US Diversity training ‘forces workers to hide beliefs’ for fear of losing job

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Diversity training ‘forces workers to hide beliefs’ for fear of losing job

Almost two-thirds of staff who undergo diversity training at work say they have had to conceal what they really thought for fear of losing their job, according to a survey by the Free Speech Union.

Nearly a quarter say they have been compelled to say things they don’t believe after attending the courses.

Members of the minority communities, where the schemes are meant to benefit, were more likely to find the training conflicted with their views, the survey of 800 employees found.

One person surveyed, a white woman in her late 50s, said: “I think everyone is too scared to speak about topics like this any more and certainly free speech doesn’t exist in my company.”

It comes after Kemi Badenoch told the Telegraph that Britain’s diversity push had been “counterproductive” and that many equality, diversity and inclusion (EDI) initiatives are “snake oil”.

Cancel culture

The Free Speech Union was set up by journalist Toby Young to oppose cancel culture.

Tom Harris, Director of Data and Impact at the group, said: “We knew already from our casework that EDI training has been suppressing free speech in the workplace, but even we were shocked to discover the extent of the self-censorship going on – 62 per cent of the employees who go on the training have had to conceal what they really think.

“Authoritarian EDI training has become a fiscal drag on the bottom lines of British business. While millions of pounds continue to be spent on these courses, our research demonstrates that the most ambitious employees are leaving companies because of it and, ironically, the training conflicts most with the values held by the minority groups it purports to benefit.”

The employees spoken to by the pollsters attended courses on white privilege, microaggressions, decolonisation, pronoun declarations and gender identity.

They did

The poll found that 45 per cent believed their EDI training conflicted with their personal, religious or political views.

The proportion was higher among ethnic minorities and religious groups, and men were more likely to say this than women.

More than a third (36 per cent) said they had witnessed staff being penalised in some way by their current employer because they challenged the training, including 12 per cent who witnessed staff being fired for doing so.

The media and communications sectors were the most likely to penalise their employees.
The survey found that 31 per cent had left a former employer because of their endorsement of “woke” ideology.

The proportion is much higher among minority groups: 43 per cent for black people, 46 per cent for Asian people and 46 for gay people.
Nine per cent said they had such a negative view of the training that they might have to leave the employer who has insisted on it.

‘Class disparity’

More than half of employees who had gone through EDI training said their organisation was seeking accreditation from a charity, such as the Race at Work Charter or the Stonewall Diversity Champion.

A white man in his early 40s who was surveyed said: “It’s dead wrong, anti-human, racist and ignorant. Bring back meritocracy and get EDI in the bin, it makes it so much worse.”

An Asian woman in her late 30s said: “I think employers are largely reactive to social circumstances. George Floyd was a big instigator.

“Employers also need to include class disparity as working-class white people are overlooked. There are various degrees of privilege; it’s not just black and white.”

A black man in his early 40s said: “I don’t think employers should force views and different ways of thinking on people. Everyone is entitled to an opinion and who decides what is right and wrong?”

The Free Speech Union conducted a survey of employees working either full-time or part-time in the UK in January. The sample was designed to be representative of the UK working population by age, industry, geography and employer size.

The 800 people who qualified for the survey had been through at least one type of EDI training with an existing or former employer.
 
“Employers also need to include class disparity as working-class white people are overlooked. There are various degrees of privilege; it’s not just black and white.”
This isn't going to happen - part of the reason stuff like idpol exists is to divide people who should be working together. It's one trick of several used to sabotage unionization. You can't trust Wyatt Mann, he's racist! Poojita is harboring racist thoughts about Jamal! Jamal needs to be on the right side of history with Israel vs Palestine, and if he isn't, we'll fire him for making Moeshe feel unsafe, even though he doesn't give a shit about Israel.

Tying DEI shit to money is obviously not helping things.
 
Members of the minority communities, where the schemes are meant to benefit, were more likely to find the training conflicted with their views, the survey of 800 employees found.
I wonder what would happen if they started speaking up about whitey telling them how to feel. A mass wave of minorities rejecting the demands to suck rainbow flag cock would be a conundrum.

I also wonder how this translates with minorities in the UK vs the US.
 
I wonder what would happen if they started speaking up about whitey telling them how to feel. A mass wave of minorities rejecting the demands to suck rainbow flag cock would be a conundrum.

I also wonder how this translates with minorities in the UK vs the US.
In the US, they'd get called Uncle Toms and House Niggers. A lot of the people pushing this shit are legitimately bigoted. Not that it's rocket science, but they're bigoted in non-progressive ways behind closed doors. When they talk about how you can't be racist to white people, that's them showing their bare face by shifting the goal post. They know the stuff they say is racist - they just try to change the meaning of things so what they do can't be defined as explicitly discriminatory.
 
About five or so years ago, we had to attend some mandatory company wide course on stupid bullshit no one cared about, and they had the most stereotypical diversity-hire shithead imaginable holding a presentation on privilege and all that. I specifically remember my original idea was that I'd sleep through it, but what I don't wasn't expecting (and neither was she) was that exactly forty seconds into her spiel, a pair of black employees would vocally accuse her of being a racist, quickly turning it into the funniest fucking work-mandated activity I'd ever attended.

Dumbass had no counter for any of it. It was fucking amazing.
 
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Diversity training is a grift and a way to pound an official State ideology into people's heads. I'm willing to bet no one wanted to burn incense before a statue of Caligula back in the day, but people did it anyway, because they didn't want to get crucified.
Agree 100% had a corporate training a year ago company wide that not only was required with the vague threat of being fired but also had a 3 hour "interactive" time requirement. If you stopped moving the mouse the timer would stop. The content was 45 min max with all the silly videos. At the end of it I was mad I didn't come up with such an amazing scam.
 
Last time I had to do diversity training, my buddy and I were talking shit about it to each other the whole time. We both knew where the boundaries so we made it entertaining to us anyway. The instructor tried to call us out but we both knew the acceptable answers so she just had to sit there and seethe.
 
Agree 100% had a corporate training a year ago company wide that not only was required with the vague threat of being fired but also had a 3 hour "interactive" time requirement. If you stopped moving the mouse the timer would stop. The content was 45 min max with all the silly videos. At the end of it I was mad I didn't come up with such an amazing scam.
We get that shit every year. 7 fucking modules each taking 30 mins to an hour. Last year I told HR I found the discrimination scenario videos "triggering" and "problematic." This year there was a trigger warning before the videos and an option to read a transcript instead of having to watch the videos.

There's also a couple other ways to game it. Because of [what I assume are] EEOC reasons, subtitles have to be provided for all sections. Last year I discovered you can run more than one module at a time. So I just mute that shit. Open up three modules at a time and go from monitor to monitor looking for interactive prompts to respond to. Like a video game.
 
Imagine seeing the same grift each year. I'm assuming they were McFucking Done with it.
They must surely see that if you’re a capable black worker it actually makes things worse for you in terms of how you’re perceived? . It certainly has with women - now men won’t mentor you get women because they’re wary of being me-too’d and there’s a suspicion of hiring for quotas and points. I think I’d be pretty pissed off if I was black and had got somewhere through hard work and merit and then all this shit comes along and sours how you’re seen at work.
 
They must surely see that if you’re a capable black worker it actually makes things worse for you in terms of how you’re perceived? . It certainly has with women - now men won’t mentor you get women because they’re wary of being me-too’d and there’s a suspicion of hiring for quotas and points. I think I’d be pretty pissed off if I was black and had got somewhere through hard work and merit and then all this shit comes along and sours how you’re seen at work.
The diversity hires don't want any competent black people around them at all.
 
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