A photo of Army biologists was on a list of images to be purged, seemingly because it mentioned they were recording data about fish that included their gender.
A review of the database underscores the confusion that has swirled among agencies about what to remove following Trump's DEI purge order.
2don MSN
References to the aircraft—which dropped the first war-time atomic bomb—were flagged for removal from Pentagon photos and online posts as part of a DEI purge, presumably because of the word “gay.”
A Defense Department purge of 'DEI' content has caused tens of thousands of photos and stories to be flagged for deletion, many of which have nothing to do with DEI. One image on the chopping block is
This picture of the Enola Gay isn’t the only image to vanish from Pentagon archives in recent weeks. A team of journalists at the Associated Press has archived and counted 26,000 separate pieces of media that the DoD has disappeared from its history. The AP said the list was incomplete, that there are probably more, and that the purge is ongoing.
1don MSN
As a former DOD employee, I had to sit through some DEI events, and in my view, they were not a great use of government time. I did not need a professor from a local college to come in and explain what cis means.
The Trump administration reportedly flagged images of a World War II bomber because it has “gay” in its name.
Why did the Pentagon reportedly flag photos of the Enola Gay for removal? Apparently because of the word “gay” in the plane’s name.
The Department of Defense is flagging photos of the Tuskegee Airmen and "Enola Gay" bomber in its purge of DEI content.
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