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Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Will Rep. Mike Rogers, Chair of the House Armed Services Committee, fight to keep the Defense Department from funding ‘wokeism’?

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U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers / U.S. Navy drag queen Harpy Daniels | mikerogers.house.gov | Instagram @harpy_daniels]

U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers / U.S. Navy drag queen Harpy Daniels | mikerogers.house.gov | Instagram @harpy_daniels]

Representative Mike Rogers (R-AL 3) has been named to the House and Senate conference committee that will craft the 2024 National Defense Reauthorization Act (NDAA)—the bill that funds America’s military. A key issue will be whether the committee keeps the Senate version, which includes controversial social spending, or the House version, which strips out the controversial social spending.

According to a press release, earlier this year, Rep. Rogers issued a statement condemning the Biden administration for turning the Defense Department into "an abortion travel agency over a lethal fighting force."

In September 2023, Rep. Rogers took to X, formerly Twitter, to reiterate his disgust with the DOD's pro-abortion policies in remarks on the House floor, in which he cited the abortion travel policy as a glaring example of the Biden administration's push to use the military to advance the Left's social agendas to the detriment of our servicemen and women and our national security.

On the topic of the defense budget and controversial social spending, Rogers told The Hill, "we're going to cut money that's being spent on wokeism."

According to the Daily Caller, however, despite his opposition to "wokeism" and abortion spending in the Senate's version of the NDAA, Rogers seemed to indicate that all of it would remain in the final bill, stating that "nobody on our side seriously believes" that the conservative policies passed in the House version would be adopted into law.

According to CNN, the House voted to pass the NDAA with the social spending restrictions in July by a margin of 219 to 210. The NDAA would authorize $886 billion for national defense programs and includes policy provisions to counter China's influence, promote tech innovation, and improve overall military readiness and missile defense capabilities.

The House version included several provisions that would eliminate all Pentagon Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion programs and personnel, block military school libraries from purchasing or possessing "pornographic and radical gender ideology books," and bar the DOD and DOD health programs from covering gender reassignment procedures.

The Jackson-Roy amendment to the NDAA was also passed in the House version, that would prevent the DOD from reimbursing service members for abortion-related expenses, including travel. Rep. Jackson argued that the DOD's policy for reimbursing abortion-related travel expenses violates the Hyde Amendment, which expressly prohibits the use of federal funds for abortions.

According to The Hill, the House version of the bill also included an amendment that would codify a ban on drag shows taking place on military bases and further ban DOD funding for any such performances.

Also included and passed in the House bill were several amendments from Congressman Jim Banks, whose office referred to the Banks amendments as "anti-woke amendments." The Banks amendments included a provision to suspend the Navy's Digital Ambassador Program, which had been using drag queen videos as part of their recruitment efforts.

According to the NY Post, Yeoman 2nd Class Joshua Kelley, who performs drag under the name Harpy Daniels, was chosen by the Navy as one of its first "Digital Ambassadors." The "Digital Ambassador" program included five active-duty personnel and was designed to help boost recruitment efforts.

The so-called "anti-woke" Banks amendments also took on racial quotas in admissions to service academies as well as DOD policies related to promotions and assignments. According to a release on Banks' website, the Banks amendments would eliminate racial discrimination and quotas in admissions for military academies, like West Point, and would further require the DOD to issue policy that all military accessions, assignments, selections, or promotions must be decided based on merit and also prohibit any quotas being assigned to applicant pools.

A lawsuit against West Point was recently filed by Students for Fair Admissions, a group challenging the institution's race-based admissions policies—the same group that recently won an affirmative action case against Harvard and UNC-Chapel Hill earlier this year, according to CNN.

A Magnolia Tribune report from February 2022 found that US Service members had spent 5,889,082 man-hours on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion trainings and seminars since President Biden took office the previous year. The report also included a letter from General Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the time, stating that during that same period the DOD had spent $476,874 on DEI trainings and a further $535,000 on a training program called "Extremism Stand Down."

A survey of active service members conducted by the Heritage Foundation earlier this year found that 68% had witnessed some, or a significant level of, politicization in the military. A further 65% of respondents expressed that they were somewhat or very concerned about this development.

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