(no title)
rudi-c | 5 years ago
It's true that some companies might do diversity poorly and hire solely to hit diversity numbers. I don't personally feel good about that. However, in practice I've seen companies that focus on diversity adopt the practice of putting more effort into reaching out to diverse candidates, but have the exact same hiring process & hiring bar applied to them. Those reasonable companies don't make the news -- after all, the unreasonable stories tend to be the ones that get attention.
Again, it's not to say that your concern never happens. However, framing diversity as if it was fundamentally at odds with competence, especially in a completely unrelated thread about a programming language, does a disservice to both diversity _and_ competence.
throwaway894345|5 years ago
postpostpost|5 years ago
The diversity you're talking about uses the definition everyone is familiar with from English.
The diversity Black Lives Matter is talking about is a technical term with the definition coming from Critical Race Theory, which defines whites as the least diverse categorically due to historically injustices against BIPOC folx.
> The idea of focusing diversity isn't at odds with focusing on competence
It is explicitly such, as stated by the movement you defend.
monocasa|5 years ago
> The diversity Black Lives Matter is talking about is a technical term with the definition coming from Critical Race Theory, which defines whites as the least diverse categorically due to historically injustices against BIPOC folx.
Can you provide a citation for that from a CRT source, not a political opponent to CRT?
> > The idea of focusing diversity isn't at odds with focusing on competence
> It is explicitly such, as stated by the movement you defend.
I think you're misunderstanding the major points of Ehmke and others. It's not that we should give up on competency being a driving factor, but instead that the set of organizational tools grouped together as "meritocracy" don't actually make competency the final end result because of the biases those tools impart. "Not a great culture fit" and all that.
alexkarbiv|5 years ago