Yes. You are in the military for "the best interests of the Service." Any condition that compromises your ability to fulfill your mission is grounds for a discharge. Bipolar disorder could directly interact with in-the field performance, so it would almost certainly lead to a discharge under Section 8. Depending on the length and nature of your service, you may get an honorable or general discharge. Talk to a military lawyer for details. This has nothing to do with homosexuality, however.
Unless you served an entire career and retired honorably there is no such thing as "severance" pay from the military. If you are referring to Veterans benefits for a service-connected disability, you can make application for it, but the burden of proof will be upon you to prove that that your Bipolar Disorder was caused by your military service. HIGHLY doubtful!
Yogoslavia and France escaped from the bipolar alliance of the cold war by withdrawing from NATO military structures and expelling all of their NATO troops.
If you have anti-social personality disorder the military wipes their hands clean of you and kick you out.
Bipolar NOS is a category for bipolar states that do not clearly fit into the bipolar I, II, or cyclothymia diagnoses.
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Desorden bipolar o trastorno bipolar
Kids can definitely get Bipolar, especially if one (or both) of the parents are Bipolar.
Bipolar is the correct spelling.
Translation of bipolar: The same word is used.
http://blogs.psychcentral.com/bipolar/2009/01/bipolar-disorder-qa-how-close-are-we-to-a-bipolar-cure/
Get caught with drugs in the military and you face court martial, a few years in military prison and after all that, a dishonorable discharge on your employment record.
It is much less likely with bipolar II than with bipolar I, but yes it can.