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Nationalism Is Poison (www.hamiltonnolan.com)
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Hinduism doesn't exist (web.archive.org)
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https://freddiedeboer.substack.com/p/affirmative-action-lost-in-the-progressive

The article is paywalled other than the preview section at the top, but I've copy-pasted enough of the article below to get the main point across:

I pitched a piece to a magazine recently about the common conservative insult that Kamala Harris specifically, and many minorities in general, have only “DEI” to thank for their success, calling Harris a “DEI candidate.” As I stressed in the pitch, this is of course racist terminology designed only to inflame. It’s also a good example of the stupid way that terms become memes and then are applied more and more loosely; Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion and affirmative action are both related to race and both associated with college, but they are genuinely very different things. In any event, the core of the pitch was this: in angrily dismissing the idea that Harris could have been the beneficiaries of any of the affirmative action programs that they themselves support, many liberal Democrats were inadvertently casting scorn on the whole concept of affirmative action. It’s racist and false to say that anyone gets a boost because of such programs! But if that’s true, then… what do those programs do?

I have no idea whether Harris ever actually benefitted from diversity programs, but if she did, good. And either way, if you think affirmative action is good, you should proudly state that of course minority applicants get into colleges (and achieve in other ways) thanks to admissions programs dedicated to promoting diversity. That’s the whole point. Affirmative action is perhaps the only policy program I can think of where the supporters of said program find it inherently offensive to frankly reflect the most basic definition of what such a program is for. Which I find bizarre and counterproductive; we should be proud of the programs we support! Simultaneously saying that we should have affirmative action and similar programs in place, but acting as though it’s bigoted to mention their impact - what they actually do - is a good example of the progressive snake eating its own tail. We don’t do this with public school or Medicaid, and we shouldn’t do it with diversity-enriching programs either. “It’s offensive to say that people on food stamps were able to access that food because of food stamps!” Just a really strange place we’re in.

Editor said no to the pitch, specifically because I was supposedly saying that Kamala Harris really was a DEI candidate. Which is not true. I was saying, instead, that to the degree that she may have been the beneficiary of these programs, that’s an example of the program functioning as it was intended. She became Vice President of the United States! Clearly she’s flourished in her personal accomplishments. To hide from the fact that affirmative action actually helps actual people to flourish is to completely hamstring our ability to intelligently defend such programs. More, though, it’s an artifact of a modern progressivism that’s utterly lost in its own pathologies, so scared of being called racist that it shies away from one of our most consequential anti-racist policies, so dogged by years of conservative mockery that it’s become incapable of simply and unapologetically stating its own values.

Told this story before, but I think it deserves repeating.

At the very tail end of my grad school days I found myself roped into an argument that I would have been better off avoiding. Two grad students were talking about the job market, and a new listing in particular. One of them, a white woman, noted that the other, a woman of color, would receive a boost, given that the application explicitly said that they were looking for minority applicants. (“We invite especially applications from scholars from minority groups….” or similar language, meant to make the preference plain without running afoul of equal employment opportunity rules, was a constant in such ads.) This offended the grad student of color, who said it felt like this implied that she was not qualified for the job. It devolved into the kind of pointless identity bickering that is so common among left-leaning 21st century people, and somehow I got pulled into it. When I was asked to weigh in, I said the only thing I could think to say. I asked them both if they supported efforts to give a boost to minority applicants for academic jobs. They both readily said yes; I told them that I do too, at least if it’s done right. And so I asked them: if such efforts do not actually make it more likely that minority candidates will get hired… what do they do? If they don’t, what are you supporting? Literally, how can such efforts be said to exist, if they don’t actually give anyone a boost?

To the specifc question of university hiring, I don’t know why any honest person would deny the basic reality - of course there’s been a vast effort in academia to hire more women and more professors of color, and of course that means that applicants of color have a signifcant advantage. Google for ten minutes and you will find a mountain of discourse within the academy about this effort. I was on the academic job market for two years and saw hundreds upon hundreds of job ads; the percentage that did not specifically encourage minority applicants had to have been in the single digits. Stuff like “We especially welcome applications from minority groups, women, LGBTQ applicants, applicants with disabilities...” Again, you’ll note that this is deliberate language; they’re not saying that they’ll give a boost to the applications of applicants of color or women, hahaha, that would be illegal. They just welcome their applications! And they’ll include boilerplate equal opportunity language to be safe. But the boost is there, and if you go to academic conferences and talk to profs on job committees they’ll often just nakedly say that they’re not reading any applications from white men this cycle. (The white male professors are always the ones most keen to share this information.) Yes, of course, minority applicants get an advantage in the academic hiring process. I think that’s sometimes appropriate, within reason. But that the statement “minority applicants receive special advantages when applying for many professor jobs” could be perceived to be controversial is absurd.

If you’re a supporter of giving minority applicants for jobs and schools, as I am when it’s handled appropriately, then the thing to do is to just openly and directly support those programs. Which means, yes, saying that some members of minority groups will get jobs or admission slots to competitive colleges who would not otherwise have gotten them, because that is literally the one and only thing these programs do. Just own it, directly. If you think it’s good, own it! I guess the fact that such considerations can be considered illegal in some contexts puts people on their back foot. But whenever there’s one of these cyclical controversies where a young academic complains that it’s hard to get hired as a white man in the American university in 2024, and the whole world of academia comes together to mock him, I shake my head at how disingenuous it all is. Go back to 2020 and find all of the colleges and professors talking about how they’re going to redouble their commitment to diversifying the faculty. Absolutely everyone in academia knows it; the job committees know it and the applicants know it and the advisors of the applicants know it, the people who support that hiring advantage know it and the people who oppose it know it. Everybody knows it, but to talk about it openly would be too challenging. Kayfabe.

It goes on past that for about another thousand words, but I didn't feel it was necessary to copy-paste that stretch; the above passage captures the point that I want to get people's thoughts on.

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[-] join_the_iww@hexbear.net 26 points 2 months ago

Thanks, this seems like exactly what I was looking for

[-] join_the_iww@hexbear.net 56 points 3 months ago

so this is it, right? We're, like, definitely in WW3 now?

been thinking about this a lot this morning.

[-] join_the_iww@hexbear.net 45 points 6 months ago

You know what, good points. I shouldn’t have fallen for it so quickly

[-] join_the_iww@hexbear.net 36 points 8 months ago

In their perception, Britain turned against the Zionists around 1939 or so (White paper) and sided with the Arabs in opposing a Jewish state after that. So they mean “Independence” as independence from Britain.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_insurgency_in_Mandatory_Palestine

[-] join_the_iww@hexbear.net 27 points 8 months ago

What the hell does “self-determination” even mean? I feel like since 10/7 we’ve all been gaslit into the idea that “self-determination” is some obvious, uncontroversial thing

[-] join_the_iww@hexbear.net 35 points 8 months ago

Free Palestine

(Bum-Bum-Bum)

From the river to the sea

THE SEA

THE SEA

ba-da-ba-da-ba

[-] join_the_iww@hexbear.net 21 points 9 months ago

The orca attacks are back

[-] join_the_iww@hexbear.net 27 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Civil Rights Corps is way better

[-] join_the_iww@hexbear.net 52 points 11 months ago

One memory that sticks out to me is, I was reading some comment thread about like unemployment or something, and somebody wrote a comment that was something like the following:

"Republicans dream of a country where everyone is their own small business owner, but that's literally impossible to achieve because then there wouldn't be any workers. Capitalism needs workers."

Suddenly a lot of things about the economy started to make more sense. I became a socialist not long after that.

I think it was an r/politics thread, strangely enough

[-] join_the_iww@hexbear.net 37 points 1 year ago

“Just get a raise to catch up, if you can’t then that’s your own problem.”

[-] join_the_iww@hexbear.net 49 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Russia supports Hamas; Ukraine supports Israel.

This in particular stands out as extremely questionable, if not just outright false.

Netanyahu and Putin have been fairly friendly for a long while, and Israel has in many ways sided with Russia since the invasion of Ukraine in 2022 (continuing diplomatic relations with Russia when many countries broke off with them, not sanctioning Russia, not sending weapons to Ukraine, etc).

Both Ukraine and Russia have formally condemned the settlements, and Israel has gotten butthurt about it in both cases. Russia is somewhat more aggressive about reaching a two-state solution and making concessions to the Palestinians than Ukraine is, but it’s not a huge difference.

It’s fairly complicated, but overall I don’t think either Ukraine or Russia can be said to be more supportive of Israel (or of Palestine) than the other one is. Israel has a lukewarm relationship with both. There are no strong contrasts to be made here.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palestine%E2%80%93Ukraine_relations

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israel%E2%80%93Ukraine_relations

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israel%E2%80%93Russia_relations

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palestine%E2%80%93Russia_relations

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join_the_iww

joined 4 years ago