The backlash against “wokeism” has led a growing number of states to ban D.E.I. programs at public universities. Thousands of emails and other documents reveal the playbook — and grievances — behind one strand of the anti-D.E.I. campaign.
It would be nice if at least once a page someone fucking explains an acronym. It's a little more understandable when you can infer a meaning through context, but when the context is that people are using it as the new woke bogeyman it gives zero clue as to what it even is.
You aren't wrong with your criticism in general (from a purely journalistic pov). But actually typing DEI into Google and clicking the first hit, would be more constructive than ranting.
Well sure, but that's not how they would frame it. I'm curious what their arguments against it are. They usually put a little spit and polish on their turds before feeding them to their faithful masses.
I really enjoy those honey badger nature vids online. Watching this angry little weasel go pick a fight with 6 lions. Jumping from one to other and ruining their day. This ball of pure malice and hate that is forever in need of a target. One of the only critters on earth that will kill for the joy of it.
I am glad I sure don't know any humans like that. Especially not those in power, not ones who have zero interest in building or even maintaining things. Just rage and the ability to hurt.
It continues to be amazing that so many of them are sticking to the lie that there's a "leftist revolution" going on. How can it be that anyone still falls for it?
It's a convenient excuse that allows them to reject any social progress without having to examine or defend any of their own views. It doesn't matter that the ideas of the "leftist revolution" may in fact be correct and completely justifiable, because introducing it through a "revolution" is inherently bad.
I really miss RES's filters, and the ability to filter out posts linking to irreputable, clickbait sources like nytimes.com. I always wished for an android app that had that capability for Reddit, and now for Lemmy.
I thought treating people differently based on race was to be avoided? There's no good racism right?
Wouldn't a better and fairer idea be to give people a hand up based on economic issues?
You can't tell if someone has experienced racial discrimination based on the race they ascribe to (ask Megan markle).
However you can definitely (and without bias) tell someone is going to be disadvantaged if they grew up in a poor neighbourhood, neither parent earned much, no family history of higher education etc etc.
Too easy and doesn't let us divide and conquer the US among racial lines. Easier to just make the populace fear and attack each other while the top 1% loots any remaining value.
You're talking about affirmative action, this is about DEI.
I thought treating people differently based on race was to be avoided? There’s no good racism right?
On the very slim chance you're asking in good faith, I'll answer your question.
Suppose we were playing poker, and I was cheating the whole time. After a long time, and with almost all the chips, I finally agree not to cheat anymore and play the game "with the same rules for everybody, going forward". That's fair, right?
I get that you have good intentions and I hate to tell you this but every racist thinks their racism is right and justified. Best to reject racism mate.
Also your example plays perfectly into the compromise I suggested. Why not give those with less chips more? They're not always (insert race you want to preference here).
I know the intention is to level the playing field but it's been divisive and often exploited by those who don't need it. Economic standards are far easier to determine, more accurate measures and aren't racist.
This debate feels somewhat surreal because I feel like both sides are wrong.
Conservatives are clearly doing this because they're pretty, vindictive, reactionary ethnonationalists. DEI is clearly harmless.
Conversely, I've not seen any evidence of these meaningfully ameliorating systemic racism at all. Honestly, they feel like another successful effort to turn a serious social problem into a profit generating industry, like carbon offsets.
(Maybe that's what they'll replace DEI with: some kind of Racism offset./s)
Anyway, what I'm saying is I have no horse in this race.
From my experience, DEI is not about making racist people not racist, or sexist people not sexist. It's about making people from varying backgrounds feel welcome, and making sure people don't feel isolated if they're different.
I think that's the intention, and it's laudible, but in my experience it's become something of a racket. An industry of consultants exist to receive money from corporations to launder their images. I think some of their recommendations are good, but ultimately it seems tokenizing and designed to brag about the fact that a board room full of ruthless Harvard grads isn't all white men.
It seems highly performative. I haven't seen credible evidence, for instance, that having more queer people on the board of a fossil fuel company changes their behavior or the long-term consequences for the poor families forced to live next to the company's pollution.
I don't mind these programs. I just think they're a money maker and branding exercise rather than a genuine tool of change.
Now, socially responsible investing: that's a conservative bogeyman that I think has some teeth.
I don't think that's DEI, that's Affirmative Action.
The Supreme Court banned that, so it's over.
The problem with ivy league admissions was never racial selection. It's that it's a cartel. It's an artificially limited resource. Asian applicants aren't being excluded for black people, they're being excluded to leave empty space at a gigantic campus that could accommodate several times sad many students as they let in.
It does if you start with the assumption that you need to do ANYTHING POSSIBLE in the name of equity, including causing further inequities at the individual level.