009
24,497
Brighton factually.....
I'd be happy for every one of the persecuted to get £500k and full 30 years served military pension. £70k is misery to compensate them for their suffering.
As wrong as it all is, where do you think they will get 500k to pay possibly thousands of folk, shall they increase your tax or take it from the NHS, Schools, council budgets or the underfunded military in a time of world conflict ?
 


Westdene Seagull

aka Cap'n Carl Firecrotch
NSC Patron
Oct 27, 2003
21,585
The arse end of Hangleton
As wrong as it all is, where do you think they will get 500k to pay possibly thousands of folk, shall they increase your tax or take it from the NHS, Schools, council budgets or the underfunded military in a time of world conflict ?
Ah, the "it would be too expensive" argument ! Firstly there is plenty of wasteful spending within government which if cut out could pay for it. Or stop HS2 or the Trident upgrade. Maybe pull out of Diego Garcia and save the running costs. There is a myriad of areas that could easily cover the money required.

The bottom line is that it was wrong and immoral and the government and the taxpayer should pay the bill ( very few taxpayers objected to the policy when it was in place ).
 


Deportivo Seagull

I should coco
Jul 22, 2003
5,524
Mid Sussex
You missed my point.

As I said in my post, I personally knew of 2 different lads who worked their ticket for an early release from the service by ‘coming out’. Neither was gay. In the Navy being gay wasn’t treated by most as a terrible crime, as I’m led to believe it was in other services. These 2 lads should not be getting compo.
Most mafelots were quite ambivalent towards gay people.
In fact, Quentin Crisp said the only time he had found real acceptance of his homosexuality was a weekend in Portsmouth with a load of matelots.
i and number of lads knew of one guy who was gay. one of the lads new a friend of friend whose brother was gay. Shows just what a small world it is. He knew that we knew which did make it awkward for a while. General consensus was that you’d have to some sort of miserable **** to grass him up so we just ignored it and let him be. He did his 9 years and left without any problems. Thinking back I can’t think of anyone saying they’d shop someone if they were gay (this is early eighties). Plenty of jokes which would definitely not be tolerated today but it was a case of ’who gives a shit’. Things that were important were ‘women, going on the piss, make and mends, leave and food’, if someone decided that women wasn’t on their list, then yeah whatever.
 




Insel affe

HellBilly
Feb 23, 2009
24,497
Brighton factually.....
Ah, the "it would be too expensive" argument ! Firstly there is plenty of wasteful spending within government which if cut out could pay for it. Or stop HS2 or the Trident upgrade. Maybe pull out of Diego Garcia and save the running costs. There is a myriad of areas that could easily cover the money required.
yes I suppose the funds from those above mentioned, however are current issues with the NHS and Schools, Prisons, not more pressing, if they won't divert them for these now, why should they for those poorly treated in the past. I am not saying I know the answer or that they do not deserve anything but being subjective.
The bottom line is that it was wrong and immoral and the government and the taxpayer should pay the bill ( very few taxpayers objected to the policy when it was in place ).
The bottom line is it was wrong and immoral correct.
But not at the tax payers expense, I am a tax payer and I did not vote in this law, I probably was not even alive.
 


Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
As wrong as it all is, where do you think they will get 500k to pay possibly thousands of folk, shall they increase your tax or take it from the NHS, Schools, council budgets or the underfunded military in a time of world conflict ?
They could ask Baroness Mone or Dido Harding to pay some back.
 


portlock seagull

Well-known member
Jul 28, 2003
17,949
I’ll apologise now if my thoughts on this annoy or upset anyone.

Having served at a time when it was illegal to be in the Forces and be gay, I am torn with the Government’s announcement that they will be paying compensation to anyone who was kicked out for their sexuality.
While I think that there was some awful treatment meted out to gay people in the Services, I also know of at least 2 cases where homosexuality was used as a kind of ‘get out of jail free’ card by lads who desperately wanted to leave, but were unable to due to length of service etc.
I also know of a very unfair case of a senior non- commissioned officer being stripped of his rank, and pension, and dismissed as services no longer required. This is one up from a dishonourable discharge. This was after 20+ years service.
There was never a whiff of scandal about him, a thoroughly decent, very competent rating, popular with everyone who knew him. I still remember the shock on being told he was being thrown out, and the reason for it, and I was far from being the only one.

In those days, when you joined up, more or less on your first day, you were asked if you were a homosexual, if you answered in the positive you were immediately sent home, before you signed on the dotted line. This practice was, I believe, still in force up until 2000, when the restrictions were lifted.

I really don’t know if I agree with a blanket compensation plan, I do think that each case should be individually assessed. Whether there is the will for this is a different matter.

I would just like to make clear, I completely agree with the policy regarding gay people in the Forces now. I was on a consultation process as far back as 1990, as a junior rating representative and spoke up for the liberalising of the policy enforced then.
How is it affecting you now though? What’s the point in being bothered by? Like nearly everything in the news, you can have zero influence so what’s the blooming point, coldly, of caring never mind being upset by. Unless of course you’re still involved and able to affect / impacted by.
 




Han Solo

Well-known member
May 25, 2024
3,040
Professor Andrew Hartle was interviewed this morning on the Today programme. He was a medic in the RAF and in 1996 he was outed by the News Of The World and had to leave the forces. Yes, 1996. 1996! The editor of the NOTW (or “Britain’s biggest selling newspaper” as he prefers to call it in his bio) at the time was Phil Hall who now, surprise surprise, runs a PR company.
Well the wheels of social progress are quite slow in military institutions...

In Sweden it has never been illegal to be HBTQ in the military, but while homosexuality has not been illegal here since 1944, it was still considered a "disease" until 1979 and plenty of potential recruits were denied to do service on the basis of being homosexuals. After 1979 there's no questions of that nature.

...but still it took until 2000 until someone in the Swedish military finally came out in public and said he was gay. Still in recent times some 80% feel that the Swedish military has a negative attitude towards HBTQ-people.

I think the concept of "defense" generally attracts people who are more keen on preserving their country/the world. In a lot of cases, maybe more so the higher up the ranks you go, I imagine this desire of preservation doesn't match well with socially progressive development... meaning it takes time for societal change to reach the cores of the military in any given country.
 


WATFORD zero

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 10, 2003
27,957
Never having served, I have to say I'm stunned by some of the posts on here. I'm pretty sure that since the mid 80's, I've known the sexuality of people I've worked with/for or have worked for me 95% and all we've ever done is sit in an office, chat for a bit and go for a few drinks occasionally.

There's always one or two, who bring their partners to a Xmas do, some celebration of a good project, or drinks after work and you think 'I'd never have guessed, from all orientations' but it's really sad that it could be so important in simply doing a job :shrug:
 
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dazzer6666

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Mar 27, 2013
56,073
Burgess Hill
I served in the RAF from 1980 to 1992. I joined when I was 18 I am gay, I knew it at the time. I also was asked if I was gay before I signed on, and it was made perfectly clear to me that being gay in the Military were simply not allowed and anyone found later would suffer severe consequences (Thrown out, Jail time, dishonourable discharge). During the first week at Basic Training, during one of the induction briefings (Held in the station cinema) with a couple of hundred recruits in attendance, one of the SNCO in charge came on stage and said "If any of you is a f***ing poof, get up and leave now, your enlistment will be cancelled , nothing on your record. This is the last chance, and to be clear, I dont want any f***ing poof in my Air Force".

I stayed and did not declare I was gay! I was bloody good at my job, and after 10 years or so, having served perfectly well in various locations (UK, Falklands, Cyprus) . I was promoted to JNCO level and was on the board for consideration as a SNCO

About this time I was "investigated" for homosexuality. I was pulled from my shift by RAF Police, shoved in an interrogation room, and basically given the third degree . My locker at work was searched, in full view of everyone, my room in the accom block was literally pulled apart

Being a JNCO I had younger airman under my command, 17 yr olds and up. They were all interviewed and basically "encouraged" to out me- my colleagues, friends and just about everyone else was interviewed by the RAF equivalent of CID. Thing Regan on a bad day from " The Sweeny"

The RAF Police couldn't find any "evidence" , no one outted me-mainly because I had never done anything with anyone. After a couple of weeks I was told no charges were being brought against me. I then had to go back to work as normal -not fun when the entire station knows what had just occured.

I then decided that enough was enough and I had to leave before I was found out. I had to work 18 months notice before I could leave. Less than a month before I left, one of my friends told me that a particularly nasty RAF Policeman had interviewed him saying "I want to get that gay bastard before he leaves"

Had I been charged it would have meant Court Martial , SIX months in military prison, dishonourable discharge, loss of 12 years pension

I was a lucky one, I managed to leave before being found out. I lost a career I loved and , was very good at, a way of life, friends and gave over a decade of Service

However, I KNEW before I signed up that i was not allowed, it was made very clear to me at the time and all the way through my time in the RAF.

Should I be entitled to compensation ? I wasn't thrown out, I left on my own accord, so I doubt I am included in the scheme anyway-though I will look into it. In my mind part of me says I knew what I was getting into, therefore I shouldnt be entitled to compensation. Anyone else who was gay also knew what they were signing up for. Another part of me thinks , especially for those servicemen and women who were jailed, , lost pensions , have criminal records(-the BBC news has a report on one guy was regestered as a sex offender for decades as he had kissed another guy) ,f*** em- get every penny you can. We served our Country, put our lives on the line and were treated as criminals, deviants, and third class citizens
No words. 👏👏👏
 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
63,072
The Fatherland
I served in the RAF from 1980 to 1992. I joined when I was 18 I am gay, I knew it at the time. I also was asked if I was gay before I signed on, and it was made perfectly clear to me that being gay in the Military were simply not allowed and anyone found later would suffer severe consequences (Thrown out, Jail time, dishonourable discharge). During the first week at Basic Training, during one of the induction briefings (Held in the station cinema) with a couple of hundred recruits in attendance, one of the SNCO in charge came on stage and said "If any of you is a f***ing poof, get up and leave now, your enlistment will be cancelled , nothing on your record. This is the last chance, and to be clear, I dont want any f***ing poof in my Air Force".

I stayed and did not declare I was gay! I was bloody good at my job, and after 10 years or so, having served perfectly well in various locations (UK, Falklands, Cyprus) . I was promoted to JNCO level and was on the board for consideration as a SNCO

About this time I was "investigated" for homosexuality. I was pulled from my shift by RAF Police, shoved in an interrogation room, and basically given the third degree . My locker at work was searched, in full view of everyone, my room in the accom block was literally pulled apart

Being a JNCO I had younger airman under my command, 17 yr olds and up. They were all interviewed and basically "encouraged" to out me- my colleagues, friends and just about everyone else was interviewed by the RAF equivalent of CID. Thing Regan on a bad day from " The Sweeny"

The RAF Police couldn't find any "evidence" , no one outted me-mainly because I had never done anything with anyone. After a couple of weeks I was told no charges were being brought against me. I then had to go back to work as normal -not fun when the entire station knows what had just occured.

I then decided that enough was enough and I had to leave before I was found out. I had to work 18 months notice before I could leave. Less than a month before I left, one of my friends told me that a particularly nasty RAF Policeman had interviewed him saying "I want to get that gay bastard before he leaves"

Had I been charged it would have meant Court Martial , SIX months in military prison, dishonourable discharge, loss of 12 years pension

I was a lucky one, I managed to leave before being found out. I lost a career I loved and , was very good at, a way of life, friends and gave over a decade of Service

However, I KNEW before I signed up that i was not allowed, it was made very clear to me at the time and all the way through my time in the RAF.

Should I be entitled to compensation ? I wasn't thrown out, I left on my own accord, so I doubt I am included in the scheme anyway-though I will look into it. In my mind part of me says I knew what I was getting into, therefore I shouldnt be entitled to compensation. Anyone else who was gay also knew what they were signing up for. Another part of me thinks , especially for those servicemen and women who were jailed, , lost pensions , have criminal records(-the BBC news has a report on one guy was regestered as a sex offender for decades as he had kissed another guy) ,f*** em- get every penny you can. We served our Country, put our lives on the line and were treated as criminals, deviants, and third class citizens
Looking at it another way, you were a more than able member of the armed forces who clearly put service to your country before your sexuality. If you want my answer....yes, you do deserve compensation.
 




Van Cleef

Well-known member
Jun 17, 2023
863
I also struggle with applying new standards/rules to some historic settings..... although I don't have a clue what the right answer is. Those (such as your NCO) being treated in such a way (although he presumably knew the rules when he signed up) and the lifelong impact this will have had on him is awful.

'Compensation culture' annoys me massively.......
I'm generally in agreement about retrospectively applying the law as it is now. But if you look at this from a purely financial viewpoint it will cost 50-75m to, correctly in my view, attempt to resolve this. Peanuts really. Although I would much rather each case was looked at individually rather than a blanket amount for all.
In the news the same day we were told that we are all paying up to 46m for a QE2 memorial ffs.
 


bazbha

Active member
Mar 18, 2011
312
Hailsham
The ban back then was clearly wrong. As someone who was serving pre 2000 and still serving I think in an ideal world compensation is due but lets be honest if we are so skint we can't look after our old folk properly then we can't afford to pay this. Plus as has been said previously its opening a can of worms. How many "I signed off because I was gay but didn't tell anyone that was why" could we get? Well intended but impractical me thinks.
 


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