During my first deployment I was the only woman on a convoy. The convoy commander didn't want me staying by myself across the FOB so he put me in the tent with the rest of the convoy escort team, the same guys I had just been locked in an MRAP with for 12+ hours. The billeting OIC came in and forced me to stay in the female tent where I slept by myself with no lock on the tent and ZERO battle buddies. All because it was a violation of GO1 to stay with my team.
RIDICULOUS!!!
If you can trust your "battle buddies" to spend hours in a small wheeled vehicle for hours without trying to grope you, then you should be able (as responsible adults) to trust each other to sleep in the same room without violating each other's private space...
And if you can't, then there's a much bigger issue that needs to be brought to the attention of your supervisor or commander...
We're assuming a "hetero-normative" standard in a male dominated environment and that leads us to focus our attention on heterosexual man-and-woman relationships with special accommodations for the minority party in that potential relationship: Women.
It's not about fairness or deeper philosophical underpinnings of habitation policy. It's about making the mission happen with the least friction in the form of sexual harassment/assault, pregnancy, morale, and everything else while the civilian paymasters are breathing down our higher's back to make sure we don't get any bad headlines from down range that lose us the public relations war at home.
Here's my personal preference: A gender neutral environment with coed lodging, hygiene facilities, strict punishment for sexual harassment from anyone, and an end to adultery as a UCMJ offense as long as it doesn't even create the appearance of undue influence on the CoC. But I'll take what I can get.
Although I believe I understand why you drew the connection between punishing adultery and upholding the Army Values, I think you have an invalid argument...
The Army Values are a set of goals to strive toward. No one is purely Loyal, or purely Dutiful... No one is ALWAYS Respectful to EVERYONE... they are NOT punitive clauses in the UCMJ...
That said, if they removed adultery from the list of punishable offences, it would not make people lie, nor have less personal courage. It would, in my opinion, give people more leeway to TELL the truth without the fear of negative repercussions...
Do I think Adultery is good, No. Do I think that engaging in Adultery shows Loyalty, Duty, Respect, Selfless Service, Honor, Integrity, and Personal Courage... No...
And I'm not even going to bring my Religious convictions into this, but I still believe that if we try to police everyone's code of ethics, then we are going to be very busy busting people for other things...
SFC Holmes, I think this may open up a Pandora's box of issues. The main thing I would say with regards to this question is the DADT act itself or its repeal didn't change the physical gender of anybody. Is it now suggested that it was fair before, or that I didn't know the guy/gal (depending on your gender) in the shower with me had/displayed LBGT tendencies before? For me, fairness doesn't become an issue, for I realize that any/all LGBT personnel are probably not be attracted to me. And the ones that are and present unwanted attention of any sorts would definitely fall into the category of a SHARP complaint, not a fairness complaint, IMO.