It's the "Satanic Panic" of the '80's all over again. Or deja vu, all over again. I forget which. But we've been down this road once or twice before.https://t.co/ukr07vCA7v pic.twitter.com/EbmKpyoh49
— Rick Wilson (@TheRickWilson) April 28, 2022
As the primaries get into full-swing, people are going to slowly realize just how insane most of the GOP candidates are. And it will change some of the general election calculus. https://t.co/h9iCMMs7Dc
— Sarah Longwell (@SarahLongwell25) April 28, 2022
Remind me, how many state primaries have we had so far? And how many yet to go? Personally, I think the general electorate is tired of the crazy, and not inclined to let it in by default anymore. I'm of the opinion the real crazy actually draws out the rational to be sure the crazy loses. We'll see. I could worry about the future; or I could wait to see what it brings when it gets here. Maybe that's because the older I get the more I realize the future is the past we were afraid of day before yesterday.At tonight’s Republican debate for the #pagov: Doug Mastriano says he will appoint a Secretary of State who will force every voter in the state to re-register.
— The Republican Accountability Project (@AccountableGOP) April 28, 2022
PS: Mastriano was an organizer to the Jan. 6 rally and refuses to testify to the Jan. 6 committee. pic.twitter.com/yvN5PGuq64
Last I looked, "you and me" get to vote (well, I don't until November. I've already voted in the Texas Primaries and in the primary runoff.) And Trump's rallies aren't exactly star-studded attractions drawing crowds to fill football stadia. If anything, the attendance is dropping like a stone and Trump fears tomatoes.Another great article by @chaunceydevega
— David Reiss, M.D. (@DMRDynamics) April 28, 2022
Trump's latest hate rally: A master class in cult mind control | https://t.co/Sij5eNdLaI https://t.co/WVCoAFx5ot
"Cult mind control"? From this guy? Over people who think Jackie O and Princess Diana are still alive, and Biden is dead? I think that's a level of crazy even Trump doesn't control. He attracts it, makes it leave the house occasionally, but control? It’s more like he makes it easier to know where the crazies are.Trump says he feared being pelted with ‘very dangerous’ fruit at rallies https://t.co/dGfZMmeGFw
— Felicia Sonmez (@feliciasonmez) April 27, 2022
First, "diversity training" sux, and that's not because of the topic or what it attempts to do. Pedagogically it's a joke. It’s practically designed for failure. That aside, you can't educate people out of their culture: not without concerted effort over years, and with their acquiescence. I knew as a young child that racism was wrong, but I didn't really understand racism, or my own racism, until my encounters with a black seminary student (the only one in the school for most of the time I was there). She taught me things no "training" could, that even the seminary couldn't do (try as it did). I'm still a creature of my culture, but I know that now. That took some combination of life experiences and various graduate programs to achieve, along with no small effort on my part. Do I still suck at "diversity"? Yeah, probably. Not intentionally, but rare, I think, is the person who doesn't suck at it."A study of 829 companies over 31 years showed that diversity training had 'no positive effects in the average workplace.' Millions of dollars a year were spent on the training resulting in, well, nothing."https://t.co/f4dUcXbxiU
— Jonathan Church, CFA (@jondavidchurch) April 28, 2022
Diversity training doesn’t extinguish prejudice. It promotes it.At first glance, the first training — the one that outlined what people could and couldn’t say — didn’t seem to hurt. But on further inspection, it turns out it did.The scenarios quickly became the butt of participant jokes. And, while the information was sound, it gave people a false sense of confidence since it couldn’t possibly cover every single situation.The second training — the one that categorized people — was worse. Just like the first training, it was ridiculed, ironically in ways that clearly violated the recommendations from the first training. And rather than changing attitudes of prejudice and bias, it solidified them.This organization’s experience is not an exception. It’s the norm.
The solution? Instead of seeing people as categories, we need to see people as people. Stop training people to be more accepting of diversity. It’s too conceptual, and it doesn’t work.Instead, train them to do their work with a diverse set of individuals. Not categories of people. People.Teach them how to have difficult conversations with a range of individuals. Teach them how to manage the variety of employees who report to them. Teach them how to develop the skills of their various employees.
this is just sic https://t.co/JjvpFph0cM
— George Conway🇺🇦 (@gtconway3d) April 28, 2022
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