Air Force
Removes Content Honoring First Female Thunderbird
The U.S. Air Force
removed online tributes to female aviators amid federal DEI rollbacks.
Amelia Walsh
According to Newsweek, the purge includes numerous
webpages, images, videos, and biographies that spotlighted groundbreaking
achievements by women in military aviation. Among the most prominent removals
was content featuring retired Colonel Nicole Malachowski, a 21-year Air Force
veteran and the first woman to fly with the elite Thunderbirds demonstration
team.
Malachowski
publicly criticized the directive, arguing that it distorts the historical
record. "You're good enough to serve but
not good enough to be remembered," she told 9NEWS. "It's
been really just shocking to me to see that we would censor the historical
fact, the historical stories, the historical contributions of service members
and veterans."
Other removed content includes webpages
dedicated to the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) of World War II and
profiles of trailblazers like Maj. Gen. Jeannie Leavitt, the Air Force’s first
female fighter pilot.
An Air Force spokesperson told Air
Force Times that the branch intends to restore purely
historical content after it has been reviewed to ensure compliance with current
guidelines.


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