TSgt Private RallyPoint Member 1020611 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Diversity is the strength of our Air Force. How have you promoted it? It&#39;s time we share this valuable knowledge with each other! How have you promoted diversity in your work center? 2015-10-06T13:02:40-04:00 TSgt Private RallyPoint Member 1020611 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Diversity is the strength of our Air Force. How have you promoted it? It&#39;s time we share this valuable knowledge with each other! How have you promoted diversity in your work center? 2015-10-06T13:02:40-04:00 2015-10-06T13:02:40-04:00 SCPO David Lockwood 1020617 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>We always promoted diversity! Response by SCPO David Lockwood made Oct 6 at 2015 1:03 PM 2015-10-06T13:03:41-04:00 2015-10-06T13:03:41-04:00 1stSgt Private RallyPoint Member 1020622 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>We don&#39;t. we hire those that apply and meet the qualifications, regardless of race, color, creed or sex. They have no bearing. Response by 1stSgt Private RallyPoint Member made Oct 6 at 2015 1:04 PM 2015-10-06T13:04:40-04:00 2015-10-06T13:04:40-04:00 MSgt James Mullis 1020995 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>As a long retired dinosaur, I&#39;m curious about this post. Diversity is built into the Air Force accession process. I don&#39;t understand how you could &quot;promote&quot; diversity in a shop where your individual membership is sent to you from the Air Force Personnel Center? AFPC might look at installation and unit diversity during the assignment process. Also, at the unit and shop level, you could &quot;celebrate&quot; and possibly &quot;educate&quot; your members on the diverse nature (race, religion, country of origin, sexual orientation, etc) of the Air Force at events such as commander&#39;s calls, holiday parties and luncheons. However, that&#39;s not really promoting diversity. I guess you could pick out individuals for special mentorship, but that seems unfair to the rest of your shop. Response by MSgt James Mullis made Oct 6 at 2015 2:26 PM 2015-10-06T14:26:57-04:00 2015-10-06T14:26:57-04:00 Maj Private RallyPoint Member 1021264 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I just got the letter from SecDef Carter about promoting diversity and providing support to Lean in Circles. I&#39;m not buying into this whole &quot;we need more diversity&quot; program. Diversity has never provided anything more than diversity itself. Somehow people got into their minds that diversity increases productivity, competency, excellence, or something. Creativity comes out of exercised minds...not because your skin tone is different or because what sex you are or anything else we like to classify people on through demographics. Let&#39;s get our eyes back on the goal rather than focusing on being this ever changing mantra called political correctness. Response by Maj Private RallyPoint Member made Oct 6 at 2015 3:43 PM 2015-10-06T15:43:38-04:00 2015-10-06T15:43:38-04:00 Cpl Jeff N. 1021377 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Diversity, in and of itself is not a strength or a weakness. You get the best people regardless of background to do the job. People also have to fit into the chemistry of the unit. It isn't as easy as saying I want 5 men and 5 women and of those 10, X need to be white, Y need to be black, Z need to Asian etc. That is not a valid or logical way to assemble a high performance team. That might be an outcome but it should not be the goal. <br /><br />Mission first. Everyone should know that, clearly some do not. Skill is skill, demographics are demographics, don't confuse the two. Response by Cpl Jeff N. made Oct 6 at 2015 4:30 PM 2015-10-06T16:30:46-04:00 2015-10-06T16:30:46-04:00 MSgt Dwyane Watson 1022197 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I always did, do a good job and work your butt off or I would diversify your butt right out the door and I didn't care what age, sex, race, or religion you were. If you are a good NCO focus on your people and the job, quite being a hand wringing liberal and worrying about diversity. I never saw black, women or other religions, I saw airmen who needed to be trained and mentored; end of story. Response by MSgt Dwyane Watson made Oct 6 at 2015 9:34 PM 2015-10-06T21:34:26-04:00 2015-10-06T21:34:26-04:00 SrA Art Siatkowsky 1022518 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>The strength of our military is that everyone is a patriot regardless of race or gender.....not politically correct diversity. There is no quota on being a patriot. Response by SrA Art Siatkowsky made Oct 7 at 2015 12:36 AM 2015-10-07T00:36:45-04:00 2015-10-07T00:36:45-04:00 Capt Seid Waddell 1022564 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>No. Skin color is irrelevant; skill level and dedication rule. Response by Capt Seid Waddell made Oct 7 at 2015 1:14 AM 2015-10-07T01:14:39-04:00 2015-10-07T01:14:39-04:00 SPC Chris Dorsey 1022625 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I always promote unity. In the military it doesn&#39;t matter sex, race, religion, ect. The person beside you was your brother or sister and you trusted them as they did you. Unity is the hard concept to teach because the PC world pounds diversity down our throats. United we stand, divided we fall. Response by SPC Chris Dorsey made Oct 7 at 2015 2:07 AM 2015-10-07T02:07:20-04:00 2015-10-07T02:07:20-04:00 SrA Matthew Knight 1022714 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Promoting diversity? All I have really seen is those who are Christian or anything else against the typical flow generally being forced to keep quiet about our opinions or thoughts because if we say anything different from what others want us to think we are immediately put down and met with negativity. I hate to say it but in the effort to become more diverse and tolerant of diversity we are becoming more intolerant to those who don't share the same progressive opinions.<br /><br />I will give an example based off of a real situation I witnessed with names removed of course. So the situation was SrA J watching a youtube music video involving a scantily clad female singer while at their very open to the world computer desk at work. SSgt N (who happens to be a known faithful Christian) tells SrA J that the video is inappropriate for the work place and may upset someone so they must turn it off. Later on SSgt N is reading his Bible at his desk, in no way speaking out loud or trying to push it on anyone, just silently reading. SrA J sees this and decides to be a smartass and tells SSgt N that he should put away his Bible at work because it might offend him or another Airman.<br /><br />People aren't as open to diversity as they claim to be. They just accept whatever is the norm in daily culture and treat those who don't like crap and it's getting old. Gone are the days of treating others like you want to be treated or earning respect and now are the days of "You will respect me and my opinion or I will report you and do my best to destroy your career and others opinions of you."<br /><br />Sorry if this didn't go the way you were expecting the answer to go but Diversity is nothing more than a cloak covering the intolerance towards groups that are becoming the minorities now. Response by SrA Matthew Knight made Oct 7 at 2015 4:35 AM 2015-10-07T04:35:24-04:00 2015-10-07T04:35:24-04:00 TSgt Gwen Walcott 1023299 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Mission comes before politics or ego-boosting Response by TSgt Gwen Walcott made Oct 7 at 2015 10:21 AM 2015-10-07T10:21:56-04:00 2015-10-07T10:21:56-04:00 SMSgt Private RallyPoint Member 1024534 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>How do you define diversity? Simply being in the Air Force is supporting diversity. Working with people from different regions of the country, different backgrounds, different tastes in sports teams etc. is diversity by definition? Response by SMSgt Private RallyPoint Member made Oct 7 at 2015 6:27 PM 2015-10-07T18:27:05-04:00 2015-10-07T18:27:05-04:00 MAJ Ken Landgren 1026664 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>It starts with the basic premise that everyone deserves equal opportunity, dignity, and respect. Response by MAJ Ken Landgren made Oct 8 at 2015 2:17 PM 2015-10-08T14:17:18-04:00 2015-10-08T14:17:18-04:00 MAJ Private RallyPoint Member 1026673 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I believe "promoting diversity" is the wrong way to approach it. The issue should be promoting workplace unity and mission accomplishment, while treating everyone as one team.<br /><br />"Promoting diversity" creates a divide. Response by MAJ Private RallyPoint Member made Oct 8 at 2015 2:19 PM 2015-10-08T14:19:36-04:00 2015-10-08T14:19:36-04:00 MSgt Karl Mayfield 1026856 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I think the military lost the focus on this subject. We all came from different backgrounds and world experience. As a leader you're responsible for taking all these different people and making one unit. For me, At the end of the day the person next to me was blue. An United States Airman, and in the end my friends and comrades bleed red on the battlefield. Response by MSgt Karl Mayfield made Oct 8 at 2015 3:20 PM 2015-10-08T15:20:34-04:00 2015-10-08T15:20:34-04:00 SPC Christopher Perrien 1027116 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Well you could push to outlaw Pork being served , that might bring in a lot more Muslims and Jews into the military. :) Response by SPC Christopher Perrien made Oct 8 at 2015 5:06 PM 2015-10-08T17:06:32-04:00 2015-10-08T17:06:32-04:00 Capt Al Parker 1037918 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Treat EVERYBODY EQUAL, Response by Capt Al Parker made Oct 13 at 2015 4:11 PM 2015-10-13T16:11:54-04:00 2015-10-13T16:11:54-04:00 MSgt Paul Anderson 1038716 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Diversity is our strength ? <br />What about being qualified and able to do our jobs the best possible. <br />Diversity doesn't mean anything if you can't do the job or if the standards were lowered.<br />PC for PC sake can be killers in the military. <br />Me? Retired EOD tech. Response by MSgt Paul Anderson made Oct 13 at 2015 11:21 PM 2015-10-13T23:21:20-04:00 2015-10-13T23:21:20-04:00 Capt Private RallyPoint Member 1041079 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I was in a position where I hired staff for several years. I always hired the person who I believed was most qualified. <br /><br />The only exceptions was when I hired a person with a disability because someone else was going to pick up the pay for a year. She turned out to be one of the best employees I ever had. Response by Capt Private RallyPoint Member made Oct 14 at 2015 8:45 PM 2015-10-14T20:45:23-04:00 2015-10-14T20:45:23-04:00 MAJ Ken Landgren 1062598 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>There is an inherent diversity in the military. The leaders must ensure there is equal opportunity. Response by MAJ Ken Landgren made Oct 24 at 2015 6:17 AM 2015-10-24T06:17:08-04:00 2015-10-24T06:17:08-04:00 Capt Al Parker 1119857 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>IN my 47 years working for Uncle Sam in and out of uniform the times I saw race and diversity used was because the person wouldn't perform to standards. Then the boss's would use diversity to excuse the poor performance. Response by Capt Al Parker made Nov 19 at 2015 4:12 PM 2015-11-19T16:12:48-05:00 2015-11-19T16:12:48-05:00 2015-10-06T13:02:40-04:00