theprestige
Penultimate Amazing
Counterpoint: It's LinkedIn.
Your "DEI" is all those things. And your insistence that your ridiculous definition is all that there can be.DEI is indeed all those things.
"Perceived"? LMAOOf course they are. Because DEI is full of ◊◊◊◊.
Again, DEI is not, and has never been, anti discrimination. It is and has always been an effort to produce discrimination intended to correct perceived historical injustices. You can’t no true Scotsman your way around that.
Yeah. When it uses an alphabet soup to promote inclusivity, though it is actually excluding those not mentioned in the soup, it's not anti-discrimination."Perceived"? LMAO
OK. Between this forum and SGU, I've backed up "my" definition of DEI with two Biden executive orders instituting DEI throughout the federal government, a peer-reviewed paper, and several online articles. You havre yet to provide any evidence that there is something called DEI that does what you say it does anywhere other than in your mind.Your "DEI" is all those things. And your insistence that your ridiculous definition is all that there can be.
Yes, perceived. Whether that perception is correct or not is a separate matter. I'm not disputing any particular perception (and certainly some perceptions of oppression are correct), but it is still perception that this is based on. I'm not sure why that's controversial."Perceived"? LMAO
Are you ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ serious? If you don't know, how can you disagree with me? And how can you not know, when I've explained it over and over again, including just a few posts up.What do you think I say it does?
You're becoming incoherent. In fact, I've already said what I think DEI does, and you summarily dismissed it. You appear to think I think DEI does something different from that. The link you posted does not explain what you think I say it does, it explains what you say it does, which, yes, you have indeed explained over and over again. Because I think it does something different from that, I disagree with you.Are you ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ serious? If you don't know, how can you disagree with me? And how can you not know, when I've explained it over and over again, including just a few posts up.
Relax. Obviously I misread your question. I understand what you think the kind of DEI that you believe exists somewhere does, or is, or tries to do. There is no reason for me to reiterate it. It is just an attempt at misdirection to hopefully avoid having to defend your position.You're becoming incoherent. In fact, I've already said what I think DEI does, and you summarily dismissed it. You appear to think I think DEI does something different from that. The link you posted does not explain what you think I say it does, it explains what you say it does, which, yes, you have indeed explained over and over again. Because I think it does something different from that, I disagree with you.
Can we just be done with "businesses are more succesful with DEI" nonsense. Nonreplicable flimflam.
The operative thing actually in question had been "perceived historical injustices" there. Your response was entirely irrelevant to that. Ziggurat's response, on the other hand, was entirely relevant.Yeah. When it uses an alphabet soup to promote inclusivity, though it is actually excluding those not mentioned in the soup, it's not anti-discrimination.
Yes, perceived. Whether that perception is correct or not is a separate matter. I'm not disputing any particular perception (and certainly some perceptions of oppression are correct), but it is still perception that this is based on. I'm not sure why that's controversial.
What is there to defend? My position is literally the dictionary definitions of those words.Relax. Obviously I misread your question. I understand what you think the kind of DEI that you believe exists somewhere does, or is, or tries to do. There is no reason for me to reiterate it. It is just an attempt at misdirection to hopefully avoid having to defend your position.
Okay, I'll bite.Again, for the umpteenth time, the people who are doing that and calling it "DEI" are full of ◊◊◊◊. What are we arguing about again?
*rolleyes*Okay, I'll bite.
What is actual DEI? Please explain it so that we can all understand where you're coming from, and why that doesn't apply to the "◊◊◊◊ implementations" that you insist are not DEI.
I haven't claimed that it makes money. That's the capitalist wet dream. I'm interested in making people and society a better place for everybody. Diversity means that nobody is excluded from opportunity. Equity means that everybody has access to the same opportunity. Inclusion means that everybody is represented, regardless of their circumstances and who they are.
Some people and organisations do not believe in these ideals.
So... DEI training would consist of... "don't exclude anyone from consideration for any opportunity" and "consider everyone equally for every opportunity" and "make sure you have at one of every possible kind of person from every walk of life represented in every job"?*rolleyes*
Therefore overweight males should be given the opportunity to work as runway models for female clothing designers. And Danny Devito should be given the opportunity to plan the role of Ms. Congeniality. And a 5'0", 95lb female should be given the opportunity to be a firefighter. Seems totally reasonable.Diversity means that nobody is excluded from opportunity.
Therefore the person who just graduated high school should have access the the same opportunity to perform neurosurgery as the person who has an MD in that specialty. And the person with a degree in fine art and no math beyond high school algebra should have access to the same opportunity to do your taxes.Equity means that everybody has access to the same opportunity.
Therefore con-artists should be represented in the running of charitable endeavors, and child sex offenders should be represented in daycare centers, and meth-heads should be represented in pharmacy management...Inclusion means that everybody is represented, regardless of their circumstances and who they are.
I'm not a policymaker. It's not my job. I'd be bad at it.But you seem rather silent on presenting policies that you think qualify as "real DEI".
You're making the mistake of assuming that a compound word or phrase in English is a concatenation of the meanings of its constituent words when taken separately.*rolleyes*
What you have to defend is indefensible. As I have explained to you over and over again, and just recently right here, DEI doesn't use the dictionary definitions. DEI isn't what you want it to be. It's this.What is there to defend? My position is literally the dictionary definitions of those words.