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blissfullynot

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blissfullynot
·3 years ago·discuss
I have a close friend who expresses similar sentiments sometimes, as someone who is sometimes the target of DEI initiatives.

I've seen DEI hiring initiatives abused to paradoxical ends. Once department administration got into an attempt to basically hire someone using funds set aside for DEI, essentially with the plan to terminate them later, just to collect the support monies that came along with the position. The situation was complex but none of this had to do with hires' actual competence, it had to do with the available pool and this zealotry in unit aims at the time (basically the minority applicants were all working in areas different from the types of projects administration thought people should be working on).

In any event, it created this disturbing situation where an attempt to increase DEI by the higher powers that be was actually having the opposite effect on a hire arguably, by creating this opportunity for unit management to use them for support funds with no actual intent to support them in their career or keep them around long term.
blissfullynot
·3 years ago·discuss
This was infuriating to me, especially the opening anecdote. And I'm highly educated and married to someone from an "elite" university.

There's something ironic to me about that anecdote if true — it illustrates everything wrong with "meritocracy" in a nutshell. But people are people — it seems we always have to have some superficial way of rank ordering ourselves, even when it's to our own detriment.