http://www.family.org/cforum/fnif/news/a0034813.cfm
December 7, 2004
by Keith Peters, Washington, D.C., correspondent
Gay activists have a new strategy for ending the military's policy on homosexuality.
Pro-homosexual activists are once again trying to get the military's "Don't ask, don't tell" policy overturned, this time using a weapon provided by the U.S. Supreme Court—last year's ruling overturning a Texas ban on sodomy.
Twelve men and women filed suit Monday in federal court in Massachusetts, citing the high court's Lawrence v. Texas decision in their effort to void the military's ban on open homosexuality. Attorney C. Dixon Osburn of the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network said the world is different now than it was when President Clinton implemented "Don't ask, don't tell" in 1993.