White men feeling left out?

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How can it be white men feel left out of anything in American society, let alone in the workplace? They are at the center of power in nearly every space. White men are the wealthiest, make the laws, set policy, and sustain exclusive power networks elevating themselves. They hold the most leadership positions and decision-making power in the U.S. (and globally), and they make up the majority of business executives at 67.8%, according to Zippia.

Many white people did indeed come from poverty and are descendants of poor immigrants who did hard labor. Still, they benefit every single day from the intentionally racist systems in America sustaining their privilege, while oppressing Black, indigenous, people of color (BIPOC). These systems were established to benefit the social construct of whiteness, where respect and access to opportunity, privilege, and safety is inherent to being white.

So, why are white men feeling left out of diversity, equity, and inclusion conversations, initiatives, and actions, when DEI impacts everyone? Perhaps DEI is most challenging for white men because it doesn’t center them, elevate them higher, nor forfeit them all of the power in any space. Not wanting to lose your power doesn’t make you a bad person, but the choices a white man makes to hold onto systems of power does perpetuate racism.

According to the White Men's Leadership Study, a study of white men and DEI, nearly 70% report feeling forgotten by DEI efforts. Feeling uncertain about whether DEI includes them is the main reason they either disengage or are not as committed to it. DEI does center belonging for all and empowers everyone, and it gives support and voice to the most vulnerable. Simply put, DEI works to level the playing field across industries, organizations, and society dominated by white men for centuries.

No one wants to feel disadvantaged, as if something is being taken away from them. Yet, consider how the following narratives coming from white men land for BIPOC, given the historical marginalization and oppression imposed on BIPOC.

• An engineer was enraged when he was told to cultivate an applicant pool with more diverse talent, even though a white man already interviewed with the knowledge and skills for the role.

• A leader was angered he was passed up for promotion several times because a woman or person of color was selected.

•A colleague murmuring under his breath he had to go to “another pointless DEI training,” and he wasn’t going to let it make him feel bad for being a white guy.

What are white men feeling? I cannot speak for them, it’s not my lived experience, but this is what I observe.

They are feeling what it’s like to not dominate all of the power; what it’s like to not have advantage all of the time, what it’s like to be BIPOC past and present.

• White people don’t often think about their race; whiteness in this country is what is seen as most American and normal. This stems from racist ideologies, thinking along the lines of, “I have the power and privilege, so everybody else is different from me.”

• They may feel they are being blamed for the current state of affairs or they're being shamed for their privileges.

• Others focus on equality and fairness, missing the mark on equity, noting it’s not fair women and BIPOC are being given more advantages. This thinking presumes it's been fair all along, which is untrue.

• There’s a sense of loss, not wanting what’s good for the entire human ecosystem if it doesn’t benefit self.

. White men are feeling the pressure. Some feel like, “You're talking about me without including me in the conversation.”

We can’t force white men to engage the DEI conversation. The invitation is open. DEI work is lifelong learning, and it’s incredibly difficult to navigate in the workplace because it is organizational and deeply personal. Volumes of research shows a diverse workforce, an inclusive culture, and equitable systems and processes lead to greater innovation and performance, which leads to a competitive advantage and greater profits. DEI supports more opportunities for everyone, including white men, even if they feel like they are losing in the short term.

Bonnie J. Walker, a Worcester resident, is principal diversity & inclusion officer at MIT’s Lincoln Laboratory in Lexington.

SOURCE:

ARCHIVE:
https://archive.ph/dywog
 
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I would love to one day rope and lynch all these multicultural usury hybridized bastards of the world. There needs to be a mass genocide of all these DIE enforcers.
 
Volumes of research shows a diverse workforce, an inclusive culture, and equitable systems and processes lead to greater innovation and performance, which leads to a competitive advantage and greater profits.
The first part and the final part of this sentence only work when you remove most of the middle. Jeff Bezos, one of if not thee richest man on the planet had a plan at Amazon for diversity, because a diverse work force makes it more difficult for workers to unionize. Worker protections being something one of these fucking charlatans try to clamor for.

So allow me to fix your bullshit; "volumes of research shows a diverse workforce leads to greater profits."
 
A very select number of white men and much larger number of (((fellow white))) men enjoy that kind of power. Many from a shrinking middle class and of course lower class whitesost emphatically do not. This is compounded by the great replacement, as well as an increasingly dystopic society fraught with a myriad of societal ills including single moms, no fault divorce, increasing proliferation of drug abuse, ubiquity of online pornanong many other personal vices actively promoted by the ruling class. This is further augmented by an increasingly hostile culture as well as centers of power that want to reduce the memory of white people to an exhibit in the Smithsonian and the like.
 
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Alpha white males are pretty good at building social, fiscal and physical enclaves. If you're sure that's what you want, do carry on.
 
You assholes have done all you legally could to shut out white men for the last 30+ years from the first day they started preschool.
 
How can it be white men feel left out of anything in American society, let alone in the workplace? They are at the center of power in nearly every space. White men are the wealthiest, make the laws, set policy, and sustain exclusive power networks elevating themselves. They hold the most leadership positions and decision-making power in the U.S. (and globally), and they make up the majority of business executives at 67.8%, according to Zippia.
Because the people you are referencing here are what... 100k white men at the most? (Being generous here) What about literally every other white man who isn't in this very small select group?

What are white men feeling? I cannot speak for them, it’s not my lived experience, but this is what I observe.
Also, everything in this "article" comes off as a smug and still horribly jealous tantrum. It's the article version of pointing at a wojak and saying white men are that because they aren't agreeing with you.
 
They're gonna be crying and praying they had some of those White men running things once society really starts crumbling. If diversity was such an ideal way to run a society, it would happen naturally. It wouldn't need to be forced, because the best person for the job would rise to the top no matter what their background is. It's not "institutional racism" that put Whites and Western civilization on top. We really are just that much better.
 
I would go on a long rant about how the fundamental premise of this article is flaws, which is to say the idea that white men are a collective and that some white dude on the other side off the world being rich and successful has no meaningful impact or benefit to my life and to think that is pretty stupid.
Then again I can't exactly say I don't hold some negative views about certain groups myself... so meh.
 
So, why are white men feeling left out of diversity, equity, and inclusion conversations, initiatives, and actions, when DEI impacts everyone?
Go fuck yourself.

Ya know at some point the reality that whites are still the majority and a larger majority than statisticians let on by tucking 'white hispanics' into BIPOC is going to hit home and when it does...lol.

Also DEI and companies that incorporate it are going to get straight up raped in the coming years. Good luck with that, lol...lmao even.

When the rich realize how fucking shit their diversity has played out again lol..lmao.
 
Very cool propaganda article you've got there, but I still don't like having hordes of shitskins imported into my country, and I won't no matter how much garbage you write.
 
Bonnie J. Walker, a Worcester resident, is principal diversity & inclusion officer at MIT’s Lincoln Laboratory in Lexington.
A useless person in a useless position. You can be sure nearly everyone at MIT filters her emails to the trash. It was the first thing I did when my employer started sending out that junk.
 
• A leader was angered he was passed up for promotion several times because a woman or person of color was selected.
Totally anecdotal, but last time I saw a "woman of color" being passed over for promotion she immediately ran to HR to get one of the few white guys on the selection committee dragged in for a sexism/racism investigation. That anger didn't take "several times" to ignite.

Not only was he only one person on a committee, but he was on vacation when she was being considered so hadn't been involved, and she hadn't even noticed. The entire affair so soured him he moved up his retirement date then proceeded to spend his time pulling every last string he had to make her life miserable. I think he managed to get her office moved three times in as many months. That was quite fun.
We can’t force white men to engage the DEI conversation.
You don't want white men to "engage the DEI conversation" except to say "Sorry master, it's all our fault master, take everything we have master." You regret not being able to force that.

But you can certainly force a bunch of white men to sit in a big room as some lightly-tanned guy, in a vest with a buffalo embroidered on it of course, plays a drum and talks about how privileged they are because their family name was never changed by a government official and they were never forcibly relocated by a colonial power. The Cajun in the crowd with a distinctly English-sounding name looked like he was debating grabbing his folding chair and going full WWE on the guy. (But what does the speaker care? He's made his money, the grift keeps rolling.)

principal diversity & inclusion officer at MIT’s Lincoln Laboratory in Lexington.
Is it time for the internet pundits to remind me again how STEM is immune to this kind of thing?
 
If you look at the article on the website itself, it opens up looking like a parody:
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Big ol' smug picture of herself, and her name's presented twice before the article even starts. Someone's got narcissistic personality disorder, hahahahaha.
 
They're gonna be crying and praying they had some of those White men running things once society really starts crumbling. If diversity was such an ideal way to run a society, it would happen naturally. It wouldn't need to be forced, because the best person for the job would rise to the top no matter what their background is. It's not "institutional racism" that put Whites and Western civilization on top. We really are just that much better.
Just see how south africa can barely keep its lights on and there's a large enough movement in colored (mixed race saffers) and indians and white majority states to seccede.
Or how the eastern africa provinces (Kenya, Uganda, etc) expelled all their whites and indians and suddenly had a large drop in farming and comerce.
They are feeling what it’s like to not dominate all of the power; what it’s like to not have advantage all of the time, what it’s like to be BIPOC past and present.
It's always interesting to see the facade of prententioness:("we're for equality!!) drop via a freudian slip like this one.
They always project their thoughts of brutal revenge fantasies on their targets, be it whites, Christians, non-homosexual couples, families, etc.
 
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