by
Rod
Bishop and Ron Scott
On October 14, 2020, The New York Post broke a story (here and here) involving Hunter Biden.
The leftist mainstream media worked hard all week to discredit the story (see here, here, and here, for example). We watched with dismay that none of the major networks even mentioned the story at all on their prime-time news programs the day the story broke in The New York Post. Crickets. Absolutely no mention of the story.
Here
is an important article that speaks from first-hand associations and
authenticates the story (note: in the interest of full disclosure, the computer
repair shop owner is Ron’s nephew). More
importantly, the revelation demonstrates how the FBI sat on the story since
December 2019 when it could have provided exculpatory evidence during the
impeachment proceedings.
For an organization that should be apolitical, the FBI has
demonstrated that it has an ideological allegiance. This was clearly demonstrated in July of 2016
when the Director of the FBI provided tremendous details of crimes committed by
Hillary Clinton but exonerated her because there was no evidence of “intent” to
break the law. How deep is ideological corruption?
Developments
at our Service Academies, which should represent one of the purist crucibles
for an apolitical culture, provide additional evidence to the extent political
ideology has infiltrated these institutions.
The U.S. Naval Academy is in the process of discharging a senior for
violating its policies against racism. This
midshipman (MIDN), who has roomed with a fellow black cadet for three years,
issued a Tweets while COVID-19 evacuated to his home in L.A. His parents are police officers, who at the
time were working overtime to provide some safety for the citizens exposed to
Black Lives Matter and Antifa riots. The
MIDN tweeted that he was concerned about his parents’ safety, yet some of his
tweets were not without some controversy.
The issue is how the leadership conceptualized “racism” and to the
extent that it violates policy. This
“interpretation” in and of itself is controversial because it appears to stem
from an ideological perspective as opposed to a legal one. Here is an
excellent article, “US Naval Academy’s Cancel Culture
Targeted the Son of Two LA Police Dept Officers for Expulsion,”
that partially describes the circumstances.
Two
excerpts speak loudly regarding the ideological disposition of the USNA Deputy
Commandant:
The “adjudication” before the Deputy Commandant was straight
out of Franz Kafka’s “The Trial.” Ignoring our legal arguments, he
made clear to MIDN Standage that there was only ONE acceptable position with
respect to the subject matters of the tweets – the Command’s position (informed
by the BLM and Anti-Racism movements), and that MIDN Standage’s statements to
the contrary were racist and prejudicial to good order and discipline. The Deputy
Commandant’s comments and his rant about the supremacy of the football
team left
no doubt that the Deputy was pandering to the Brigade’s social justice
warriors. It is also important to note that one of the clear undercurrents of
the adjudication was the Deputy’s contempt for the President. For example,
he asked Standage, “You really think the President sets the standard of conduct
for officers?” The specifics of his comments are in the complaint
filed. MIDN Standage was found guilty of both charges, received the max on
demerits and restriction, and his case was forwarded to the Commandant
recommending separation from the Naval Academy.
“You
were not found guilty for what you said, but how you said it.”
Other relevant articles related to these issues can be
read here,
and here.
The
U.S. Military Academy at West Point provides mandatory
courses on critical race theory. Recent graduates, one a former Corps Captain
(#1 cadet within the cadet organization) who is black and a Rhodes Scholar,
authored a 40-page
document complaining about systemic racism at West Point. On its face, one cannot help but wonder, that
if systemic racism did exist, how did the cadet rise to be the number one cadet
in charge of the entire cadet corps? Why
is “systemic racism” only being discovered now if it has been existing? Military
ranking is based on peer evaluation. The
Superintendent, a black lieutenant general, initiated
an investigation (no published results as of the date of
this article).B
Traceable ideological indoctrination began to seep into
the culture of the United States Air Force Academy (USAFA) following the
Michael Brown incident in Ferguson Missouri.
According to The
Atlantic Monthly, the Superintendent, at the time, presumably with
every good intention (but perhaps without full knowledge of the ideology of the
institution), arranged for the Knapsack Institute
from the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs to conduct seminars with the
cadets. Here is an excerpt from their
website:
The name, “The Knapsack Institute” hails from Peggy McIntosh’s
renowned article, "White privilege and male privilege: A personal account
of coming to see correspondences through work in women's studies,” in which she
states:
"I have come to see white privilege as an invisible package
of unearned assets which I can count on cashing in each day, but about which I
was 'meant' to remain oblivious. White
privilege is like an invisible weightless knapsack of special provisions, assurances,
tools, maps, guides, codebooks, passports, visas, clothes, compass, emergency
gear, and blank checks." (Peggy
McIntosh, 1988 "White privilege and male privilege: A personal account of
coming to see correspondences through work in women's studies." Excerpted from Working Paper 189, Wellesley
College Center for Research on Women, Wellesley, MA.)
The
outgoing USAFA Superintendent achieved national notoriety when he lectured
Academy cadets about racism and acceptable values following an incident at the
Academy Preparatory School on the same campus.
Ron wrote about it here. The incident turned out to be a hoax
perpetrated by the same black prep school student who made the complaint. One of the USAFA’s Superintendent’s themes during his tenure at this time was the existence
of “systemic racism,” as indicated in this
letter to the “Academy Family.” A review of minutes
from the USAFA Board of Visitors provides absolutely no evidence of systemic
racism. Further, we filed a Freedom of
Information Act request for documentation on racism complaints back
on August 4, 2020. Despite the
statutory requirement for a response within 10 work-days (or 20 for exceptional
circumstances), the only response received so far was to let us know we went
from number 64 to 48 in the queue.
More
egregiously, the Air Force Academy football coaches posted a video on their
Facebook page supporting “Black Lives Matter” seven times during a three-minute
video. We learned about the video from a Colorado
Springs Gazette article, “Air
Force football takes firm social stance with video in support of Black Lives
Matter,” on July 7,
2020. Two days later, Ron posted a
rebuttal here.
The issue is that whether wittingly or not, the coaches supported a
Marxist organization that created the expression “Black Lives Matter.” A group of Academy graduates have invested a
considerable amount of time to convince the coaches that the video presents
false information and apparent support for a Marxist organization. To this day, the coaches, supported by USAFA Superintendents
(outgoing and incoming), have refused to take the video down.
On September 14, a group of Academy graduates filed an
Inspector General (IG) Complaint at the Secretary of the Air Force level
expressing concern about the Air Force Academy coaches’ video. There are four concerns: (a) the video violates Air Force Instruction
51-508; (b) the video violates DoD Directive 1344.10; (c) the video violates
the President’s Executive Order; and (d) the video is extremely divisive. A subsequent addendum, September 28, 2020,
provided additional arguments/evidence for the complaint. The complaint referenced OMB Memo dated
September 4, 2020 and the President’s Executive Order, dated September 22,
2020. We are still waiting for an answer,
which strongly indicates the issue is political—perhaps waiting
for the outcome of the Presidential election to determine how to respond to the
IG complaint?
The “slow-rolling” status of the above actions speaks
volumes as to the political and ideological transformation of the Department of
Defense. If the military is to preserve
the essence of its apolitical nature, we would suggest that some actions are in order, at least for the
U.S. Air Force:
·
Direct the football video be taken down from
social media;
·
Initiate a review of the Academy academic
curriculum to eliminate Marxist indoctrination (i.e., critical race theory);
and
·
Through the Center for Character and
Leadership Development, develop a case study to (a) analyze the emergence of
indoctrination, (b) integrate the importance of recognizing such indoctrination
and (c) apply measures to stem it.
The
Secretary of Defense should advance similar considerations for other Service
Academies in accordance with the
OMB Memo and Executive Order from the Commander in Chief addressing Critical
Race Theory Training (referenced above in the IG Complaint).
The
phenomena described above are not unprecedented. History has documented similar
developments. Hannah Arendt in her
seminal work, The Origins of Totalitarianism, analyzed and explained
similar examples. The Dreyfus
Affair (which justified political divisions and a systemic anti-Semitic
ideology) represents the manifestation of ideology similar to claims of
“systemic racism” in today’s American narrative.
More
existentially, current movements are contrary to the essence of the inalienable
rights asserted in our Declaration of Independence and codified in our
Constitution as a system of self-governance.
Current movements are multicultural, secular, and antithetical to the unifying
constructs of a Constitutional Republic.
Human nature has not and will not change. Thus, history can and does repeat
itself. Cicero observed similar dynamics
when he wrote:
A
nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. But it cannot survive
treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known
and carries his banner openly. But the traitor moves amongst those within the
gate freely, his sly whispers rustling through all the alleys, heard in the
very halls of government itself. For the traitor appears not a traitor; he
speaks in accents familiar to his victims, and he wears their face and their
arguments, he appeals to the baseness that lies deep in the hearts of all men.
He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine
the pillars of the city, he infects the body politic so that it can no longer
resist. A murderer is less to fear.
Evidence
on the Hunter Biden hard drive provides a glimpse into this type of
behavior. The left diminishes it, even
dismisses it in favor of their favorite Russia conspiracy meme.
America
faces a similar existential moment as she did in 1860 when America was
confronted with acquiescing to an ideology of slavery versus the ideals of her
Declaration of Independence. America risks
enslavement by ideology as opposed to being liberated by truth. The dangerous ideological culture at our
Service Academies is just one example.
Rod Bishop is a retired
Air Force lieutenant general, member of the Class of 1974, U.S. Air Force
Academy. Ron Scott is a retired Air
Force colonel, member of the Class of 1973, U.S. Air Force Academy.
This 61 Graytag grieves for my USAFA's decay and surrender. Thanks for ruining my day with this story.
ReplyDeleteOutstanding article. I am so disappointed and saddened by the "transformation" of our Service Academies. Our respective Service leadership is to blame for caving in to the political left and allowing the Academies to become a civilian institution focused mainly on "social justice" rather than educating and training the future leaders of our military with character, integrity, and equal standards. Just look at the significant change in how many graduates now pursue the combat arms after graduation compared to several decades ago. It is indeed depressing! As a 73 USAFA grad, I don't even recognize it's purpose or value any more. Old Jaeger
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