NASA spent $20M in Biden DEI push that brought ‘anti-racist’ trainings to agency: report
NASA forked over more than $20 million in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) grants and contracts during the Biden administration, shelling out for âimplicit biasâ trainings, talks with so-called âanti-racistâ authors, âgender-affirmingâ workplace guidelines and an aggressive, left-wing media presence.
Prodded by executive action from former President Joe Biden, NASA officials also implemented a strategic plan to suffuse all agency operations with DEI, altering criteria for recruitment, performance evaluations and promotions.
The taxpayer-watchdog group Open The Books revealed the politicization of the space agency in a report published Wednesday, which shares a trove of documents obtained from various public records requests.
âNASAâs mission is too risky to get distracted by identity politics,â Open The Books CEO John Hart told The Post. âNewtonian physics and atmospheric re-entry do not care about antiracism talks and gender âaffirmationâ policies. NASA has an opportunity to take one small step toward fiscal responsibility and one giant leap toward common sense.â
The $11.7 million in grants and $8.3 million in contracts represent just a fraction of the agencyâs $25 billion annual budget, though former NASA Administrator Bill Nelson advanced Bidenâs equity agenda far beyond the reach of those spending items.
NASAâs Office of Diversity and Equal Opportunity kicked off their DEI agenda in earnest during the final months of President Trumpâs first term.
Email records obtained by the watchdog group reveal that the office invited left-wing author and professor Ibram X. Kendi to give a talk to NASA employees in August 2020 titled âMission to Inclusion: Cultivating an Antiracist Workplace.â
Itâs unclear how much Kendi was paid for the lecture. Two years later, the star anti-racist guru got $5,000 for a similar discussion with hundreds of National Institutes of Health (NIH) employees, which was disclosed previously by Open The Books.
Trumpâs NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine, a former Republican congressman, also dipped his toe into DEI by adding âinclusionâ to the agencyâs list of core values in 2020. NASA in the past only touted âsafety,â âintegrity,â âteamworkâ and âexcellenceâ as vital principles.
But Biden kicked the costly DEI initiative into high gear with a Day One executive order on âadvancing racial equity,â reversing action by Trump that had halted the identity-focused trainings and barred race- and sex-focused grants and contracts.
Some of the developmental sessions that came as a result were titled âDiversity All Inâ and the âThe Power of Inclusion,â with the latter involving a three-hour-long course to help âengage men to advance women in leadership positions.â
Lefty authors were also invited back for talks, while books on âunconscious biasâ and workplace diversity were made a part of professional development.
âIn order to move toward a more inclusive society, the primary beneficiaries of privilegeânamely European-American, heterosexual, Christian menâmust recognize the advantages they are automatically granted,â states one of those agency-touted books, âDiversity Beyond Lip Service: A Coaching Guide for Challenging Bias.â
âWhile white men must recognize their privilege, the rest of us must recognize that for them, this new accountability will come with a sense of loss and discomfort,â writes author LaâWana Harris.
Another 2021 book discussion featured author Uju Asika speaking about her book âBringing Up Race: How to Raise a Kind Child in a Prejudiced World,â to âpositively open up the lines of communication on anti-racism,â an email obtained by Open The Books shows.
âAs a woman of color in todayâs Brexit and Trump climate, you have to stay woke,â Asika writes, while elsewhere calling out those who are âwhitewashing Americaâs past.â
âThis doesnât mean you have to cancel Thanksgiving, but your child should understand why a Native American might not want to sit at your feast,â Asika goes on. âExplain that for many, Turkey Day is a day of mourning.â
Other facets of implementing Bidenâs DEI prerogatives included âworkplace genderâ plans that placed âtransitioningâ NASA workers in âthe restroom, locker room or other facility that they feel most comfortable using.â
â[T]he transitioning employee should not be asked or required to use an alternate facility in order to accommodateâ employees who took issue, the guidelines declared.
Recruitment efforts also honed in on so-called âunderserved communitiesâ or potential employees with disabilities â while âthe process of selecting top leadersâ was slated for an update âto better reflect DEIA principles and practices.â
In performance evaluations, employees were graded on the degree to which they âemphasize[d] social justice and inclusion,â fostered âdiversity dialogues,â affirmatively asked for, participated in and incorporated DEI trainings into their roles or promoted âthe development and advancement of underrepresented groups through nominating and selecting diverse team members for professional development courses, speaking engagements, and training opportunities,â according to Open The Booksâ report.
Not even tech workers were spared from the aggressive approach, with officials working âto harness existing data systems, artificial intelligence, and machine learning to analyze DEIA-relevant data.â
In 2023, NASA hosted a âDiversity Equity Inclusion and Accessibility [DEIA] Dayâ that contracted an array of DEI-obsessed businesses to coach their employees. The event took place at the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center in Houston, the site supporting the Apollo missions that first put men on the moon.
One of the eventâs vendors, Decide Diversity, developed a âTable of Diversityâ that labeld employees by their races, gender identities, sexual orientations and other markers to spark workplace conversations.
It appears NASA fully embraced the effort, with the creator of the table, Demetria Miles-McDonald, trumpeting her âpartnershipâ with the agency last year.
The Post has reached out to NASA reps for comment.
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