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knighthack | 11 months ago

Somehow an anti-DEI push is "ridiculous", but the prior pro-DEI push isn't?

There are those who were successful without merit, achieved renown/success only because they were DEI tokens.

Therefore if they didn't deserve their 'achievements' by the merits in the first place, there's nothing wrong with taking their stories down once the political climates have changed (especially a climate that encourages truth and merits over the political advantage that got those DEI tokens in in the first place).

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filoeleven|11 months ago

> There are those who were successful without merit, achieved renown/success only because they were DEI tokens

Can you cite some examples?

_mlbt|11 months ago

Kamala Harris

John23832|11 months ago

I don't think that you're genuine in your response.

> Therefore if they didn't deserve their 'achievements' by the merits in the first place, there's nothing wrong with taking their stories down once the political climates have changed (especially a climate that encourages truth and merits over the political advantage that got those DEI tokens in in the first place).

Who hasn't earned what? You tell me.

The majority of the current administration are people who were put into positions of power with no merit. I can say pretty much all of the Trump administration cabinet nominees have no experience in the positions they are in. They're receiving sycophantic rewards.

I'm arguing to reward merit genuinely and that undoing work is regressive. You respond with "what about" (and no evidence).

TylerLives|11 months ago

I don't think years of experience is a good measure of merit. If you believe they're worse at their jobs, you should demonstrate that in some other way.

yokoprime|11 months ago

Please provide sources