News & Articles

West Point Professor: “You don’t want certain groups too far overrepresented leading the ranks”

wp57
CRTDEI AgendaProfessors

West Point Professor: “You don’t want certain groups too far overrepresented leading the ranks”

West Point professor Morten Ender was interviewed for this Military.com article, “The Air Force’s Faltering Effort to Get More Diversity Among Officers May Be Out of Time“.

Ender was the advisor to West Point cadets in sociology who did projects on topics such as:

—Deconstructing Patriotism: Exploring Postmodernism and US Army Recruitment Amidst the Lack of a National Narrative

—Uniformed Perspectives: The Evolution of Cross-Dressing in the Military and Gender Norms

—Do My Leaders ‘Get’ Me?: Unpacking the Importance of Representation in the Military

See our coverage: West Point Cadet Projects: Deconstructing Patriotism and Cross-Dressing in the Military

Ender is also the co-chair of West Point’s controversial DEI minor and published an academic paper (written while at West Point) entitled, “Dinner and a Conversation: Transgender Integration at West Point and Beyond.”

Here is his portion of the Military.com article, which he implies there is a problem of too many white officers (he calls “certain groups”) who lead black and female people in the enlisted ranks, as if these people wouldn’t follow or obey a white officer because of the color of their skin or gender.

. . . . Morten Ender, a professor of sociology at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point and author of “Inclusion in the American Military: A Force for Diversity,” told Military.com in an interview that getting a more diverse cohort in the ranks is more difficult in the more than 50 years since the services became an all-volunteer force.

He added that creating better representation has become more difficult among the officer corps as universities also compete for more diverse populations. He explained that it’s important to have a more diverse representation among the higher ranks to balance with the enlisted demographics.

“To certainly have goals for representation is terrific and then putting processes in place to go after folks in those demographic categories is a good thing,” Ender said.

“You don’t want certain groups, especially with the officer corps, too far overrepresented and then leading the enlisted ranks, which we know are overrepresented by people of color and increasingly large numbers of women. So, that’s why it’s problematic.” . . . .

This is Marxism 101 “oppressed versus oppressor”, creating grievances, division and being racist. The military has a big problem if he’s implying (and teaching) that soldiers won’t/can’t/shouldn’t be expected to follow someone if they don’t share the same skin color.


Related articles:

Teaching Cultural Marxism at West Point

CRT Still Being Taught at West Point

Records Show Critical Race Theory Propaganda at West Point

West Point Lecture Halls turned into Indoctrination Seminars
The experience of a West Point grad in dealing with the woke agenda at the Academy and in the military is detailed in Pete Hegseth’s new book, “The War on Warriors”.

M I S S I O N
To preserve, defend, and advocate for West Point's history, purpose, and principles of Duty, Honor, Country.

Join our mailing list to show your support of the Society's mission and get alerts on action items and occasional updates on our activities. Join List:

Follow MacArthur Society:

Facebook
X
YouTube
Rumble

Watch Commanders Call:

Topics

In the Fight Together:

STARRS.US
Calvert Task Group
Stand Up America US
Flag Officers 4 America
Students For Fair Admissions

Get the Saturday morning newsletter from STARRS.US monitoring current news on the elimination of the CRT/DEI woke agenda and ideology in the military, including West Point and the Army. Join STARRS Mailing List

BOOK: West Point’s Cult of DEI by John Hughes ’96:

BOOK: Proud Grads by Dave Jackson ’73:

Book

Don’t Give Up the Ship” – Essays by the Calvert Task Group on woke policies endangering our military and nation:

Website Disclaimer

We, at the MacArthur Society, believe in publishing articles which reflect a range of opinions regarding West Point’s training and education of our country’s future military leaders. The articles published on this website are intended to stimulate dialog regarding those issues and do not necessarily always reflect the views of the MacArthur Society. The MacArthur Society works to ensure the veracity of all articles published on our website. Readers are welcome to send any comments on specific issues to the attention of the MacArthur Society at mission@macarthursociety.org.