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| − | '''Barry Winchell''' was "a [[homosexual]] soldier at Fort Campbell, Ky., who was brutally [[murder]]ed in 1999. Homosexual groups immediately portrayed the murder as an example of anti-homosexual bigotry in the Army. But in Paul Harvey’s formulation, “the rest of the story” is somewhat more complicated. It turns out that the murder was inspired by a “love triangle” involving Winchell, another soldier, and a performer in a [[Nashville]] gay bar who was in [[Sex change operation|transition]] from male to female." <ref> | + | '''Barry Winchell''' was "a [[homosexual]] soldier at Fort Campbell, Ky., who was brutally [[murder]]ed in 1999. Homosexual groups immediately portrayed the murder as an example of anti-homosexual bigotry in the Army. But in Paul Harvey’s formulation, “the rest of the story” is somewhat more complicated. It turns out that the murder was inspired by a “love triangle” involving Winchell, another soldier, and a performer in a [[Nashville]] gay bar who was in [[Sex change operation|transition]] from male to female." <ref>https://www.nationalreview.com/articles/229096/defending-dont-ask/mackubin-thomas-owens?page=2</ref> |
== References == | == References == | ||
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[[Don't Ask, Don't Tell]] | [[Don't Ask, Don't Tell]] | ||
| − | [[Category:Homosexuals in the | + | [[Category:Homosexuals in the Military]] |
Latest revision as of 05:30, April 9, 2019
Barry Winchell was "a homosexual soldier at Fort Campbell, Ky., who was brutally murdered in 1999. Homosexual groups immediately portrayed the murder as an example of anti-homosexual bigotry in the Army. But in Paul Harvey’s formulation, “the rest of the story” is somewhat more complicated. It turns out that the murder was inspired by a “love triangle” involving Winchell, another soldier, and a performer in a Nashville gay bar who was in transition from male to female." [1]