For a brief, furious window of time, anyone searching the Department of Defense’s website for Maj. Gen. Charles Calvin Rogers found only a void. The Vietnam War hero, a Black officer who fought for both his country and equality within its ranks, had been replaced by a 404 error and a URL that now read “deimedal” instead of “medal.” To critics already alarmed by the Trump administration’s crusade against Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, it felt like a digital slap: as if his valor had been reduced to a culture‑war talking point.
The backlash was immediate and blistering. Veterans, historians, and ordinary users called it “blood‑boiling,” an “insult” to a man who once ran through fire to pull dazed soldiers back into the fight, refusing medical care so he could keep leading them. Within days, the page was restored, its URL scrubbed of “dei,” its narrative of courage intact. But the damage lingers in a deeper question: how fragile is remembrance when a hero’s legacy can vanish with a keystroke?