US | Don't Ask, Don't Tell Top West Point Cadet Quits Over 'Don't Ask' Says she has 'compromised' her integrity long enough By John Johnson Posted Aug 10, 2010 5:49 PM CDT Copied Graduating cadets are seated during a commencement and commissioning ceremony at the U.S . Military Academy in West Point, N.Y., Saturday, May 22, 2010. (AP Photo/Mike Groll) A West Point junior ranked 9th in her class is leaving the military school in protest over Don't Ask, Don't Tell. In her letter to the school, Katherine Miller says she's transferring to Yale and will be happy to reapply to the academy—once DADT is repealed. "I have lied to my classmates and compromised my integrity and my identity by adhering to existing military policy," she writes. Read the full letter at Pam's House Blend blog. "I am unwilling to suppress an entire portion of my identity any longer because it has taken a significant personal, mental, and social toll on me and detrimentally affected my professional development," writes Miller. "I have experienced a relentless cognitive dissonance by attempting to adhere to §654 [colloquially known as "Don't Ask, Don't Tell"] and retain my integrity, and I am retrospectively convinced that I am unable to live up to the Army Values as long as the policy remains in place." Read These Next Game 3 of the World Series took a historically long time to wrap up. Bill Gates wants less 'doomsday' talk on climate change. Within half hour, Navy fighter jet and copter both go into the sea. After his grandma's fall, teen creates a winning solution. Report an error