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Arlington Cemetery strips content on black and female veterans from website
The Army-run cemetery said it is working to follow Trump's orders on ending diversity while restoring information.

It's just March fool. Explain this shyt.![]()
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Susannah Burley, Founder & Executive Directorsburley@soulnola.org504.616.6888 Susannah Burley holds a Master of Landscape Architecture degree from Louisiana State University. From 2012-2016, sh…soulnola.org
Thread ran out of momentum quickly I see. Grasping already.
FBA, Tariq stans, and no reparations no vote posters need their asses banned.TLR tried to touch this topic, and it was a bunch of ghosts that never tagged into the thread.
FBA, Tariq stans, and no reparations no vote posters need their asses banned.
N-gga stay trying to sound tough behind a computer screen, but have the energy of a ham sandwich irl
It's just March fool. Explain this shyt.
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Black Medal of Honor recipient removed from US Department of Defense website
Page honoring Charles C Rogers for his Vietnam war service is now defunct with letters ‘DEI’ added to website addresswww.theguardian.com
Black Medal of Honor recipient removed from US Department of Defense website
Page honoring Charles C Rogers for his Vietnam war service is now defunct with letters ‘DEI’ added to website address
Maya Yang
Sun 16 Mar 2025 15.03 EDT
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The US defense department webpage celebrating an army general who served in the Vietnam war and was awarded the country’s highest military decoration has been removed and the letters “DEI” added to the site’s address.
On Saturday, US army Maj Gen Charles Calvin Rogers’s Medal of Honor webpage led to a “404” error message. The URL was also changed, with the word “medal” changed to “deimedal”.
Rogers, who was awarded the Medal of Honor by then president Richard Nixon in 1970, served in the Vietnam war, where he was wounded three times while leading the defense of a base.
According to the West Virginia military hall of fame, Rogers was the highest-ranking African American to receive the medal. After his death in 1990, Rogers’s remains were buried at the Arlington national cemetery in Washington DC, and in 1999 a bridge in Fayette county, where Rogers was born, was renamed the Charles C Rogers Bridge.