Not much of a comparison. As Colin Powell succinctly said (before supporting the repeal of DADT), race is innate, sexual preference is not.
It's not an exact comparison, obviously, and how much of a comparison in regards to whether its a good or bad one is really just matter of opinion.
However, there are similarities:
- opponents of integration cited that allowing blacks to serve alongside whites would damage moral. The same is being said with gays.
- Same with unit cohesion
- discrimination can or does exist for both minorities and gays
- Many of the problems are rooted in assumptions about gays and minorities.
I read this in an article on the subject:
"Most people think of racial identity as a matter of (racial) status, but they respond to it as behavior. Most people think of sexual identity as a matter of (sexual) behavior, but they respond to it as status. Accordingly, people who fear and dislike blacks are typically preoccupied with the threat that they think blacks' aggressive behavior poses to them. Hence they're inclined to make exceptions for the kindly, "civilized" blacks: that's why "The Cosby Show" could be so popular among white South Africans. By contrast, the repugnance that many people feel toward gays concerns, in the first instance, the status ascribed to them. Disapproval of a sexual practice is transmuted into the demonization of a sexual species."Interesting note: when Truman issue in the integration order, 63% of the american public was against it.