I thought she said she did it for networking purposes.
I think you are confusing stories. Anonymous data is difficult to use for networking purposes. But I'd be happy to be corrected on that.
I thought she said she did it for networking purposes.
You asked the question 'what does that mean?' in response to someone answering 'what did she gain?' with 'a subjective sense of personal identity'. The proposal, which I agree with, is that Warren simply felt a little special to have a (precarious) claim to exotic ancestry. A thoroughly human peculiarity shared by millions.
I thought she said she did it for networking purposes.
Yeah, confusing stories and confusing speakers. "networking purposes" was my wording. And it was the Harvard Directory, not the Texas Bar card story. She was already past the point of being hired and/or taking advantage of affirmative action when she was listed in the Harvard directory. And the directory has no real official use as far as I know. It's just a directory.I think you are confusing stories. Anonymous data is difficult to use for networking purposes. But I'd be happy to be corrected on that.
Why do teenage girls fill their diaries with pages of "Mrs. John Doe"?What does that mean, exactly? And how does filling out a line you've been told will not be linked to you give you this personal identity?
Meh. It's clear something has gotten garbled somewhere along the way. Probably my fault.You thought Warren filled in a line that she was told was anonymous and wouldn't be linked to her for networking purposes, eh?
Right.
Why do teenage girls fill their diaries with pages of "Mrs. John Doe"?
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) received a standing ovation when she made a surprise appearance Tuesday at a Native American conference.
Warren spoke at the National Indian Women's "Supporting Each Other" lunch, where she introduced Cheryl Andrews-Maltais, the chairwoman of the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head Aquinnah in Massachusetts, HuffPost first reported. The luncheon took place during an annual meeting of the National Congress of American Indians.
In her speech, Warren praised Native American women, specifically Reps. Deb Haaland (D-N.M.) and Sharice Davids (D-Kan.) — the first two Native women elected to Congress. The progressive lawmaker, who reportedly received a standing ovation from tribal leaders and other Native attendees as she approached the stage, detailed several legislative priorities related to the Native American community.
Why do teenage girls fill their diaries with pages of "Mrs. John Doe"?
Meh. It's clear something has gotten garbled somewhere along the way. Probably my fault.
Your question is fundamentally broken/loaded. You're moving the goalposts, by clear implication and none too subtly:Which of these constitutes identifying yourself to someone:
1. Saying your name to them.
2. Writing your name down in a secret location you expect they will never see.
In which particular case would you be willing to bet an admissions or hiring committee took her ancestry/ethnicity into account?Tracing back through the conversation it appears to be you that changed to "self-identification". Who cares what she self identifies as? In all cases I'm aware of she identified as some form of white or non-minority when affirmative action might have applied.
Citation needed.How about Harvard, when the hiring committee explicitly defended hiring her as a white person over other minority candidates?
Citation needed.
Pay better attention please. I corrected an unambiguously false claim. You replied to that with broken, counter-factual goalpost movement.Tracing back through the conversation it appears to be you that changed to "self-identification". Who cares what she self identifies as? In all cases I'm aware of she identified as some form of white or non-minority when affirmative action might have applied.
Having read through the article, I have failed to find the part where the committee admits to taking her ancestry into account as a factor in her favor (or against her, for that matter).
What did I miss?
Can we all agree that there are no documented examples of Warren using her trace Native American ancestry or family lore to get ahead in life?
You previously asked for evidence of a hiring committee taking her ethnicity into account. I linked you to evidence that the Harvard hiring committee defended hiring her over minorities, which obviously entails taking her ethnicity into account.