Stars and Stripes

VIDEO: Six months after repeal, military says DADT died quietly

WASHINGTON — Sgt. Pepe Johnson was surprised by the reaction he received when his fellow soldiers learned that he is gay.

“They’ve pretty much shrugged it off,” said Johnson, who rejoined the Army last fall after nearly a decade away. “Most of them were wondering why I had a nine-year gap in service. When I told them it was because of ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,’ they shrugged it off.

“That was a pleasant surprise.”

Former Rep. Patrick Murphy responds to Rep. Hunter's efforts to block or delay DADT repeal

Last year, it was an honor to sponsor and fight for legislation to end the discriminatory “don’t ask, don’t tell” law that, for nearly two decades, barred otherwise qualified openly gay Americans from serving the country they love in the military. As an Army officer, I saw how wrong it was that patriots serving our nation were forced to disobey the core military values of honesty and integrity in order to defend the very freedoms that make our country great.

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