Arlington National Cemetery Removes Content About Non-White or Female Members of the Military from Website

| 0

Arlington National Cemetery removed from its website information and links regarding members of the military who were non-white or female, even those who were Medal of Honor recipients.

In some instances content still exists in the website but can only be found through a targeted search. The web address of such content was changed to imply that any awards they held were not earned. For example, Charles Rogers was awarded the Medal of Honor for his service in Vietnam. He was black. When found through a direct search, the address for content about him included “deimedal-of-honor.”

Internal links were removed for webpages listing dozens of “Notable Graves” of Black, Hispanic, and female veterans, along with their spouses.

Among those now hidden on the website are:

  • General Colin L. Powell – The first Black chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
  • Justice Thurgood Marshall – The first Black Supreme Court Justice.
  • Major General Marcelite Jordan Harris – The Air Force’s first African American woman brigadier general.
  • Lieutenant Kara Spears Hultgreen – The Navy’s first female carrier-based fighter pilot.
  • Major Marie Therese Rossi – The first American woman to fly helicopters in combat during Operation Desert Storm.
  • Ruth Bader Ginsburg – The first Jewish woman appointed to the Supreme Court and the second female Justice.

Additionally, the removed content included information about groups such as the Buffalo Soldiers and the Tuskegee Airmen, both composed of Black service members who made significant contributions to U.S. military history.

Click here for more details.