President Trump’s recent dismissal of General Charles Q. Brown Jr., hailed by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth as the “wokest Joint Chiefs Chairman in American history,” was not merely a political maneuver—it was a necessary course correction. Under Brown’s leadership, the military abandoned its core commitment to excellence in favor of a social experiment rooted in racial preferences and ideological conformity. Brown’s tenure embodied the triumph of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) over military readiness, transforming the Armed Forces into an institution where identity trumped merit. In doing so, he made himself a liability to the very institution he swore to serve, forcing Trump’s hand in removing him to restore the military’s foundational principles.
General Brown’s ideology was never in question. From the outset of his tenure as Air Force Chief of Staff, he made his priorities clear: diversity first, effectiveness second. In a now-infamous June 5, 2020, statement following the death of George Floyd, Brown declared that he was focused on ensuring that “all Airmen, both today and tomorrow, appreciate the value of diversity.” But diversity, as Brown defined it, was not about a broader range of perspectives or an expanded pool of high-caliber recruits. It was about dismantling what he called the “white boys club” in military leadership, an obsession that would guide his tenure and policy decisions at every level.
Brown’s fixation on racial balancing was explicit. In an interview with The Washington Post in January 2021, he insisted, “We gotta actually nudge and pull and actually purposely manage to ensure that we have diverse candidates” for leadership positions. This was not merely an effort to create opportunities for qualified minority candidates—it was an admission that race would be a decisive factor in military promotions. Brown’s belief in “managing” diversity extended into recruitment, where he advocated for altering standards to achieve demographic goals, including reducing reliance on standardized testing because he believed it created barriers to diversity.
PBS, in a July 28, 2021, report, noted that Brown had made “diversifying” the Air Force one of his top priorities. In that same broadcast, Brown justified his radical agenda by stating that “the beauty of” George Floyd’s death was that it forced the Air Force to take a “hard look at ourselves.” That statement alone should have raised alarm bells. The military’s mission is not to engage in self-flagellation over racial grievances but to defend the United States from foreign threats. Instead, Brown saw his role as a racial activist within the ranks, pushing the military to adopt DEI principles that prioritized race-based hiring and promotions over operational effectiveness.
His DEI policies permeated every aspect of military personnel management. Brown pushed for reviewing the social media activity of Air Force recruits to screen for “extremist tendencies,” raising concerns about ideological litmus tests being used to weed out conservatives. His monthly “inclusion councils” became ideological echo chambers, where the military’s leadership was pressured to fall in line with progressive social mandates.
Most troublingly, Brown actively worked to diminish meritocratic standards in favor of racial quotas. Under his leadership, pilot training prerequisites were modified to boost racial diversity, even if it meant reducing the importance of flight experience. His efforts to anonymize personal information in awards nominations were similarly driven by a belief that military evaluations were tainted by “unconscious bias.” The implication was clear: the only way to achieve the racial outcomes he desired was to erode the standards that had long defined military excellence.
Brown’s approach to DEI was not merely misguided—it had real-world consequences. The U.S. military, under his tenure, faced its worst recruitment crisis in decades. In 2023, the Army missed its recruiting goal by over 15,000 soldiers, while the Air Force fell nearly 3,000 short. Brown and other military leaders dismissed concerns that DEI policies played a role in this shortfall, but surveys showed a growing distrust in military leadership among conservatives, many of whom cited the force’s “woke” turn as a deterrent to enlistment. The Reagan Institute found that trust in the military plummeted from 70% in 2018 to just 51% in 2022, with respondents overwhelmingly citing the politicization of the Armed Forces as a primary factor.
At the same time, military readiness suffered. Training mishaps and operational failures surged, with the Army experiencing its highest rate of deadly aviation accidents in over a decade. In 2023 alone, 14 soldiers lost their lives in noncombat aviation incidents, a number not seen since 2011. The Air Force, under Brown’s watch, also saw an increase in Class A mishaps—major accidents involving loss of life or aircraft destruction. When the focus of leadership shifts from combat readiness to identity politics, such failures are inevitable.
The crime rate among service members also reflected a growing erosion of discipline and order. Reports showed that sexual assault cases skyrocketing, with the Navy experiencing a 13% spike in reported incidents from 2022 to 2023. While military justice data on other crimes varied by branch, the perception that the force had become more permissive under DEI-driven leadership was undeniable.
Brown’s defenders argue that his policies were necessary to create a more inclusive force. But the Armed Forces were never meant to be an incubator for social engineering. They exist to fight and win wars. Brown’s tenure represented a profound deviation from that mission, one that prioritized identity over capability, quotas over excellence, and social justice over national security.
President Trump’s decision to replace Brown was not just justified—it was imperative. The military cannot afford leadership that views it as a vehicle for racial activism rather than a warfighting force. Trump’s actions send a clear message: the era of DEI-driven decline is over. The military will once again be led by those who understand that its primary obligation is to the defense of the United States, not to ideological experiments in diversity.
With Brown gone, the challenge now is to undo the damage he has done. The military must recommit to meritocracy, restore faith among conservative enlistees and refocus on its core mission of national defense. That process begins with purging DEI policies from the ranks and ensuring that future leaders understand that the only standard that matters is excellence in service, not the color of one’s skin. General CQ Brown was the wrong man for the job. Trump made the right call in removing him.
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Obama train the General well 🤦♀️
Take a look at OER’s. When I was in the US Army, it was very hard NOT to get an almost perfect score. If everybody is “above average,” the scores and feedback is meaningless and doesn’t work as a discriminator. Later in my business career, I used this experience as a teaching point about how NOT to do performance reviews.
This is a prime example of “destruction from within” that was promised by Kruschev decades ago. It is an outright attack on America.
Defend against any enemy foreign or domestic ring any bells ?
AND, just STF did or does the death of LIFETIME CRIMINA< DRUG ADDICT< ALCOHOLIC, George Floyd haeve to do with DIVERSITY of DEI.
Floyd did NOT die because he was BLAXK; He died because he was a LIFELONG CRIMINA and DRUGGIE. He died because he had a FATAL dose of Fentanyl in his system, along with an assortment of AMPHETAMINS , and a HIGH VOLU<E of alcohol. Floyd was NOT MURDERED. Floyd KILLED HIMSELF with his CRIINAL lifestyle addictions .
A law officer is serving a prison sentence because of YOUR DEI BULLSHIT; I hope that under President Trump's administration he can receive a NEW TRIAL without the CRIMINAL STREET PUNKS intimidation of the ENTIRE process. We are so TIRED of your DEI and RACISM BULLSHIT. Study to pass tests like anybody who takes a test. regardless of skin color. The SLAVE GUIILT has been REMVOVED from the around the neck of the American people and the BLACKS' scam exposed.
Nobody in the last 20 generations has owned a slave, AND when there was slavery in the country, the ONLY SLAVE OWNERS were DEMOCRATS and some blacks, AND WE ARE tired OF THE STYGMIZATION
DEI has been a priority at the service academies since Obama’s days, but it became even more prominent and in-your-face under Biden. The same philosophy has permeated the promotion policy for senior officers. So ti may take 10-20 years to filter through the mid and higher ranks to reestablish a priority for war fighting over diversity goals. We need more than attrition to work through its damaging effects.
I was a victim of DEI when it was not even invented. It was in the 1970’s when I was a SSG E6 and eligible FOR PROMOTION TO E7. I had to wait until “ALL” minority” E6’s who were eligible for promotion were promoted to E7 regardless of their standing on the promotion list!!! To this day it still sickens me because it prevented me from making E8 before I finally retired in 1982 as an E7!!! I’ve lost a lot in retirement money. I will reiterate the fact that all this time I was at the top of the promotion list! Email me if you need any more facts. I DO NOT LIE TO ANYBODY!!! I am a firm believer in our Lord Jesus Christ…..
Jerry, your story sounds exactly like my situation. I retired on 1 May 1979. I could not believe it when my supervisor, an E8 told me he found out I missed a promotion to MSgt
by 3/32nds of a point. at one time. He told me it almost made him sick as he told me he also knew what was going on. God bless you Jerry and our entire Military.
What is really sad is that so many competent junior leaders got out because of DEI and their leaders’ commitment to DEI over readiness and national defense. Who do you think was left behind to mentor them? If you guessed DEI and leftovers with nowhere else to go, you pass.
This stuff has been going on since the mid-1970s. Only to a greater degree in the past 20 years or more. It all started out as “Social Actions” training. Even my black friends in the Military thought it was crazy at the time.
It was somewhat noticeable that promotions were awarded by the color of your skin. I retired from the US Air Force after 20 years service because I saw what was happening although I wanted to stay for 30 years.
My advice for those wanting a career in the Military is to study hard, do the best you can at your job, and military protocol. Put forth your very best effort always. Be the sharpest tool in the shed. Never degrade your dignity
and character by submitting to peer pressure. All said and done though, I am proud of my 20 years of service. http://www.EBAY.COM/USR/EARL7770
RACIST MEGALOLMANIACS!
So to be the Commanding General and be the first Black Racist to push the military even further into the DEI social experiment where it should have never gone shows Career changing dismissal was warranted.