Excuse me, but someone has to be the rabid angry sneering lefty round here or we'll all drown in our own reasonableness. — unenlightened
I fully accept, for example, that gays have had a tough path historically in the US, but I don't think part of that struggle was in exclusion from universities, real estate markets, or employment. So why am I being asked to be on the lookout for them to be sure they get hired? — Hanover
I fully accept, for example, that gays have had a tough path historically in the US, but I don't think part of that struggle was in exclusion from universities, real estate markets, or employment. So why am I being asked to be on the lookout for them to be sure they get hired? — Hanover
Have you really? Someone has asked that from you in your work?
Or have you read an article that basically urges people to do this? — ssu
Sex and skin colour are a bit hard to hide although I guess from a social experiment perspective it would be totally cool if a black man could pretend to be white and then show up normally on his first day. Preferably somewhere in Mississipi. — Benkei
Once hired you're not allowed to fire them because of it. — Benkei
Not a problem, because many to most Americans are hired, quit, or are fired "at will". "At will" requires no justification, You can hire me (bearded, balding, in a mini dress and heels) if you so wish. I can quit because I would just rather not work for you, and you can fire me because... heels and mini skirt didn't match. If one is hired with a contract this doesn't apply, and voluntarily quitting generally disqualifies one for unemployment. — Bitter Crank
because litigation has resulted often enough from references the next employer thought were too positive or the former employee thought was too negative. — Bitter Crank
You'd be amazed at what's actually occurring. I solicit business from major corporations and am told very directly that they need a certain percentage ownership by minority and then I get these 10 page forms where I'm asked for specific breakdown of employee by race and sexual orientation. It's illegal for me to ask, and impossible for them to verify for accuracy. — Hanover
No it doesn't. It requires that people are selfish first, familial second, and tribal third, and that people in government are good at manipulating opinion. — unenlightened
I can attest the same cultural norms amongst the UK working classes, and also among the Afro Caribbean population here. And that proves what? It proves that we are all hearing the same messages and seeing the same solutions to the same problems. 'Work hard, support power, make yourself useful to power, don't rock the boat, etc.' The Jewish community surely knows as well as any that education and hard work count for little when the government is against you. — unenlightened
how does that apply to Asians? — Hanover
Asian culture, whatever it might historically have been long before America was a twinkle in anyone's eye, must play some role internally here as well, meaning their values must also be leading them toward STEM based occupations, without manipulation by the powers that be. — Hanover
Well, given that there's been Affirmative Action, in effect, for straight, white male, Protestants (in the main) established in every manifest institution in North America since 1619, I don't see an equitable alternative to addressing persistent (perhaps intractable) structural inequalities. If not "permanent"", then for at least 247 more years (1969-2269) in its current, limited scope as redress(?) for the three centuries of 1619-1969 AA for white males (that continues). Besides, as I've pointed out here (link to data therein), in practice, white women have been the primary beneficiaries of Affirmation Action programs since the early 1970s.I don't know that even if I can accept the need for affirmative action to right past wrongs, that I can accept it as a forever proposition — Hanover
Well, given that there's been Affirmative Action, in effect, for straight, white male, Protestants (in the main) established in every manifest institution in North America since 1619, I don't see an equitable alternative to addressing persistent (perhaps intractable) structural inequalities. — 180 Proof
Well, given that there's been Affirmative Action, in effect, for straight, white male, Protestants (in the main) established in every manifest institution in North America since 1619, I don't see an equitable alternative to addressing persistent (perhaps intractable) structural inequalities. If not "permanent"", then for at least 247 more years (1969-2269) in its current, limited scope as redress(?) for the three centuries of 1619-1969 AA for white males (that continues). Besides, as I've pointed out here ↪180 Proof (link to data therein), in practice, white women have been the primary beneficiaries of Affirmation Action programs since the early 1970s. — 180 Proof
That's not what I'm arguing.If AA is the equitable solution as you argue, but also an ineffective solution as you argue, then why have it? — Hanover
I'm not arguing this either.Are you arguing that AA is in principle fair, but in practice unhelpful, so we should just keep it because it's of good intent?
:chin:[D]o you believe that the original AA for straight, white male, Protestants since 1619 will be completely given up (as a birthright entitlement) by straight white male Christians ever? willingly? If you do, please explain. However, if you don't, then explain why some AA on the margins for women & minorities since c1969 is not warranted in the interest of redressing some systemic educational, occupational & social inequities. — 180 Proof
However, do you believe that the original AA for straight, white male, Protestants since 1619 will be completely given up (as a birthright entitlement) by straight white male Christians ever? willingly? — 180 Proof
However, if you don't, then explain why some AA on the margins for women & minorities since c1969 is not warranted in the interest of redressing some systemic educational, occupational & social inequities. — 180 Proof
I accept the playing field is not level, but leveling it is far more complex than just dumping people into broad categories and going from there. — Hanover
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