Chiefs of U.S. Army, Navy, Marine Corps & Air Force say that transgender soldiers aren't a problem

Hey, remember few weeks back when The Trump Administration, with its dickery engines revved up to 126%, declared that transgendered personnel would no longer be in welcome in the United States military? One of their bullshit excuses for why this should be the case was that, apparently, transgendered individuals were bad for unit cohesion and terrible for morale. Well, the heads of all four branches of the American military have all gone out of their way, on the record, to say that this simply is not the case.

From the Military Times:

Sen. Kristen Gillibrand, D-N.Y., as she had with the top military leaders of the Army, Navy and Marine Corps when they appeared before the Senate Armed Services Committee for their budget hearings, used the opportunity to question Goldfein as to whether he was aware of any "issues of unit cohesion, disciplinary problems or issues of morale resulting from open transgender service."

"In the last two weeks Gen. [Mark] Milley, Gen. [Robert] Neller, and Adm. [John] Richardson have told me that they have seen zero reports of issues of cohesion, discipline, morale as a result of open transgender service in their respective service branches," Gillibrand said, referring to the chiefs of staff of the Army, Marine Corps and Navy, respectively.

Bravo Zulu.

The Military Times goes on to say that on Tuesday, the Air Force's top officer, Chief of Staff Gen. Dave Goldfein, told Congress that he hadn't heard any reports of issues in the ranks surrounding transgender personnel and, of those he spoke with, he noted a "commitment to serve by each of them." This is a hell of a thing: four career officers at the pinnacle of their careers all going to bat for the men and women that serve under them. Any of the four officers could have played politics, and thrown their transgendered troops under Trump and Secretary of Defense Mattis's shitty, bigoted short bus.

I guess at the end of the day soldiering, as they say, isn't about fighting for your country–it's about taking care of the soldier next to you.

Image via United States European Command, Spc. Bethany L. Little, 40th Public Affairs Detachment