• mechoman444@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    This post attempts to frame opposition to DEI as opposition to the literal meanings of the words rather than the policies built around them. That’s a false dilemma. One can oppose DEI initiatives that sacrifice meritocracy and individual achievement without rejecting the values of diversity, equity, and inclusion in their purest forms. A system that prioritizes individual ability, effort, and competence over group identity is the foundation of real progress and innovation.

    We need to be fighting nepotism, not implementing DEI policies that replace one form of favoritism with another. Nepotism undermines meritocracy by prioritizing personal connections over competence, but DEI hiring, when based on demographic factors rather than qualifications, does the same by shifting the bias to identity. The goal should be a system that rewards individual ability, effort, and achievement—ensuring opportunities are earned, not granted based on who you know or what group you belong to. True fairness comes from eliminating favoritism altogether, not redistributing it.

    It seems we are forgetting the folly of the greater good.

    That being said, everything I’ve read about companies that implement DEI—aside from some questionable journalism in the gaming industry—suggests that they are actually about 27% to 30% more profitable than those that don’t.

    I just don’t like this post in general; it seems like one large logical fallacy.

    • Ulvain@sh.itjust.works
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      3 hours ago

      “We need to be fighting nepotism, not implementing DEI policies that replace one form of favoritism with another”

      Sure, except no DEI policy worth its salt ever does that. Day 1 on the job in actual DEI, the difference between tokenism and inclusion is taught, and a policy or practice where unqualified people are put in positions solely because of their identity are not DEI policies.

      It’s about giving equal access and opportunity to equally qualified diverse candidates that, because of systemic biases and obstacles, they wouldn’t have had access to.

      Saying “we need a guy on a wheelchair in the legal team, to look good, so hire this guy without a law degree” is dumb tokenism.

      Saying “hey now that we don’t do ‘jog-and-talk’ interviews on the 14th floor of a building without an elevator, we were able to interview and hire Joe, a great lawyer in a wheelchair” is implementing a basic DEI change.

      Decently done DEI is about making it easier to select the most qualified talent from a qualified, talented and diverse slate of candidates.

      NOTE: I don’t think you seemed to disagree with the above, it was just funny to me that you started highlighting the false dilemma, then articulated another one :)

      • Wisas62@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        Your statement is not based on fact. The DEI created metrics that federal employment and federal contractors were required to meet related to DEI.

        it’s more on the lines of, one of the women quit so we can only interview women because otherwise we won’t meet our required diversity goal.

        Your statement is the dream goal and not the actual case.

      • mechoman444@lemmy.world
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        1 hour ago

        The primary issue with those games is that they sucked fundamentally as games.

        The politics in those games not withstanding if they were actually good games they would have done fine even if the fantasy dragon lady living in a world of magic and polymorph is “nonbinary”