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Comment by AnotherGoodName

2 days ago

I specifically do remember comics poking fun at diversity initiatives. A quick search of "Dilbert comic about diversity" brings up some examples.

At the time i read those i probably thought they were on point. I've changed my views over the years. You can't keep them or you end up like Adams. That's probably the key to understanding him. He grew up in an era where black students were not allowed to attend white schools. The world changed. He didn't.

Diversity initiatives are often racist or regressive, in which case they should be mocked, and he wasn’t in the wrong for doing so.

At the time, a lot of them were little more than lipstick on a pig.

It took a long time to actually get to diversity that was beyond token "person of group" inclusivity.

  • Funny enough, to get to actual representative diversity you need to explicitly hire underrepresented candidates and pass up on white dudes. Which Scott famously complained about.

    Damned if you do damned if you don’t.

    • > you need to explicitly hire underrepresented candidates and pass up on white dudes

      If the initiatives that promoted diversity explicitly said that, they probably wouldn't have passed. The whole argument was about whether that was true because proponents would never be honest about that part so the public debate never got past that.

  • > It took a long time to actually get to diversity that was beyond token "person of group" inclusivity.

    Are we really beyond that now?

    Many of the initiatives I've experienced are the same thing today, which is why I'm not a big fan.