God help America! The Navy hires a DRAG QUEEN ambassador to boost
recruitment? When even our military does a Bud Light, the US truly has
been lost to woke fanatics
By Amber Athey
Daily Mail
May 4, 2023
In November, the Navy hired an active-duty drag queen to boost recruitment.
Eat your heart out, Top Gun.
The
U.S. Navy has chosen a particularly unexpected approach to the current
military staffing crisis – and it’s sparked an all-out war.
Former Navy SEAL Robert J. O’Neill, who took part in the 2011 mission to kill Osama Bin Laden, hit out on Twitter at the Navy’s recent decision to hire an active-duty drag queen to boost recruitment.
'China is going to destroy us… I can’t believe I fought for this bull****,’ O’Neill raged over the November appointment of non-binary Yeoman 2nd Class Joshua Kelley, who moonlights as cross-dressing performer ‘Harpy Daniels’.
And can you blame him?
The
Navy says the Digital Ambassador program – a pilot scheme which has
since ended – was an attempt ‘to attract the most talented and diverse
workforce.’
Excuse me – the most talented?
O’Neill and his team seemed to manage fine without wigs, fake breasts and garish makeup. What an insult!
Non-binary Yeoman 2nd Class Joshua Kelley moonlights as cross-dressing performer ‘Harpy Daniels’.
The Navy says Kelley was hired as
part of a pilot scheme - which has since ended - in an attempt ‘to
attract the most talented and diverse workforce.’
Now, of course, our servicemen are welcome
to do whatever they like for entertainment in their free time – no
matter how tacky I may personally find their choice of pastime. But this
seems a particularly misguided attempt by Navy bosses to address
staffing problems, which cannot be overstated.
The Navy already expects to fall short of its current fiscal year recruitment target by 6,000.
And it’s not just sailors. All our armed forces are suffering from denuded ranks.
The Army will likely miss its hiring goal this year by 10,000. Last year they fell short by a shocking 15,000.
Why? There are numerous cultural conditions which mean young Americans are less likely than ever to join the military.
Not
least among them is the shameful fact that, as a study by the Pentagon
found last year, 77 per cent of 17 to 24-year-olds would fail to qualify
for service because they are overweight, abuse drugs, or suffer from
mental and physical health problems.
Some
experts have also pointed to the Biden administration’s botched
withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan in August 2021 – during which 13
U.S. servicemen died – as a demotivating factor.
Meanwhile, patriotism is at an all-time low among woke millennials and Gen-Z.
Just
25 per cent of citizens aged 18 to 34 say they are ‘extremely proud’ to
be an American, compared to 51 per cent of people aged 55 and over,
according to polling firm Gallup.
Former Navy SEAL Robert J. O’Neill, who took part in the 2011 mission to kill Osama Bin Laden, hit out on Twitter at the Navy.
The U.S. military – the very
thing that secures our place as the leader of the free world – is facing
a full-blown existential crisis. (Pictured: Kelley in Naval uniform).
In other words, the U.S. military – the very thing that
secures our place as the leader of the free world – is facing a
full-blown existential crisis.
And yet,
top brass would seemingly rather spend their brain power – and public
cash – virtue signaling by pinning their colors to the latest
ultra-liberal fad.
How pathetic.
These
are the men and women charged with our protection. Who are supposed to
rise above the cultural noise and make confident, well-judged decisions
in the national interest – not the interests of a tiny, but vocal
minority.
The Left might have you believe that ‘queer’ identification is the new normal. But it’s not.
Still only 5 per cent of adults under 30 – surely the most progressive – identify as transgender or non-binary.
And how many of them, would you guess, are likely to want to serve in the military?
It doesn’t take a genius with decades of experience in complex battlefield strategy to see that something doesn’t add up here.
So the question has to be asked: who on Earth is making these marketing decisions?
Is
it the same over-paid bosses who have recently dragged our armed forces
into disrepute over repeated embarrassments on the international stage?
Yet, top brass would seemingly
rather spend their brain power – and public cash – virtue signaling by
pinning their colors to the latest ultra-liberal fad. (Pictured: Kelley
in drag).
These are
the men and women charged with our protection. Who are supposed to rise
above the cultural noise and make confident, well-judged decisions in
the national interest – not the interests of a tiny, but vocal
minority. (Pictured: Kelley in drag).
I
mean the Afghanistan withdrawal, the current debacle over the
evacuation of Americans from war-torn Sudan, the recent Pentagon
intelligence leaks.
It’s no wonder young Americans don’t want to entrust their lives to these people’s care.
This hasn’t emerged from a vacuum.
Consider
the recent rows over so-called ‘Drag Queen Story Hours’ for children in
libraries, dangerous puberty blocking drugs for minors, the new
corporate obsession with ‘Diversity, Equality and Inclusion’ in the
workplace – or even the Bud Light fiasco which saw the company’s stock
price tank after partnering with TikTok trans activist Dylan Mulvaney.
That all makes the Navy’s decision to hire Joshua Kelley even more tone-deaf.
Politically divisive issues should have no place in matters of national security.
Indeed,
one would hope that our military leaders are less concerned with
fighting the culture wars than holding off the threat from terrorist
states.
But somewhere along the way, the aptitude for sound judgment has been eroded.
Last
June, the Navy came under fire after releasing a risible training video
urging sailors to create ‘safe spaces’, and use ‘inclusive language’
and ‘preferred pronouns’.
The year
before, it had emerged that the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New
York, was offering trainees an elective course focusing on critical
race theory, named ‘Politics of Race, Gender, and Sexuality’.
The recent Bud Light fiasco which
saw the company’s stock price tank after partnering with TikTok trans
activist Dylan Mulvaney (pictured).
But people are losing patience with this
kind of petty politicking. And, if the Navy truly hope to tackle their
flagging recruitment, they would do well to take heed of the Mulvaney
row.
Bud Light executives are learning
the true meaning of ‘go woke, go broke’, as sales have continued to
plummet since hiring the controversial TikToker. There was a staggering
26 per cent decline in the final week of April – and overall sales for
the year are down 8 per cent.
In a
groveling call to investors on Thursday, Bud Light CEO Michel Doukeris
was forced to row back on the misguided partnership, claiming it was ‘not a campaign’.
So,
as the battle against Russia in Ukraine drags on, and the cold war for
supremacy with China reaches new heights, it’s time to get some
priorities straight.
A congressional
war game last month prompted calls for ‘decisive action’ after a
simulated Chinese invasion of Taiwan proved the U.S. was wholly
unprepared for such a conflict.
Before it’s too late, we must cut the woke posturing and focus on what our suffering armed forces sorely need.
1 comment:
Well, it is the NAVY after all.
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