No; you just dismiss any answer you don't like... or ask for explanation (again, and again, and again — trying to get some words they say that you can jump on and say "ah-ha!").
People apply for the military, they have to answer questions, during the 30 plus years of the draft answering yes kept you out of the draft.
Being caught out meant dishonorable discharge.
Repeating myself:
Would not going out and getting girls with the guys, or not going to strip clubs be evidence enough? Because I didn't do that in the Army -- because (a) I don't care to go to a strip club, and (b) because I do want to honor my God's strictures on marriage, meaning within the confines of marriage -- but, so far as I know, there's nothing stopping someone from leveling the charge that I'm homosexual because, [obviously] by my actions, I'm not into girls.
You are just posting gibberish.
Should the law be libertarian and that gays are equal, and their legal state marriages recognized in the military, or should they be kicked out if they are discovered to be gay?
Please do not keep pretending that no one can discover if a soldier is gay, in reality, we have been doing that for centuries, including when you were in.