The United States Senate is supposed to be the "senior body," the place where wise legislators serving long terms weigh new laws and debate their decisions carefully, with due attention to history, science and culture.
When a Senator votes, it's a well-considered choice -- or so a dozen years of Social Studies, U. S. History and U. S. Government classes led me to believe. When the Senate voted to confirm General Charles Q. Brown, a former fighter pilot, as the new Chairman of the Joint Chief of Staff, Senator Thomas H. "Tommy" Tuberville of Alabama voted Nay.
Ah, but he's a U.S. Senator; surely his reasoning is sound even if one might disagree with his conclusion, right?
Judge for yourself. The senior Senator was concerned the USAF fighter pilot might be too "woke," telling an interviewer, "Our military is not an equal opportunity employer, it is a military that is here to protect American citizens." You can look up the video for yourself, but the quote is not out of context.
And it's a hundred percent wrong. Ever since 1948, when President Truman signed Executive Order 9981, it has been explicit U. S. policy "...that there shall be equality of treatment and opportunity for all
persons in the armed services without regard to race, color, religion or
national origin."
The military is, in plain fact, an equal opportunity employer. They don't promise equality of outcome; not everyone makes it through Basic Training and of the ones who do, some will never qualify for anything especially challenging. But if you've got the ability, Uncle Sam doesn't care about your hue, what (if any) deities you worship or where you came from. These days, he doesn't even care who you sleep with or if you're a boy, a girl or a mystery. The military cares about what you can do. That's not "wokeism;" it's kind of harsh -- service in the toughest, most elite units is based on reality-tested individual accomplishment, both alone and as part of a team. Them as can't, wash out, period. That's not going to change.
The Senator, I'm not so sure what he cares about. Looking stuff up doesn't appear to be on his list.
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