Dermatologists say Marines' tightened shaving waiver could hurt Black members' careers
Source: NBC News
May 24, 2025, 7:00 AM EDT
Air Force veteran Ed Anderson cant recall any time past puberty when he didnt get razor bumps after shaving his face. His coarse facial hair would often cause painful inflammation and itchy bumps as it grew back. Anderson, now 70, remembers requesting a shaving waiver when he entered the service in 1975, allowing him to bypass the militarys requirements for men to be clean-shaven.
For him and other Black airmen, the waivers became a symbol of unity. It was seen as an identifier of solidarity with other Black GIs having that shaving waiver, Anderson said. The military as a whole began issuing these waivers in the 1970s, with the Navy taking the strongest approach in 1970 to allow the elective wearing of beards to address medical conditions. But the policies of the different branches have changed multiple times since then. Now, a new U.S. Marine Corps grooming policy that affects people with curly or coarse hair is drawing ire from critics who say it targets Black men.
The guidance, issued in March, states that a diagnosis of pseudofolliculitis barbae, or PFB, a skin condition more commonly known as razor bumps or ingrown hairs, could lead to a service members expulsion from the branch if the issue persists. The U.S. Air Force also updated its guidance on PFB earlier this year, saying shaving waivers will expire 90 days after an airmans next annual health assessment. But the requirements for those who may still qualify for a waiver remain unclear.
The condition affects up to 60% of Black men, according to the American Osteopathic College of Dermatology, a far higher rate than for any other group. Anderson said he sees the move as yet another example of ongoing attacks on diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives in the federal government. Its mostly soldiers of color who are impacted by this, he said. I dont see this as a productive and effective means of retaining and recruiting troops.
Read more: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/dermatologists-say-marines-tightened-shaving-waiver-hurt-black-members-rcna208090

KatyaR
(3,591 posts)I guess a soldier's beard is more important than providing education, food, and health care for children and adults.
brush
(59,984 posts)Last edited Sat May 24, 2025, 01:08 PM - Edit history (1)
with no razor bumps. It's been advertised in all the Black magazines like Ebony, Jet and others for decades.
Blackbydemand2008
(1 post)Magic Shave has been linked but not confirmed to cause cancer. Also, it triggers severe allergic reactions in many people.
brush
(59,984 posts)druidity33
(6,727 posts)they're insidious. When you "use something for years" is when you should be most worried. Think Talcum powder, which of course EVERYONE thought was so safe we put it on babies... and on our most sensitive areas.
Be Leave On
(204 posts)They were used for years before doctors quit advertising for Chesterfield King cigarettes.
LetMyPeopleVote
(163,500 posts)BonnieJW
(2,898 posts)greatauntoftriplets
(177,680 posts)He had a waiver when he was in the Army from about 1998 to 2002.
TomSlick
(12,418 posts)In that time, I never saw an instance where a soldier with a shaving profile looked unprofessional as a result.
Black servicemen would rather shave than draw attention to themselves for being "on profile." Soldiers got shaving profiles only if they had to do so.
This is just a way to suppress black people from service.
JMCKUSICK
(2,463 posts)the Jenga tower which is then toppled by the ones we scream about. It's overwhelming.
jmowreader
(52,319 posts)Seinan Sensei
(975 posts)... then you could bet your bottom-dollar that shaving profiles would be a-okay
I would have thought that macho-man Petey would defer to actual manly-men who actually grow beards.
BonnieJW
(2,898 posts)He has racist tattoos. assaults women, and has been married 3 times. He also cheats on his wives. How can you say he isn't manly?!
LudwigPastorius
(12,509 posts)to ensure that a gas mask doesn't leak.
But, given that fact that waivers were routine for years, this stinks of Trumpist racism.
niyad
(123,870 posts)authoritarian scum have not thought to go after?
JT45242
(3,344 posts)You need to get the people who look like what you are going to dehumanize out of the military.
This is yet another step towards using the military on US civilians.
The camps are coming...it's a matter of when not if at this point.
Irish_Dem
(69,973 posts)Only christian white males will be in the US military.
DFW
(58,070 posts)I suffer from it as well. I also suffered from my high schools (2 different in 11th, and 12th grades) pressuring me to shave, them being totally indifferent to the fact that if I shaved, my face would turn bright red like a boiled lobster. I bent in 11th grade, stopped bending in 12th grade. There were two guys in my graduating class with beards. One was a libertarian right wing type, so he was tolerated. I was not, and so the pressure, while not quite reaching the level of mobbing or harassment, was relentless. As a partial revenge, at graduation, when we were herded together for the class picture, my brother, one class below me, and at a rival school, who was next to me, tried to scramble over the arrogant jocks to be out of the way when the picture was taken. No one would let by, and I said, "look, the school doesn't care about us anyway, so stay put. I bet they'll never notice." Indeed, they never did. I let word filter up about six months later, but they were so indifferent, me being no Republican president's son, to this day, no one ever figured out who the ringer in the photo was.
My high school social life, never the subject of sitcoms to begin with, dropped to flatlining until I stopped shaving. Indeed, my last year of high school, the school paper ran an article about how the girls' school down the road considered us "Freaks, Jocks, and Zeroes," and then ran a photo of me under the headline (and they wonder why I never send them alumni contributions). It didn't take me long to not give a rat's ass if their alumni were put off about one of their students having a beard (this was 1970, after all) or not. That kind of emotional scar lasts a lifetime, and I never forgot it. I stood in unshaven solidarity with every beard-wearer I ever met since.
twodogsbarking
(13,761 posts)cstanleytech
(27,615 posts)BumRushDaShow
(153,109 posts)"Ari Melber 5-o'clock shadow"??
cstanleytech
(27,615 posts)Skittles
(164,443 posts)when I was in the Air Force you'd see some some airmen with very closely-cropped facial hair - PROBLEM SOLVED. As someone who worked in a base personnel office I sometimes ADVISED guys about this condition (those bumps look very painful indeed). This is just more repuke cruelty.