Pentagon Anti-DEI Purge Leads To More Erasure Of Our Shared History

from the the-stupid-it-burns dept

The only silver lining in just how stupid this supposed anti-DEI purge of government records has become is that it appears the stupids doing the stupid are now finally starting to realize just how stupid it has become. Stemming from one of Trump’s many executive orders, one which instructed the government to essentially purge its policies and records of anything that could be tied to programs for Diversity Equity and Inclusion (DEI), the government has apparently decided to approach this in the laziest and most capricious way possible. Some automated system was setup to flag, and in some cases remove, content on all kinds of government systems content based on broad search terms with nary a human to review the results to be found. Instead, this appears to be something of an anti-woke scream test. These records, often matters of valuable historical content, get removed and the administration waits to see who screams about it so they can clean up any messes they made.

That’s no way to run a government, of course, but here we are. And the end result has been about what you’d expect if you thought this through for ten seconds. Terms that are only sometimes used in DEI-type conversations are being searched and purged for, resulting in the removal of content that has nothing to do with DEI. Historical content has been scrubbed from government websites in the same way, with one example being the removal of references to the Enola Gay, the plane that dropped the first American nuclear bomb, simply because of the plane’s name.

But rather than stop and admit that this was all going terribly, the Trump administration has steadily marched on. And because it did so, we have a whole new trove of erroneously removed content from Pentagon systems and websites.

But dozens of the articles either flagged for removal or removed already — but still accessible via the Internet Archive’s Wayback machine — and reviewed by CNN have no ostensible connection to DEI programs; race theory; gender ideology or identity-based programs.

At least half a dozen articles already removed are about the Holocaust and now have the word “DEI” in their URL. Articles related to September 11 remembrance, including service members reflecting on their service and where they were that day, have also been removed. So have articles about cancer awareness, including those related to Breast Cancer Awareness month and colon cancer awareness.

Several articles about sexual assault have also been removed and now have “DEI” in their URL, including “April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month” and “A call to action – Three ways to combat sexual assault.”

Articles about suicide prevention have been purged, too, including ones titled: “VA releases veteran suicide statistics by state”; “Suicide prevention alliance focuses on troops, veterans”; and “Suicide Prevention Resources That Can Help.” The latter two articles now feature “DEI” in their URLs.

Also included in the collateral damage were materials relating to Jackie Robinson. Robinson is an American hero, of course, not only for breaking the color barrier in Major League Baseball, but for what he endured in the military as well. A recipient of the Congressional Gold Medal and the Presidential Medal of Freedom, Robinson was court-martialed for refusing to sit in the back of a bus (the other charges against him were made up). An all-white jury acquited him of those charges. The article that was removed was one that detailed his military career.

Now, some of this content, including those concerning Robinson, has since been restored. The scream test resulted in screaming, you see. But much of it has not and the comments coming from the administration about it all are, well, fairly indecipherable.

Pentagon Press Secretary John Ullyot said in a statement Wednesday that the Defense Department was “pleased by the rapid compliance” across the Pentagon with the directive removing DEI content from all platforms.

“In the rare cases that content is removed – either deliberately or by mistake – that is out of the clearly outlined scope of the directive, we instruct the components and they correct the content so it recognizes our heroes for their dedicated service alongside their fellow Americans, period.”

If you’re sure you know what actual hell that means, your confidence is impressive. But voices from inside the Pentagon give lie to Ullyot’s claim that this is all going well.

That automated process has led to “a high level of irresponsible collateral damage,” one of the defense officials said. “People don’t understand the scope and the carelessness of ‘unpublishing’ that’s happened,” the official said.

Another of the defense officials said that the Pentagon understands that the process needs a significant course-correction and is now undergoing a more thorough review of what has been purged to determine if it should be republished.

“Because of these series of events, the department recognizes that this needs to be a more deliberative process involving human beings to ensure that a thorough review of content is completed,” the official said. “This may take more time than originally planned.”

Well, gosh golly gee, welcome to the real world. If only someone could have predicted that this haphazard effort to whitewash history would result in such collateral damage. This is, after all, somewhat akin to content moderation. Which, as we’ve noted repeatedly, is essentially impossible to do correctly at scale.

And when the collateral damage amounts to the erasure of our history, it really is the sort of thing you should want to get as close to correct as possible.

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Comments on “Pentagon Anti-DEI Purge Leads To More Erasure Of Our Shared History”

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20 Comments
This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

“Collateral damage” requires that this isn’t the intended result. It is. This is just “normal damage.”

The Trump administration isn’t marching on despite how it’s all “going terribly”. They are marching on because it is going well.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
TJ Aich (profile) says:

Re:

It does imply that, but it’s rarely used that way. Usually, when a country bombs another country and kills civilians, they say there was collateral damage to cover up the fact that they knew they’d kill civilians and did it anyway. Maybe the first time it’s an accident. By the 100th time, I think you can safely assume it’s intentional.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

This isn’t “knowing they’d kill civilians and doing it anyway.” Having a target, and doing indiscriminate damage to other non-targets while seeking to attack the target is an example of the normal use of collateral damage, and would make that the correct term to use.

That isn’t what is happening here. The Trump administration wants to erase this history, it is the explicit target of their purges. Using “collateral damage” to describe these actions is equivalent to saying that JFK died as a result of collateral damage from an attack on Dealey Plaza.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Terribly picky, but you do know trinity is a word describing something of three parts, right? The plutonium bomb detonated in New Mexico was only to find out if it worked, and Little Boy and Fat Man were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki respectively to find out their effects on humans. Why do you think American doctors were sent to treat the survivors in both cities for decades afterward?* It wasn’t out of any sense of guilt Truman may have had over the horror that he and his predecessor were ultimately responsible for, I can tell you that.

*Source

Anonymous Coward says:

At least half a dozen articles already removed are about the Holocaust and now have the word “DEI” in their URL.

I think this might actually have been done by the web masters to ensure their content gets removed because for all the Trump Administration is anti-‘woke’, they won’t want to do anything that is anti-semitic, which is exactly what removal of articles about the Holocaust (“No such thing” ~ Bobby Fischer)* looks like.

*Just to clarify: I don’t deny that the Holocaust was carried out against my people, but Fischer definitely did.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

I read on CNN earlier that Trump is trying to declassify and release a bunch of files on Martin Luther King, Jr.⁠—files believed to contain information that would paint MLK in a negative light (e.g., evidence of extramarital affairs). Now combine that knowledge with the scattershot and widespread removal of “DEI” materials, including the removals mentioned in the article and the brief removal of materials about the Tuskegee Airmen from an Air Force training course.

What purpose would any of these actions have besides discrediting the work of the Civil Rights Movement and the ideas of racial desegregation and equality? Seriously, I’d like a Trump supporter to tell me what purpose, other than laying the foundation for resegregation, any or all of these actions have.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
n00bdragon (profile) says:

Re: Re:

I am not myself a Trump supporter, but my politics and geographic location sometimes put me close enough to them that I think I can translate. The most charitable way I can put it is this: There is a widely held belief among some people that the celebration (or simple acknowledgement) of the achievement/presence of non-white people erases or diminishes or comes at the expense of white people. The “logic” goes “how come they get recognition and I do not?”

If this sounds like racist garbage, that’s because it is. This subculture has some grievances (legitimate or otherwise) to air about being sidelined and excluded from the cultural zeitgeist and that’s been allowed to fester in the corners of society too long without exposure to competing viewpoints and now they are willing to put their faith in some really fucked up people because those people are the only ones who openly declare they are willing to “fight for them” (even if they lie through their teeth about that every time).

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
MrWilson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2

It has to be the most mediocre people whose lives are so disappointing that they must associate themselves with the achievements of others entirely based on the similarity of the pigmentation in their skin, which doesn’t even indication genetic relationship or other shared features.

Interestingly enough, the mentality seems to still occur even in “successful people,” which shows that the sense of mediocrity and disappointment can be even more powerful than wealth and power.

When people like Musk and Trump, despite being wealthy and powerful, are desperate for approval, demand ego-stroking and apologies, whine about how criticism of them is unfair, and alienate those around them with their histrionics and solipsism, it’s a good sign that having more money than you need will never make you happy if you weren’t already happy with having enough to thrive on.

They both could have retired on what they have, but they have to keep desperately seeking more approval, securing more money, trying to force reality to their will. Much like the trolls who spend way too much time in the comments, no healthy person spends that much time trying to twist reality to be what they want.

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