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diversity and inclusion

  • valerie@relateful.com avatar

    Disasters as Political Fodder. Recently, a family member asked me if I knew about the LA fires.  I said "yes, it's terrible".  And they said "and they've proven that the fires were started by immigrants."  I burst out laughing derisively and said "yes, if they'd just shoot all the immigrants, everything would be fine."  It was not one of my finer moments, as sarcasm does't invite connection or understanding.  It invites the opposite, actually. 

    When the plane and helicopter collided over the Potomac River a couple weeks ago, killing everyone, immediately the news was about the incompetence of air traffic controllers and the increasing treachery of flying brought on by lowering standards and selecting unqualified minorities and women for air traffic controller jobs.  This was without any data, any analysis, that indicated air traffic control was at fault. There was a dumb, affirmative action policy put in place years ago, that was then abandoned years ago.  That's what the news highighted.   

    The Left uses disasters as fodder for their purposes as well.  They aren't in controll of the narative right now, so I'm writing about what's here.  Politics are wicked.  I remember that, after the election, I was going to sit back and watch the political theatre unfolding while eating a metaphorical bowl of popcorn.  I'm not sure if that's the right thing to do, as what's happening is distressing, but I can't find any political action that would be effective.  

    What I do know is that the investment of our time in people, through Relatefulness and Uptrust, is real, powerful, joyful work for something good and true.  I am resting on that. 

    taurus12•...
    When you witness airline executives recording commercials about their intent to have x percent of pilots look a certain way, when the general population is only a fraction of x percent promoting this whole philosophy of selecting candidates using criteria that have nothing to do...
    ethics
    diversity and inclusion
    aviation
    Comments
    0
  • annabeth avatar

    Oppress me. Is it possible? Can you oppress me right now?

    Context:
    The guy I’m dating (Ken) had said he was frustrated with the Austin School District teachers that he’s teaching Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion to because they were all giving wrong answers to the question, Who is the oppressor in your classroom? According to Ken, and apparently according to the book the teachers had been assigned to read, the oppressor in a classroom is the teacher.

    Last night I was telling my friend Arun about it and he said Oppress me! Right now!

    All of this post is rooted in my discomfort with the premise that all teachers are oppressors in their classrooms. I can see the roots of truth of it, but making that its own conclusion point looks wildly flawed to me.

    renee•...
    Yeah, I trust your discomfort. That’s a grim view. I like holding that is a possibility if one is unaware of the power they wield, but not a definite. And there are a lot more possibilities for teacher’s roles....
    education
    social issues
    diversity and inclusion
    Comments
    0
  • jordan avatar

    id like to learn more about juneteenth. can you guys share it?

    dara_like_saraSA•...
    The thing I usually do is just acknowledge the day, especially to my black friends that I know would like to have it acknowledged and post something on facebook or linkedin to share awareness....
    community engagement
    social media
    cultural awareness
    diversity and inclusion
    Comments
    0
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