Pentagon releases guidance on trans military ban, seeks to lift court order

On Friday, the US Department of Defense issued new guidelines on how it applied President Donald Trump’s ban on sexually converts in the army, and asked the federal judge to lift its last order to block the ban.
The memorandum from the Minister of Defense office says that the Ministry of Defense will review the medical records of the service members, and within 45 days, they give them self -evaluation questionnaires, to determine whether they have a diagnosis, date, or current symptoms of the sexual disruption, which makes them not eligible for continuous service.
Difficulty is the distress that a person’s sexual identity faces is not in line with the gender of her birth.
The White House, the Ministry of Defense, and the lawyers of the lawsuit immediately did not respond to the suspension requests.
The memorandum states that excluding people with symptoms of dyslexia applies only to those who suffer from “a noticeable discretion or a large clinical weakness for at least six months,” noting the diagnostic and statistical guide in the American Psychological Association.
It also stipulates that it is not currently possible to be executed due to Wednesday’s order from the American boycott judge, Anna Reyes, in Washington, to ban the Trump administration in response to a lawsuit by sexually transformed and service members.
Lawyers of the Ministry of Justice in the Friday proposal asked Reyes to raise her order in light of the new guidance. They argued that Rais arrangement was incorrectly found that politics was distinguished against people based on their transgender identity, and that the instructions show that they are based on a medical diagnosis.
Reyes has already rejected a similar argument when the policy prevented.
She had been waiting for her until 10:00 am on Friday, to give the government an opportunity to appeal. On Friday’s proposal, the government said it was planning to appeal and asked Reyes to keep her waiting while appeals if she did not raise her.