Jump to content

The Troubling Decline of DEI: A Step Backward for America


Recommended Posts

Posted
8 hours ago, Social Media said:

image.png

 

In the years following the George Floyd protests, the United States appeared ready to confront its deep-seated issues of discrimination and inequality. Yet, the recent rollback of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives in corporate America and educational institutions signals a troubling retreat from those commitments. While DEI programs have faced criticism for their shortcomings, their rapid dismantling suggests a country regressing rather than progressing.

 

Major companies like Facebook, McDonald’s, and Walmart have recently announced reductions or complete discontinuations of their DEI efforts. These initiatives, ranging from specific hiring targets for women and people of color to broader goals of fostering inclusive workplaces, are now being scaled back. This shift reflects a disturbing trend: corporations are signaling less concern about creating environments that support women, LGBTQ+ individuals, people of color, and those with disabilities.

 

 

The retrenchment isn't limited to the corporate world. Educational institutions are also rolling back diversity measures. Some colleges have halted efforts to increase enrollment of Native, Black, and Latino students or cut scholarships designated for minority groups. Others have shuttered campus centers that offered support and resources for Black, LGBTQ+, and female students, among others.

 

The legal climate has undoubtedly played a role in this shift. The 2023 U.S. Supreme Court ruling restricting affirmative action in college admissions has emboldened conservative legal groups to challenge corporate DEI programs, arguing that they resemble the policies struck down by the court. In response, many companies are preemptively abandoning these initiatives, fearing legal repercussions.

 

However, the decline of DEI is not solely a legal issue. The social and political environment in the U.S. has shifted significantly. For some corporations, the expansion of DEI programs may have been more about aligning with the prevailing societal mood than a genuine commitment to combating racism and sexism. As the fervor surrounding the George Floyd protests subsides, so too does the urgency of these initiatives.

 

The rise of anti-DEI sentiment is rooted in two flawed premises. The first, often espoused by conservatives, is the belief that acknowledging gender, race, and other identities is inherently divisive. This argument suggests that ignoring identity would lead to fewer tensions, an approach that overlooks the systemic issues these initiatives aim to address.

 

The second premise comes from a segment of liberals and Democrats who, while supportive of certain diversity measures like campus centers for Black students, resist initiatives that seem to challenge the concept of meritocracy. This group sometimes aligns with conservatives in opposing the consideration of race or gender in admissions and hiring, fearing it undermines a merit-based system.

 

Both premises weaken the case for necessary and overdue societal changes. Ignoring identity does not erase the inequalities tied to it, and clinging to a flawed notion of meritocracy often perpetuates existing disparities.

 

The decline of DEI initiatives is more than just a policy change; it is a reflection of a shifting national consciousness, one that risks undoing progress made in recent years. As memories of George Floyd's killing and the subsequent protests fade, there is a danger that the hard-fought gains in diversity and inclusion will be lost, leaving the U.S. further entrenched in its historical patterns of inequality.

 

Based on a report by WP 2024-01-18

 

news-logo-btm.jpg

 

image.png

Seems to be mainstream now

  • Agree 1
Posted
4 hours ago, JingerBen said:

Good riddance to bad rubbish.

No! No! No! Attitudes like that are precisely what DEI is trying to eliminate. People are not "bad rubbish" just because they are different from you. :sad:

  • Sad 1
Posted
13 minutes ago, jas007 said:

I would draw the line at hiring people do a job that they are incapable of performing, or who can only perform that job at a sub par level.  People's lives can sometimes hang in the balance.  Airline pilots, air traffic controllers, life guards, paramedics, doctors. The list goes on.  

 

Should the LA Lakers have to hire a midget or two, just to be "inclusive'?  Should Hooters have to hire morbidly obese women? 

DEI does not suggest crossing that line. Like Affirmative Action before it, DEI only recommends that an employer attempts to increase the diversity, equity, and inclusion of their workforce when hiring, but all those considered must be people who meet the minimum requirements. 

  • Like 1
Posted

So is it better to give the job to a DEI hire who just makes the Minimum benchmark, or to a non DEI hire who nears the Maximum. As a business man, I know which I would prefer. 

  • Love It 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
7 minutes ago, WDSmart said:

DEI does not suggest crossing that line. Like Affirmative Action before it, DEI only recommends that an employer attempts to increase the diversity, equity, and inclusion of their workforce when hiring, but all those considered must be people who meet the minimum requirements. 

 

Except that's not how it works at all.   Here is the current racist advert for internships at MI5 in the UK that allows everyone to apply except white people.  

 

https://www.mi5.gov.uk/careers/opportunities/internships

image.thumb.png.4ff94f254e418e8ae4cefd588b757fb3.png

 

 

  • Like 1
  • Sad 1
  • Thanks 1
Posted
8 minutes ago, WDSmart said:

DEI does not suggest crossing that line. Like Affirmative Action before it, DEI only recommends that an employer attempts to increase the diversity, equity, and inclusion of their workforce when hiring, but all those considered must be people who meet the minimum requirements. 

 

That may be how it was intended but just watching those 5'4" Secret Service ladies pretending to be human shields for a 6'4" Trump showed us all we needed to know. 

 

Had there been more than one shooter, someone else would be getting inaugurated later on in the week.

  • Sad 1
  • Love It 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
12 minutes ago, James105 said:

 

Except that's not how it works at all.   Here is the current racist advert for internships at MI5 in the UK that allows everyone to apply except white people.  

 

https://www.mi5.gov.uk/careers/opportunities/internships

image.thumb.png.4ff94f254e418e8ae4cefd588b757fb3.png

 

 

I agree that the first two categories are racist and overly restrictive. This is not how DEI is supposed to be deployed in the USA.

Posted
15 minutes ago, impulse said:

 

That may be how it was intended but just watching those 5'4" Secret Service ladies pretending to be human shields for a 6'4" Trump showed us all we needed to know. 

 

Had there been more than one shooter, someone else would be getting inaugurated later on in the week.

Yes, but there are still a couple more days. One can only hope... (for taller Secret Service officers with more androgen :wink:).

Posted
3 hours ago, aussiebrian said:

Lol, they were too embarrassed to put their name on the article..

I think most normal people will disagree to DEI.

"WP" Washington Post?

Opinion article with same picture by Perry Bacon jr.

(paywall)

Posted
1 hour ago, WDSmart said:

No! No! No! Attitudes like that are precisely what DEI is trying to eliminate. People are not "bad rubbish" just because they are different from you. 

It’s crystal clear to me that the ‘bad rubbish’ he’s referring to is racist and anti meritocracy DEI practices, NOT the particular people who might be advantaged by DEI. You’re entitled to disagree with his position, but not to grossly and deliberately misrepresent what he’s saying.

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
Posted
37 minutes ago, CygnusX1 said:

It’s crystal clear to me that the ‘bad rubbish’ he’s referring to is racist and anti meritocracy DEI practices, NOT the particular people who might be advantaged by DEI. You’re entitled to disagree with his position, but not to grossly and deliberately misrepresent what he’s saying.

It's crystal clear to me that by referring to DEI as "bad rubbish," the original poster was denigrating DEI's attempts to reduce the underlying racist, sexist, and other vestiges of prejudicial approaches to hiring. Anyone who does that, in my opinion, is displaying those same anti-social tendencies.

  • Like 1
Posted
2 hours ago, WDSmart said:

No! No! No! Attitudes like that are precisely what DEI is trying to eliminate. People are not "bad rubbish" just because they are different from you.

 

10 minutes ago, WDSmart said:

It's crystal clear to me that by referring to DEI as "bad rubbish," the original poster was denigrating DEI's attempts to reduce the underlying racist, sexist, and other vestiges of prejudicial approaches to hiring. Anyone who does that, in my opinion, is displaying those same anti-social tendencies.

 

First you said it, quite clearly and unambiguously.  Then when you get called out on it, you denied that's what you meant.

 

You must be a lefty.

 

Posted
5 minutes ago, WDSmart said:

It's crystal clear to me that by referring to DEI as "bad rubbish," the original poster was denigrating DEI's attempts to reduce the underlying racist, sexist, and other vestiges of prejudicial approaches to hiring. Anyone who does that, in my opinion, is displaying those same anti-social tendencies.

DEI has nothing to do with equal protection, it is all about unmerited hires based on looks and beliefs, which is the epitome of bias prejudice. Besides the US already has equal protection laws on the books to prevent unmerited hires. 

  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
4 minutes ago, novacova said:

Besides the US already has equal protection laws on the books to prevent unmerited hires. 

 

Laws that are only enforced in one direction by the current knobs in office.  But all that changes on January 20.

 

Posted
14 minutes ago, impulse said:

 

 

First you said it, quite clearly and unambiguously.  Then when you get called out on it, you denied that's what you meant.

 

You must be a lefty.

 

That's called "sarcasm" or "irony." And, yes, I am a lefty - a very far-left lefty. 

Posted
2 hours ago, James105 said:

 

Except that's not how it works at all.   Here is the current racist advert for internships at MI5 in the UK that allows everyone to apply except white people.  

 

https://www.mi5.gov.uk/careers/opportunities/internships

image.thumb.png.4ff94f254e418e8ae4cefd588b757fb3.png

 

 

Another feeble attempt at justifying backwards thinking without understanding the context.

 

ALL intelligence services look to hire ethnic minorities purely for the fact they are needed to do what they do. MI5 for example (the Uk's domestic intelligence arm) need ethnic minorities to infiltrate domestic terrorism cells and/or simply for linguistic abilities. It obviously isn't the main though as their own site informs you that only 9% of it's total wokforce are from minority groups, 5% from the LGBTQ community and 43% are women.    https://www.mi5.gov.uk/careers/working-at-mi5/diversity

 

With only 9% of staff being from ethnic minorities, they are in serious need of new recruits, hence the advert.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now




×
×
  • Create New...