logo
Disappearing DEI or history? Information taken off Arlington National Cemetery site

Disappearing DEI or history? Information taken off Arlington National Cemetery site

USA Today18-03-2025

Disappearing DEI or history? Information taken off Arlington National Cemetery site
Show Caption
Hide Caption
AG Pam Bondi's first day ends in flurry of new policies
Pam Bondi wasted no time after she was confirmed as US Attorney General Tuesday, issuing multiple directives in line with President Donald Trump.
A visitor to Arlington National Cemetery's website earlier this year would have seen links to information about a wide range of notable African Americans, Hispanic Americans and women buried there.
Not any more.
The Trump administration unpublished, altered or hid content and links about all three groups buried at the cemetery ‒ one of the nation's most hallowed military sites.
Links for other "notable graves" of veterans remain, as well as for sports figures, and leaders in politics, medicine, science and culture.
The alterations are part of a sweeping effort by the Trump administration and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to remove references throughout the Department to diversity, equity and inclusion issues or "gender ideology."
Dozens of pages and links on the national cemetery's website appear to have been caught up in the purge.
One now-missing page on the cemetery's website linked to 14 educational lesson plans on African Americans, including walking tours and a unit on the famed Tuskegee Airmen, according to a search of the Wayback Machine by Internet Archive. The unlinked lesson plans are still available through a web search.
A similar lesson plan page devoted to the Borinqueneers ‒ a storied unit of Puerto Rican soldiers awarded for their service in the world wars and the Korean War ‒ is now even more difficult to find.
Other pages also vanished from the website, but are still accessible through Google searches.
In response to questions from USA TODAY, the cemetery stated some of the removed content is being restored, while still complying with the orders from President Donald Trump and the Department of Defense. It did not specify which pages will be restored and when.
'A story of diversity, equity and inclusion'
Kevin Levin, a historian and educator in Boston who specializes in Civil War history, brought attention to the changes in a newsletter published on March 8. He told USA TODAY he learned of the changes from a teacher using the website.
'The story of Arlington is essentially a story of diversity, equity and inclusion,' Levin said. 'That is the very thing that the Trump administration is trying to wipe clean, and that entails erasing our history.'
More than 400,000 people are buried at Arlington. The first military burial at the Virginia cemetery, operated by the U.S. Army, took place on May 13, 1864. Among the historical figures buried there are two U.S. presidents, John F. Kennedy and William Howard Taft; General Colin Powell, a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; Supreme Justice Thurgood Marshall; and boxer Joe Louis, a former world heavyweight champion and grandson of a slave.
"Stepping on the grounds of Arlington offers a powerful reminder of the service and sacrifice of Americans from all walks of life," Levin wrote in his newsletter. In recent years, the cemetery had expanded its historical accounts of people who fought and died for the country, he said, creating a way for students around the country who may not get to visit Arlington, to connect with people from more diverse backgrounds.
With the ongoing changes, Levin said he worries about how materials may be rewritten, "and in what way those revisions prevent us from getting at the full history of Arlington."
'Hard work based on merit'
From the beginning of his second term, the president made it clear he wanted to eradicate references to diversity, equity and inclusion. He signed an executive order "ending radical and wasteful government DEI programs" on Inauguration Day, and another related order on DEI in the military on Jan. 27.
The Office of Personnel Management sent out a memo on Jan. 21 directing all agencies to take a number of steps on DEI, including taking down "all outward facing media" of diversity and inclusion offices.
On Jan. 29, the defense department distributed a memo stating diversity, equity and inclusion policies are "incompatible" with the department's values. Hegseth also created a task force to oversee the "standing down" of the diversity and inclusion offices throughout the department and military services and the end of all actions by the offices that promote "ideologies related to systemic racism or gender fluidity."
"The DOD mission is to win the nation's wars," Hegseth said. "To do this, we must have a lethal fighting force that rewards individual initiative, excellence and hard work based on merit."
Hegseth set a March 1 deadline for an initial report from the task force and a final deadline of June 1.
On Feb. 26, Sean Parnell, assistant to the defense secretary for public affairs, ordered all department news and feature articles, photos and videos that promoted diversity, equity and inclusion be removed. The memo also directed that all removed items be archived. The memo also stated the websites should provide blanket statements to acknowledge content was being removed to align with the executive orders from the president.
'Monumental waste of time and resources'
Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee, criticized the recent changes in an emailed statement to USA TODAY, calling them "an egregious insult to the people who have served our country valiantly."
"Wasting time on so-called culture wars entirely of the Trump Administration's own making is a monumental waste of time and resources," Smith said. "If they were serious about addressing inefficiency in the Defense Department there are plenty of real issues to focus on."
Committee chair Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Ala., did not respond to requests for comment.
Purging Department of Defense websites
Changes also have occurred to other Defense Department websites, including military branches and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, in an effort to eradicate mentions of Black History Month and Pride Month, which celebrates gay, lesbian, bisexual, queer and transgender individuals.
In some cases, the key word searches being used to flag content pulled up subjects that had entirely different meanings. The Associated Press reported, for example, that photos were flagged of the Enola Gay, the B-29 bomber that dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima. The news shocked the granddaughter of the pilot Paul W. Tibbetts Jr., whose mother the plane was named for, the Columbus Dispatch reported.
The Defense Department removed an article linked to Black History Month about Army Maj. Gen. Charles Calvin Rogers, the most senior Black soldier ever awarded the Medal of Honor.
A West Virginia native, Rogers served in the Army for 32 years, including during the Vietnam War. He was recognized for "conspicuous gallantry" for his service while a lieutenant colonel commanding an artillery battalion. He was wounded three times while helping to repel an attack on a forward support base, according to the citation. Awarded the Medal by Pres. Richard Nixon in 1970, Rogers was buried at Arlington when he died in 1990.
Social media sleuths noticed the article's web address in a copy available in the Wayback Machine, had the letters "dei" added before medal.
After a public outcry, the department had reinstated the article as of Monday, flagging it as part of a historical collection. USA TODAY has asked the Defense Department for comment about the article removal.
Among the other changes:

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

"No Kings" protests taking place in Northern California on Saturday
"No Kings" protests taking place in Northern California on Saturday

CBS News

time20 minutes ago

  • CBS News

"No Kings" protests taking place in Northern California on Saturday

Multiple protests are expected throughout Northern California as part of the "No Kings" movement on Saturday. The protests coincide with President Donald Trump's birthday and the military parade celebrating the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army in Washington D.C., which Mr. Trump will be attending. "On June 14—Flag Day— President Trump wants tanks in the street and a made-for-TV display of dominance for his birthday," the No Kings website states. "We're not gathering to feed his ego. We're building a movement that leaves him behind." Northern California events A protest is planned at the California State Capitol on the West steps in Sacramento. It will begin at 10 a.m. and is scheduled to end at 1 p.m. According to Indivisible Sacramento, the event host, there will be speakers at the Capitol protest. Some of the speakers include Assembly Member Maggie Krell and Sacramento council member Roger Dickinson. Other protests are planned at the Roseville Galleria, Galt City Hall, East Bidwell Street/Highway 50 Overpass in Folsom, San Joaquin Delta College in Stockton. A protest is scheduled at 10 a.m. in Woodland, with people marching from the new courthouse to the old courthouse. In Davis, an event is planned at the Superior Court at 10 a.m. Non-violent protests The organizing page for No Kings states the movement is committed to non-violent action. "We expect all participants to de-escalate any potential confrontation with those who disagree with our values and to act lawfully at these events," its website states.

Melania Trump compared to 'grandma's couch' in floral pants outfit with bright heels
Melania Trump compared to 'grandma's couch' in floral pants outfit with bright heels

USA Today

time23 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Melania Trump compared to 'grandma's couch' in floral pants outfit with bright heels

Melania Trump compared to 'grandma's couch' in floral pants outfit with bright heels Show Caption Hide Caption Melania Trump statue sawed off, stolen A bronze statue of Melania Trump has gone missing in her home country of Slovenia, five years after it replaced a wooden statue that was burned. First Lady Melania Trump's risky fashion behavior has fully bloomed. With summer underway, the ultra-private wife of President Donald Trump made an appearance on June 12, as dozens flocked to the White House South Lawn for the 2025 Congressional Picnic. Again, Trump raised eyebrows after sporting Dolce and Gabbana peony-print cotton jacquard pants and pink suede Manolo Blahnik pumps while greeting guests during the event. The List, an entertainment and lifestyle site geared towards women, said the "eye-popping pants look like grandma's couch." Melania Trump wears black veil to Pope Francis' funeral as President Trump dons blue suit Trump's fashion choices, which are thought to reveal subtle hints about her mood, are the subject of fierce controversy and constant attention. On Jan. 20, she emerged in a dark navy silk wool coat and skirt with an ivory silk crepe blouse designed by Adam Lippes for her husband's second inauguration ceremony. Although she often surprises watchers with her bargain buys and luxurious looks alike, the low-key black dress (and viral matching wide-brim hat) at the swearing-in was a stark departure from the Jacqueline Kennedy-inspired powder blue dress that she wore for her husband's first inauguration in 2017. The former fashion model — and first practicing Catholic to serve as first lady since Jacqueline Kennedy — also made headlines when she attended the April 26 service of Pope Francis in a double-breasted coat dress paired with a traditional veil, gloves and black stilettos.

As Trump Prepares to Celebrates Army's Founding, His Critics Take to the Streets
As Trump Prepares to Celebrates Army's Founding, His Critics Take to the Streets

New York Times

time25 minutes ago

  • New York Times

As Trump Prepares to Celebrates Army's Founding, His Critics Take to the Streets

President Trump prepared on Saturday to make a show of American military might with a parade of tanks, missiles and aircraft through the heart of the nation's capital, a celebration of the 250th anniversary of the United States Army that has already transformed into a test of wills and competing imagery, with demonstrators around the country decrying his expansion of executive power. On Saturday, central Washington was locked down, divided by a wall of tall, black crowd-control fences designed to assure that the parade, the first of its kind since American troops returned from the Gulf War in 1991, is an uninterrupted demonstration of history and American power. The event was scheduled to go on despite a forecast of thunderstorms. By design, military parades are part national celebration and part international intimidation, and Mr. Trump has wanted one in Washington since he attended a Bastille Day parade in Paris in 2017. Formally, the parade celebrates the decision by the Second Continental Congress on June 14, 1775, to raise a unified, lightly armed force of colonialists after the shock of the battles with British forces at Lexington and Concord. That army, which George Washington took command of a month later, ultimately expelled the far larger, better armed colonial force. But no celebration of history takes place in a political vacuum. And protesters in large cities and small towns from Seattle to Key West were planning to demonstrate against how Mr. Trump is making use of the modern force. His decisions over the past week to federalize the National Guard and call the Marines into the streets of Los Angeles, in support of his immigration roundups, has rekindled a debate about whether he is abusing the powers of the commander in chief. So the country was preparing for a split-screen show of force, before Mr. Trump presides over the parade and roughly 2,000 protests, under the slogan 'No Kings,' take place from Philadelphia to San Francisco to push back against what they see at authoritarian overreach. While the big-city rallies will attract attention, smaller events are being organized in rural areas, including three dozen in Indiana, a state Mr. Trump won last November by 19 points. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store