Space Force general admits she lets 'anti-LGBTQ+ laws' impact hiring decisions — resulting in 'less qualified' personnel



A top Space Force commander admitted last week that "anti-LGBTQ+ laws" affect her hiring practices.

Speaking at a Pentagon Pride event, Space Force Lt. Gen. DeAnna Burt slammed "anti-LGBTQ+ laws" and admitted that such laws sometimes force her to pass over qualified candidates because of their personal or familial circumstances.

"Since January of this year, more than 400 anti-LGBTQ+ laws have been introduced at the state level," she said. "That number is rising and demonstrates a trend that could be dangerous for our service members, their families, and the readiness of the force as a whole."

That danger, Lt. Gen. Burt explained, is that more qualified candidates may be passed over for jobs because those "anti-LGBTQ+ laws" may impact them.

"When I look at potential candidates, say for squadron command, I strive to match the right person to the right job," she said. "I consider their job performance and relevant experience first.

"However," she continued, "I also look at their personal circumstances, and their family is also an important factor. If a good match for a job does not feel safe being themselves and performing at the highest potential at a given location, or if their family could be denied critical health care due to the laws in that state, I am compelled to consider a different candidate and perhaps less qualified."

\u201cThe @DeptofDefense "pride" event last week gets more bizarre with scrutiny. \n\nThread:\n\n1. Here, LTG Burt openly admits she lets supposed concerns over "anti-LGBTQ+ laws in a state" about "healthcare" dictate personnel choices, even if it means choosing a less-qualified officer.\u201d
— William Thibeau (@William Thibeau) 1686750625

It's not exactly clear what laws Lt. Gen. Burt was referring to.

On one hand, she may be referring to laws that ban life-altering transgender-related medical procedures, what liberals call "gender-affirming" care," for minors. On the other hand, she may be referring to states that have, within the bounds of the Constitution, placed limits on abortion.

While Lt. Gen. Burt framed such laws negatively, proponents of them argue they are necessary to protect children and unborn lives.

TheBlaze reached out to the Space Force for comment, but did not receive a response by press time.

An official for the Space Force, however, provided Fox News with a statement, which said:

To stay ahead of our pacing challenge and win in a competitive environment, leaders must identify and remove barriers facing their teams. We have the top talent in the Nation, and we must enable them to perform their missions by ensuring they are not worried about the health and safety of their families. The Department of the Air Force recognizes that various laws and legislation are being proposed and passed in states across America that may affect LGBTQ Airmen, Guardians, and/or their LGBTQ dependents in different ways.

We have worked to inform and educate our members on the assignment, medical, legal and other resources available to support Airmen, Guardians and their families.

"I am proudly here as an ally," Lt. Gen. Burt later said at the event.

2023 DoD Pride Event www.youtube.com

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Department of Defense downs high-altitude object over Lake Huron



The Department of Defense downed a high-altitude object over Lake Huron Sunday afternoon, multiple outlets reported.

"I’ve been in contact with [the Department of Defense] regarding operations across the Great Lakes region today," Rep. Jack Bergman (R-Mich.) tweeted around 3:30 p.m. Sunday.

"The US military has decommissioned another 'object' over Lake Huron. I appreciate the decisive action by our fighter pilots. The American people deserve far more answers than we have."

"I've been in touch with the Pentagon, DHS, and FAA regarding the closure of air space over the Great Lakes. I'm glad the object was neutralized over Lake Huron and I'll continue pressing DoD for transparency," Sen. Gary Peters (D-Mich.) tweeted around 4:15 EST.

Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) had not addressed the event on Twitter as of 4:30 p.m. Her most recent tweet, posted around 3:15 p.m., addressed the "Puppy Bowl."

Just prior to Congressman Bergman's tweet, colleague Rep. Elissa Slotkin (R-Mich.) also addressed the situation.

"Just got a call from @DeptofDefense — our military has an extremely close eye on the object above Lake Huron. We’ll know more about what this was in the coming days, but for now, be assured that all parties have been laser-focused on it from the moment it traversed our waters," the Congresswoman tweeted.

"This isn't acceptable. They need to know it's not acceptable. I think the Biden Administration first needs to be honest with the American people," Chad Wolf, former Acting Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security told Fox News.

"[The Biden administration] needs to come out and explain what these objects are, what their intent was, [and] what is the response of the U.S. if this is specifically toward China or another adversary."

"It's a violation of sovereign airspace," Gen. Wesley Clark (Ret.) told CNN in the wake of the latest development in what has become a series of balloons and other crafts the U.S. military has taken down in the past several days.

"There's some pilot talk out there that maybe one of these devices can interfere with sensors on aircraft," Gen. Clark told CNN on the reported difficulties associated with detecting the crafts.

"It has to be determined exactly what they're after," Clark added.

"Maybe there are holes in the U.S. radar system. . .I just hope they tell us publicly what it is," Clack also said.

"Nobody should expect they could fly over U.S. airspace like this and not be taken down."

The Federal Aviation Administration issued a temporary flight restriction over Lake Michigan Sunday afternoon, classifying the area as "[national] defense airspace." The Notice to Air Missions (formerly Notice to Airmen) was issued at 1:02 p.m. EST. It warned pilots who violated the TFR could face a litany of civil and criminal penalties and charges.
Shortly after the NOTAM was issued, Fox News Channel's Lucas Tomlinson reported that fighter jets were in route to the area.
This is a developing story. Stay with Blaze News for more.
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Empty streets & air raids in northern Japan after North Korea fires a ballistic missile overhead



On October 3, just days after Vice President Kamala Harris' visit to the Korean Peninsula's Demilitarized Zone, North Korea fired a ballistic missile over Japan — the first time it has done so in five years.

The missile, believed to be the Hwasong-12, proved capable of reaching Guam. It was airborne for 20 minutes, reached an altitude of 620 miles (over twice as high as the International Space Station) and ultimately traveled 2,800 miles before smashing into the Pacific Ocean.

Upon detecting the launch, Japanese officials halted trains in the northern Hokkaido and Aomori regions and urged citizens to take shelter.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's office indicated that a missile was "believed to have been launched from North Korea" and that citizens should "evacuate to the inside of a building or go to the basement."

\u201cBREAKING: Air raid sirens sounding in Japan following reports of North Korea missile fire, missile reportedly overflew the country and landed into Pacific Ocean\u201d
— Insider Paper (@Insider Paper) 1664838074

The U.S. Embassy in Tokyo reportedly cautioned Americans in the area that there was a possibility the missile was headed toward Japan.

Later, Japanese officials acknowledged that "the aforementioned missile is believed to have passed through the Pacific Ocean."

Condemnation

The U.S., Japanese, and South Korean governments quickly condemned the attacks.

Kishida stated that the "firing, which followed a recent series of launches by North Korea, is a reckless act and I strongly condemn it."

The Japanese prime minister was referencing several earlier launches of short-range ballistic missiles by the communist regime into the East Sea, including two fired just hours after the U.S. vice president's departure from South Korea last week.

South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol indicated that the regime's "reckless nuclear provocations" would be met by a stern response.

Adrienne Watson, the spokesman for the U.S. National Security Council, stated that "the United States strongly condemns the Democratic People's Republic of Korea's (DPRK) dangerous and reckless decision to launch a long-range missile over Japan."

Watson added that the act was "destabilizing" to the region and in contravention of United Nations Security Council resolutions.

The Security Council previously called on the communist regime to "cease its illicit activity" and voted 15-0 to sanction the rogue nation.

In response to the imposition of parallel U.S. sanctions against North Korea in 2017, Pyongyang responded: "The U.S. mainland will sink into an unimaginable sea of fire on the day when it dares to touch our country by stupidly causing mischief and brandishing its nuclear and sanctions clubs."

The regime also threatened to hit U.S. military bases in Guam with the same type of missile believed to have been fired this week.

Responding to these threats to the U.S. homeland in a speech to the U.N., on September 19, 2017, former President Donald Trump stated: "The United States has great strength and patience, but if it is forced to defend itself or its allies, we will have no choice but to totally destroy North Korea."

North Korea withdrew from the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in 2003, after the U.S. alleged the regime was pursuing an illegal uranium enrichment program. It refuses to return to nuclear diplomacy with the U.S.

This latest missile launch is reportedly another step toward the regime's test of a nuclear weapon, expected to occur after China's communist party congress starting on October 16.

Adrienne Watson emphasized that the U.S. "will continue its efforts to limit [North Korea's] ability to advance its prohibited ballistic missiles and weapons of mass destruction programs, including with allies and U.N. partners."

Military response

The U.S. and South Korea quickly responded to the communist regime's first missile launch with what the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff characterized as a "combined attack squadron flight and precision bombing drill."

Four U.S. F-16 fighter jets and four South Korean F-15s fired on an uninhabited island in the Yellow Sea. The drill evidenced the allies' ability to accurately obliterate communist targets with "overwhelming force" and "to respond resolutely to any provocation from North Korea."

Last week, the two countries also conducted joint military exercises, in which the U.S.S. Ronald Reagan participated. The North Korean regime allegedly regarded these exercises as invasion rehearsals.

On October 1, the 7th Fleet conducted exercises with Canada and Japan, reiterating its "commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific."

In response to the latest missile launch, U.S. Indo-Pacific Command stated: "The United States condemns these actions and calls on the DPRK to refrain from further unlawful and destabilizing acts," noting further that while "the event does not pose a threat to U.S. personnel, or territory, or to our allies, we will continue to monitor the situation."

\u201c.@INDOPACOM's statement on #DPRK's most recent missile launch\n\ud83d\udd0e https://t.co/X2NwCs7dTu\u00a0\u00a0\n\n#\uac19\uc774\uac11\uc2dc\ub2e4 | \ud83c\uddf0\ud83c\uddf7 #ROKUSAlliance \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 | #WeGoTogether\n@ROK_MND | @DeptofDefense | @USForcesJapan\u201d
— U.S. Forces Korea (@U.S. Forces Korea) 1664860744

USINDOPACOM added that the "U.S. commitments to the defense of Japan and the [Republic of Korea] remain ironclad."

As inflation takes a bite out of Americans' finances, US continues spending big bucks to help Ukraine beat back Russian invasion



As Americans endure the painful financial consequences of raging inflation, the U.S. continues spending massive sums of money to help Ukraine defend itself against a brutal Russian invasion.

"President Biden has been clear we will support the people of Ukraine for as long as it takes," Secretary of State Antony Blinken noted in a Thursday statement.

"Pursuant to a delegation of authority from the President, I am authorizing our twenty-first drawdown of U.S. arms and equipment for Ukraine since September 2021. This $600 million drawdown includes additional arms, munitions, and equipment from U.S. Department of Defense inventories. This drawdown will bring the total U.S. military assistance for Ukraine to approximately $15.8 billion since the beginning of this Administration," Blinken said.

\u201cI have directed another $600 million drawdown to expedite our 21st shipment of arms and equipment from @DeptofDefense inventories to Ukraine, as its defenders push back Russian invasion forces. The United States stands #UnitedWithUkraine.\u201d
— Secretary Antony Blinken (@Secretary Antony Blinken) 1663290930

Earlier this week, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics released a consumer price index report that showed inflation remains quite hot in the U.S. "The all items index increased 8.3 percent for the 12 months ending August, a smaller figure than the 8.5- percent increase for the period ending July," the BLS noted.

In a tweet on Sunday, Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia noted that she has not spoken to anyone advocating for the U.S. to shell out billions more for Ukraine. "I have not talked to a single person asking to send more billions to Ukraine. Not one," she tweeted.

GOP Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky responded by noting, "All calls and conversations I've had are with people who want us to stop sending their money to Ukraine."

\u201cAll calls and conversations I\u2019ve had are with people who want us to stop sending their money to Ukraine.\u201d
— Thomas Massie (@Thomas Massie) 1662915335

"No country is entitled to receive tax dollars from hard working Americans," Massie tweeted on Monday. "But what about country _______ ? Send them your own money."

\u201cNo country is entitled to receive tax dollars from hard working Americans.\n\nBut what about country _______ ?\n\nSend them your own money.\u201d
— Thomas Massie (@Thomas Massie) 1662983540

Some lawmakers have been pushing for the U.S. to designate Russia as a state sponsor of terrorism. GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who along with Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut introduced a measure to do just that, has called Russian President Vladimir Putin "a terrorist." Currently, the only nations deemed state sponsors of terrorism include Iran, Syria, Cuba, and North Korea.

'The enemies of America are laughing at us': US Air Force pushes leftist gender ideology by recognizing Transgender Day of Visibility



The U.S. Air Force, which claims that its mission statement is "To fly, fight, and win…airpower anytime, anywhere," faced blowback Thursday on Twitter for peddling radical leftist gender ideology by recognizing Transgender Day of Visibility.

"Today is #TransDayofVisiblity," the Air Force tweeted, inviting people to watch a video of Under Secretary of the Air Force Gina Ortiz Jones interviewing Lt. Col. Bree Fram, a member of the Space Force — the tweet calls Fram the "highest-ranking openly transgender" Department of Defense officer.

Today is #TransDayofVisiblity--Check out @UnderSecAF Jones talk with Lt. Col. Bree Fram, highest-ranking openly transgender @DeptofDefense officer, about her role as the Deputy Chief of Acquisitions Policies and Process Division for the @SpaceForceDoD.\n\nhttp://go.usa.gov/xztrb\u00a0pic.twitter.com/971RJIgGp6
— U.S. Air Force (@U.S. Air Force) 1648746931

The tweet comes as Russia, a nuclear-armed power, is invading Ukraine. It also comes as the U.S. faces the ongoing threat posed by an ever-ambitious communist China that continually seeks to expand its power on the world stage.

Responding to the Air Force's post, Blaze Media's Jessica O'Donnell questioned, "how does this help us with war and stuff."

"The enemies of America are laughing at us," Todd Starnes tweeted.

"We are going to lose a major war," Benny Johnson declared.

"When do we need to learn Chinese?" someone else tweeted.

"Im just going to state the obvious here. It defies common sense for the USAF to promote such utter nonsense," another person noted.

The tweet links to a post that declares, "The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer/Questioning Initiatives Team (LIT) of the Department of the Air Force Barrier Analysis Working Group (DAFBAWG) highlighted and observed Transgender Day of Visibility (TDoV) on March 31."

"Today is a day to step back and reflect on the obstacles the trans community has overcome, recognize the work left to do, while celebrating all transgender and non-binary DAF personnel who are serving and thriving as their authentic selves," LIT Transgender Policies co-lead Master Sgt. Jamie Hash said, according to the post.

The truth about those US-funded biological laboratories in Ukraine



In case you haven't noticed, there has been quite the controversy in the last week about whether Ukraine does or does not have biological research facilities that were funded, at least in part, by the United States military. The accusation has been the subject of some absurd fact-checks by our corporate media and accusations of "Russian disinformation" from our government.

The truth is: Yes, there are indeed biological research facilities in Ukraine that have been funded by our government. We don't have any way to know whether these facilities were conducting research that was intended to produce weapons or not, but we do know that if the pathogens housed in these facilities escaped, they would be just as deadly as as an intentionally produced bioweapon.

The controversy began when the Russian government tweeted the following accusation:

@mod_russia: During the course of the special military operation evidence of an emergency clean-up performed by the Kiev regime was found - aimed at eradicating traces of the military-biological programme, in Ukraine, financed by @DeptofDefense. \n\n https://disk.yandex.ru/d/dyWUEF3tDZGauw\u00a0\u2026pic.twitter.com/rldp9UMAkx
— MFA Russia \ud83c\uddf7\ud83c\uddfa (@MFA Russia \ud83c\uddf7\ud83c\uddfa) 1646591544

Specifically, the Russian government stated that it found evidence of a "military-biological programme" that was funded by the United States Department of Defense and that was being cleaned up during the course of the invasion.

Promptly, the United States government leapt into action to dispute this contention with the assertion that the United States military does not, and never has, funded a "biological weapons" program and claimed that this accusation was part of a "Russian disinformation" campaign. This assertion was dutifully repeated by the government's stenographers in the corporate media.

Amazingly, the seminal "fact-check," written by USA Today, argued that there were no "biolabs" funded by the military, even while acknowledging the existence of such labs. The "fact-check" notes that the United States and Ukraine did have such labs, but that they were to "prevent the proliferation of dangerous pathogens and related expertise and to minimize potential biological threats" and further explicitly stated that the United States was providing funding to those labs, albeit for the purpose of "making repairs, updating equipment and purchasing supplies" at those laboratories.

At the risk of overstating the obvious, if the military is "purchasing supplies" at these laboratories, to say nothing of "updating equipment" or "making repairs" at these laboratories, it is funding them.

In a remarkable off-camera briefing held last week, the Defense Department further spoke about these claims. In that briefing, an unidentified "senior Department of Defense official" said, among other things:

A few key points about the Department of Defense's Cooperative Threat Reduction Program Biological Threat Reduction Program activities in Ukraine this is part of the Department of Defense's Cooperative Threat Reduction Program. Through that program, we have invested approximately $200 million in Ukraine since 2005, supporting 46 Ukrainian labs, health facilities, and diagnostic sites. DOD's CTR program began its biological work with Ukraine to eliminate the remnants of the Soviet Union's illegal biological weapons program left in the Soviet successor states after the USSR fell. There are no DOD bioweapon labs in Ukraine or anywhere else in the world.

The first and most obvious point to make about this statement is that it is an admission that: a) these laboratories exist, and b) we have given them a lot of money. Now, the unnamed senior official follows this up with two red herrings. First, the senior official asserted that our cooperation with Ukraine on this project began as an effort to eliminate the bioweapons program that was being carried on by the Soviet Union. Assuming that is true, it has nothing to do with our efforts that began in 2005, some 14 years after the Soviet Union fell. Second, the official asserted that "there are no DOD bioweapon labs" anywhere in the world.

Let's assume that this assertion is true, because it seems to be all that either the DOD or the press is focusing on. Assume that nowhere in Ukraine is a laboratory that has the express purpose of creating or proliferating a bioweapon. Fine. The assertion is simply not responsive to the charge that was actually made by the Russian government, which was that they found evidence of a "military-biological programme" that was funded by the United States Department of Defense. That assertion is demonstrably true and has been confirmed as true by our government. Now, our government says, and I have no reason to disbelieve it, that the purpose of those labs was not to create a bioweapon. But that doesn't mean, in this case, that what the Russian government said was false.

We know some of what the government was doing in Ukraine from documents that were released by Wikileaks. In a 2008 cable, it was revealed that Andrew Weber of the OSD/CTR (the same Department of Defense agency referred to in last week's briefing) held a discussion with Ukrainian officials about the need to create one central laboratory in Ukraine that would house its most dangerous pathogens because, among other reasons, "the U.S. seeks to consolidate the strains/pathogens that could be used by terrorists on human or agricultural targets."

This illustrates the problem with the government's straw man protestations that it does not fund bioweapon labs. Unlike other potential weapons of mass destruction, there is no functional difference between the danger associated with biological materials that are collected for peaceful purposes and materials that are collected for illicit, non-peaceful purposes. If a terrorist breaks into a nuclear power plant, they can't make off with a functioning nuclear bomb. However, if they break into a biological research facility that houses a dangerous pathogen that is being kept for the purpose of, say, vaccine development, they now have a fully functioning dangerous pathogen.

It probably (hopefully) is true that the Ukrainians are not housing dangerous pathogens in order to develop bioweapons on the U.S. taxpayer's dime. However, after we have just come through a two-year pandemic that has taken millions of lives and may well have been started due to a leak from a laboratory that was trying to develop a coronavirus vaccine, that may come as cold comfort to people who are justifiably concerned about the safety of those pathogens during the course of the scorched-earth campaign the Russian military is now conducting.

By the way, the initial Russian accusation did not just say the program existed, it said that there was an "emergency cleanup" under way that was trying to eradicate the program. This is, frankly, good news. It's exactly what should be happening.

Absolutely no one would begrudge the Ukrainians an aggressive research program into chemical and biological agents, given Russia's nasty history with poisons and pathogens — a history that includes the probable attempted assassination of Ukrainian president Viktor Yushchenko by the Russian government in 2004. And, given that the Russian military is now carpeting Ukraine with explosive devices, with apparently little care or ability to deliver those devices with precision, it is entirely appropriate for a cleanup operation to be under way to ensure that those pathogens are not inadvertently released.

But the United States government should be saying that, in order to ensure that our credibility remains intact on the world stage after the sad and senseless invasion of Ukraine is over.

Critics rip into 'pathetic' and 'utterly insane' Biden decision to reject Poland's plan to supply Ukraine with fighter jets



Critics from both sides of the partisan aisle took aim at the Biden administration for refusing Poland's plan to supply Ukraine with fighter jets after calling on other nations to do so.

On Sunday, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that NATO allies were allowed to send fighter jets to Ukraine and said they were in talks with Poland to do exactly that.

On Tuesday, Poland caught the administration by surprise when it announced that it would deliver a fleet of MIG-29 jets to Ramstein Air Base in Germany and allow the U.S. to dispose of them as it saw fit.

The administration first said the plan was not "tenable" and then on Wednesday, rejected it altogether.

“Our American partners rejected this proposal, because they have come to the conclusion that it was too escalatory,” said Poland's ambassador to the U.S.

“We need to be careful about every decision we make so that we aren’t making the potential for escalation worse,” said Pentagon spokesperson John Kirby on Wednesday.

Republican Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas led a chorus of critics excoriating the administration for the decision.

"Biden's decision to block Poland from sending MiG-29s to Ukraine is pathetic. It's weakness, and the Administration's rationale makes no sense. How are jets 'escalatory' when we are already sending Javelin missiles?"

Biden's decision to block Poland from sending MiG-29s to Ukraine is pathetic. \n\nIt's weakness, and the Administration's rationale makes no sense. \n\nHow are jets "escalatory" when we are already sending Javelin missiles?
— Tom Cotton (@Tom Cotton) 1646859728

"Sending jets for Ukrainians to use isn't escalatory—Putin's decision to invade and bomb children's hospitals is escalatory," he added in a second tweet.

"This is an utterly insane and unbelievable response from the Pentagon. The US Government must reverse course on this. We cannot win this war from a position of tepid fear. Ukraine fights for us all, we can give them the tools. Thank you to #poland," tweeted Republican Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois.

Even some Democrats criticized Biden's decision.

"Poland wants to provide its MiG-29 jets to Ukraine via the US," tweeted Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Calif.).

"This isn’t a novel concept. US gave Stingers to Lithuania & Latvia and they transferred them to Ukraine," he added. "I urge the @DeptofDefense to figure out asap how to get air assets to Ukrainians. Their survival is at stake."

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has also demanded that NATO establish a no-fly zone over Ukraine in order to give its citizens a fighting chance against the Russians. That option has been denied because of the near certainty of dragging more countries into a war with Russia.

Here's more about the war in Ukraine:

Pentagon says no to Poland's plan to fly fighter jets to Ukraine via U.S. base in Germanywww.youtube.com