Climate of fear: Google sacks employee who blamed lack of gender
diversity
on 'biological causes'
Newsletter published on 13 August 2017
(1) Climate of fear at Google - employees who
challenge leftist
narratives on diversity
(2) Google fires employee who
blamed lack of gender diversity on
'biological causes'
(3) Google
"inclusive environment" has no room for Traditionalists
(4) Google
Anti-Diversity Manifesto Author Identified And Fired
(5) James Damore: "This
Is Why I Was Fired By Google"
(6) Why I Was Fired by Google - James
Damore
(7) It may be illegal for Google to punish James Damore
(8) Text
of James Damore's Anti-Diversity screed at Google
(1) Climate of fear at
Google - employees who challenge leftist
narratives on diversity
http://www.breitbart.com/tech/2017/08/07/the-google-rebels-diversity-first-technology-second/
Rebels
of Google: ‘Senior Leaders Focus on Diversity First and
Technology
Second’
by ALLUM BOKHARI7 Aug 20174,984
Over the weekend, Google
was rocked by the publication of an internal
manifesto that alleged
wide-ranging political bias within the company.
In exclusive interviews with
Breitbart News, more Google employees are
now speaking out.
The
10-page manifesto, which was met by an immediate backlash, described
a
climate of fear at the company, in which employees who challenged
prevailing
leftist narratives on diversity were faced with immediate
threats to their
career.
Breitbart News is now exclusively publishing a series of
interviews with
Google employees who contacted us in the wake of the
manifesto’s
publication to confirm its allegations.
The interview
series, entitled "Rebels of Google," will be published in
full over the
coming days. Because every employee who spoke to us fears
for their job if
their identities were made public, we have provided
aliases in place of
their real names.
In the first interview of the series, a Google employee
(alias "Hal")
speaks of witch-hunts and intolerance at Google, as well as
dysfunction
at the company’s upper echelons.
Hal began the interview
with a statement about Google:
Hal: Witch hunts are a well-known cultural
problem at Google. The
company is currently facing a Federal complaint filed
by the National
Labor Relations Board in April for interfering with
employees’ legal
right to discuss "workplace diversity and social justice
initiatives."
The complaint alleges that Senior Vice President Urs Holzle
and numerous
managers in his organization actively stoked up witch hunts in
2015 and
2016 intended to muzzle low-level employees who raised concerns
about
the company’s practices. The trial is set for November.
Several
managers have openly admitted to keeping blacklists of the
employees in
question, and preventing them from seeking work at other
companies. There
have been numerous cases in which social justice
activists coordinated
attempts to sabotage other employees’ performance
reviews for expressing a
different opinion. These have been raised to
the Senior VP level, with no
action taken whatsoever.
Allum Bokhari: What’s it like to work in such an
environment? Do you
think it damages employee output?
Hal: A lot of
social justice activists essentially spend all day
fighting the culture war,
and get nothing done. The company has made it
a point to hire more people
like this. The diversity gospel has been
woven into nearly everything the
company does, to the point where senior
leaders focus on diversity first and
technology second. The companywide
"Google Insider" emails used to talk
about cool new tech, but now
they’re entirely about social justice
initiatives. Likewise, the weekly
all-hands "TGIF" meetings used to focus on
tech, but now they’re split
about 50/50 between tech and identity politics
signaling.
For conservative employees, this is obviously demoralizing,
but it is
also dangerous. Several have been driven out of the company or
fired
outright for sharing a dissenting view. Others have had their
promotions
denied or suffered other forms of deniable retaliation. Most of
us just
keep our heads down because we can’t afford to lose our
jobs.
AB: Have there been any stand-out moments of intolerance at Google?
Anything that particularly sticks in your memory?
Hal: There have
been a number of massive witch hunts where hundreds of
SJWs mobilize across
the corporate intranet to punish somebody who
defied the Narrative. The
first one I remember is when Kelly Ellis made
unfounded allegations of
sexual harassment against her former manager,
and Google terminated the
manager in response to the internal SJW
outrage. This was similar in
intensity to the current witch hunt. Anyone
who sympathized with the
manager’s plight or asked for any sort of due
process was "counseled" by HR
and told that they were creating a hostile
workplace for women and
minorities by sticking up for a harasser.
In another witch hunt, an
employee raised concerns that the affirmative
action policy (which gives
strong preference to women and minorities)
could be seen as discriminating
against white males. SJWs trawled
through his ancient posting history from
four years prior, found a stray
comment to take out of context, and burned
him at the stake for it.
AB: Have you heard similar stories from people
in other tech companies?
Hal: I have heard two similar stories from
Facebook.
AB: Do you fear for your job?
Hal: I didn’t even write
the document, but I always fear for my job and
operate with the expectation
that I will be purged unless something
changes. Talking to reporters is
incredibly dangerous on its own, much
less talking to Breitbart. And the
tolerance for "microaggressions"
keeps getting lower, to the point where
everybody is walking on
eggshells because they don’t want to be publicly
shamed in next week’s
Yes-At-Google.
AB: Your concerns about
intolerance towards employees at Google mirror
the concerns of ordinary web
users about intolerance towards them. Many
people now fear that Google,
Facebook, and other companies are moving to
control and censor their
content. Are these fears justified?
Hal: That is absolutely what Google
is trying to do. The pro-censorship
voices are very loud, and they have the
management’s ear. The
anti-censorship people are afraid of retaliation, and
people are afraid
to openly support them because everyone in their
management chain is
constantly signaling their allegiance to far-left
ideology. Our
leadership (Sundar in particular) is weak, so he capitulates
to the
meanest bullies on the block.
This article is part of the
"Rebels of Google" series.
(2) Google fires employee who blamed lack of
gender diversity on
'biological causes'
http://mashable.com/2017/08/11/james-damore-google-rebuttal
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-08-08/google-employee-behind-anti-diversity-memo-fired/8785596
Google
fires employee who blamed lack of gender diversity on 'biological
causes'
Posted about 2 hours ago
Google has fired an employee who wrote an
internal memo that ascribed
gender inequality in the technology industry to
biological differences.
Male engineer James Damore's widely shared memo,
titled Google's
Ideological Echo Chamber, criticised Google for pushing
mentoring and
diversity programs and for "alienating
conservatives".
"Distribution of preferences and abilities of men and
women differ in
part due to biological causes and that these differences may
explain why
we don't see equal representation of women in tech and
leadership," he
wrote last week.
He also wrote women "prefer jobs in
social and artistic areas" while
more men "may like coding because it
requires systemising", in the the
memo which gained attention online over
the weekend and was shared on
the tech blog Gizmodo.
Google's
leadership responded by slamming the statement.
"Our job is to build
great products for users that make a difference in
their lives. To suggest a
group of our colleagues have traits that make
them less biologically suited
to that work is offensive and not OK."
-Sundar Pichai
"Our job is to
build great products for users that make a difference in
their lives. To
suggest a group of our colleagues have traits that make
them less
biologically suited to that work is offensive and not OK."
-Sundar
Pichai
Chief executive officer Sundar Pichai said he was cutting short a
holiday to hold a town hall meeting with staff and denounced the memo in
an email, saying portions of it "violate our code of conduct and cross
the line by advancing harmful gender stereotypes in our
workplace".
In a note to staff, he said: "Our job is to build great
products for
users that make a difference in their lives".
"To
suggest a group of our colleagues have traits that make them less
biologically suited to that work is offensive and not OK," he wrote. And
Google's just-hired head of diversity, Danielle Brown, responded with
her own memo, saying Google is "unequivocal in our belief that diversity
and inclusion are critical to our success".
She said the engineer's
essay "advanced incorrect assumptions about
gender", and added that change
was hard and "often uncomfortable".
In an email to Reuters this week, Mr
Damore confirmed he had been
dismissed, saying he had been fired for
"perpetuating gender stereotypes".
He said he was exploring legal
options.
Google said it could not talk about individual employee
cases.
Silicon Valley suffering gender divide glitch
The battling
messages come as Silicon Valley grapples with accusations
of sexism and
discrimination.
Google is also in the midst of a Department of Labor
investigation into
whether it pays women less than men, while Uber's chief
executive
officer recently lost his job amid accusations of widespread
sexual
harassment and discrimination.
Leading tech companies,
including Google, Facebook and Uber, have said
they are trying to improve
hiring and working conditions for women, but
diversity numbers are barely
changing.
(3) Google "inclusive environment" has no room for
Traditionalists
http://www.spiked-online.com/newsite/article/the-google-memo-and-the-new-blacklisting/20179
The
Google memo and the new blacklisting
Sean Collins
When did it
become acceptable to sack someone for expressing an opinion?
9 August
2017
Google’s campus is a playground: employees ride multicoloured bikes,
play volleyball and walk dogs in the bright California sunshine. But
this week we learned it’s not all fun and games at Google.
In an
internal memo that went viral, software engineer James Damore
accused Google
of being an ‘ideological echo chamber’, a place where you
cannot openly
discuss issues such as the company’s approach to
diversity. ‘As soon as we
start to moralise an issue’ like diversity, he
wrote, we ‘dismiss anyone
that disagrees as immoral, and harshly punish
those we see as villains to
protect the "victims"’. And as if determined
to prove his point, Google
fired him for saying so.
Google’s sacking of Damore matters not only
because the tech giant is so
well-known, and has been accused of sexist
hiring practices (31 percent
of its employees are women). It resonates with
wider society because it
suggests that there is only one ‘correct’ view on
certain topics, like
diversity, and that if you dare to question the
‘correct’ line you
should be punished. Indeed, it has been striking to see
that so many,
including self-described progressives, rushed to denounce
Damore’s memo
and applaud Google for wielding the axe.
The memo,
which has been described as an ‘anti-diversity screed’, is
neither
anti-diversity nor a screed. ‘I value diversity and inclusion,
am not
denying that sexism exists, and don’t endorse using stereotypes’,
Damore
writes. His tone is measured, and he references academic
research. But he
goes on to reach two conclusions that some find
disagreeable, if not
offensive. First, that ‘differences in
distributions of traits between men
and women may in part explain why we
don’t have 50 per cent representation
of women in tech and leadership’.
And second, that ‘discrimination to reach
equal representation is
unfair, divisive, and bad for
business’.
Since the news of the memo broke, much media space has been
devoted to
disputing Damore’s arguments, and calling him a biological
determinist
and a sexist. Google’s CEO, Sundar Pichai, justified the firing
on the
grounds that he advanced ‘harmful gender stereotypes in our
workplace’.
Maybe some of these criticisms are valid. Maybe Damore’s
amateur-psychology ponderings miss the mark. But whether his theories
are right or wrong is really beside the point. The real question is:
must such views be silenced, and must someone lose their livelihood for
uttering them?
It seems that Damore naively took Google at its word
when the company
said it welcomed discussion. Many accounts, including Dave
Eggers’
Google-inspired novel The Circle, suggest that employees view the
company as an extension of university life, a place where ideas can be
debated (even the office park is called a ‘campus’). Movies like The
Internship would have us believe that Google hires quirky misfits, even
older dude-bros (like the characters played by Vince Vaughn and Owen
Wilson), who think differently.
The reality, as we are now glimpsing,
is that Google is just like other
companies: it doesn’t really welcome free
expression, and it doesn’t
like to be criticised. That doesn’t mean that
Google is ready to discard
its claims to openness. In the midst of
explaining to employees why he
fired Damore, Pichai asserted that ‘we
strongly support the right of
Googlers to express themselves’. But
presumably only if they express
agreement with Google.
Damore was
also naïve in not realising that challenging diversity could
get him sacked.
It is an especially sensitive issue at Google, at a time
when its pay
practices are under investigation by the US government.
American companies
like Google are also subject to the Justice
Department’s broad definition of
sexual harassment as ‘activity which
creates an intimidating, hostile, or
offensive work environment for
members of one sex’, which encourages them to
tread carefully in this area.
But the thought restrictions around
diversity are driven by more than
the legal environment. Corporations have
embraced diversity – usually
now referred to as ‘diversity and inclusion’ –
as central to their
missions and values. It is how many companies claim to
define ‘who they
are’. They struggle to find intrinsic purpose related to
the products or
services they provide, and so have promoted diversity goals
with the
hope of gaining some moral authority by reference to wider social
objectives.
Therefore, by poking at diversity, Damore was questioning
corporates’
self-definition, something they really don’t want examined too
closely.
Diversity is not a matter up for intellectual debate in Google and
elsewhere, and that’s why it is embedded in codes of conduct – note how
Google fired Damore specifically for violating its code of
conduct.
The response to the Google memo – from both Google itself and
the many
who have praised the sacking – has turned traditional notions
upside
down. We see an overreaction to the memo, and an underreaction to the
punishment of its author.
A solitary software engineer finds the time
to muse about diversity
policies (and I thought Googlers worked around the
clock, eating and
sleeping in the office), and everyone freaks out. His
loudest critics
have engaged in bad faith: they have distorted what Damore
said, given
him no benefit of the doubt, and assumed the worst about him as
a
person. It really takes a jaundiced eye to view him as some kind of
fanatic, based on what he wrote. Moreover, it is a huge stretch to say
that this employee constitutes a one-man hostile work environment. No
evidence has been provided that he acts in a discriminatory way towards
his co-workers.
Damore is called out for being a sexist, yet what is
really insulting is
how women employees at Google are assumed to be too weak
to handle his
10 pages of scribblings. Google’s female workers ‘are hurting
and feel
judged based on their gender’, says Picahi. You know what the real
‘harmful gender stereotype’ is here? The idea that women are vulnerable,
and in need of protection (which can only come from firing fellow
employees). That expresses a lower opinion of women than anything in
that memo.
The demands to fire Damore – and anyone else who shares
his views – are
casually made, as if it’s no big deal to deprive someone of
a job. ‘How
can women expect to work with Damore?’, they ask, again
presenting women
as too pathetic to cope with his presence. It used to be
considered
deeply problematic to punish workers for the political views they
held –
even today, the Hollywood blacklists of the 1950s are viewed as a
black
mark in American history. And yet, we now see Google managers on
Twitter
talking of compiling blacklists to weed out Damore’s fellow
wrong-thinkers.
Companies are not universities, even those that have a
‘campus’.
Employees shouldn’t be spending hours debating social and
political
ideas – they should be getting on with their work. With the uproar
over
the Google memo, some claim that we’re seeing the campus culture wars
coming to the corporate world. In fact, you could argue it is the other
way around: universities have adopted longstanding corporate codes of
conduct regarding diversity and other restrictions, which makes
wide-ranging interrogation of these ideas verboten, and undermines the
true purpose of a university.
That said, while work isn’t college, we
do need the freedom in our
workplaces and society generally to express
ourselves – to our
co-workers, neighbours and others – without fear of
retribution. We
should not feel like we are going to be punished for
expressing
unpopular thoughts, nor should we worry for our jobs if someone
takes
offence. But the over-the-top reaction to the Google memo suggests we
may be heading in that direction.
Sean Collins is a writer based in
New York. Visit his blog, The American
Situation.
(4) Google
Anti-Diversity Manifesto Author Identified And Fired
http://www.ibtimes.com/google-anti-diversity-manifesto-author-identified-fired-2575617
Google
Anti-Diversity Manifesto Author Identified And Fired
BY FIONNA
AGOMUOH
ON 08/07/17 AT 11:43 PM
The author of a 10-page
anti-diversity manifesto, titled "Google’s
Ideological Echo Chamber," has
been fired from the company as of Monday
evening, according to Bloomberg.
The ex-Google software engineer has
been named as James Damore by
Motherboard, who originally broke the
story Saturday.
The 3,300-word
document has prompted comment from Google CEO, Sundar
Pichai, who has cut
his family vacation short to address the issue,
according to CNN
Money.
Read: Google Anti-Diversity Manifesto Sparks Response From
Company's VP
Of Diversity
"Our job is to build great products for
users that make a difference in
their lives," Pichai wrote in a statement
obtained by Recode. "To
suggest a group of our colleagues have traits that
make them less
biologically suited to that work is offensive and not
OK."
The manifesto primarily detailed Damore’s opinions on biological
differences between the genders being the reason for disparities in the
number of women working in technology related professions, as well as
for the gender pay gap. Motherboard has now obtained a version of the
manifesto, which was originally shared as a Google Doc file, and
includes links and citations from publications and sources including the
Wall Street Journal, Quillette, and Wikipedia.
The document has
stirred comments from present and former Google
employees, who have spoken
out both against and in favor of Damore’s
opinions. In particular, the
ex-Googler stressed that Google employees
with conservative viewpoints are
not given the freedom to express their
opinions. However, Pichai stated in
his memo that with his manifesto,
the engineer violated Google’s code of
conduct.
Google’s newly appointed Vice President of Diversity, Integrity
&
Governance, Danielle Brown issued a statement Saturday addressing the
manifesto and also citing Google’s code of conduct.
Google’s latest
diversity report indicates the company is comprised of
69 percent men and 31
percent women, with its tech related roles being
performed by 80 percent of
men and 20 percent of women.
(5) James Damore: "This Is Why I Was Fired
By Google"
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-08-11/james-damore-explains-why-i-was-fired-google
James
Damore: "This Is Why I Was Fired By Google"
by Tyler Durden Aug 11, 2017
6:55 PM
Fired Google engineer Jame Damore has penned an op-ed for The
Wall
Street Journal explaining how his good-faith effort to discuss
differences between men and women in tech couldn’t be tolerated in the
company’s "ideological echo chamber," adding that self-segregation with
similar-minded people has grown in recent decades as we spend more time
in digital worlds "personalized to fit our views."
I was fired
by Google this past Monday for a document that I wrote
and circulated
internally raising questions about cultural taboos and
how they cloud our
thinking about gender diversity at the company and in
the wider tech sector.
I suggested that at least some of the male-female
disparity in tech could be
attributed to biological differences (and,
yes, I said that bias against
women was a factor too). Google Chief
Executive Sundar Pichai declared that
portions of my statement violated
the company’s code of conduct and "cross
the line by advancing harmful
gender stereotypes in our
workplace."
My 10-page document set out what I considered a
reasoned,
well-researched, good-faith argument, but as I wrote, the
viewpoint I
was putting forward is generally suppressed at Google because of
the
company’s "ideological echo chamber." My firing neatly confirms that
point.
How did Google, the company that hires the smartest people in
the
world, become so ideologically driven and intolerant of scientific
debate and reasoned argument?
We all have moral preferences and
beliefs about how the world is
and should be. Having these views challenged
can be painful, so we tend
to avoid people with differing values and to
associate with those who
share our values. This self-segregation has become
much more potent in
recent decades. We are more mobile and can sort
ourselves into different
communities; we wait longer to find and choose just
the right mate; and
we spend much of our time in a digital world
personalized to fit our views.
Google is a particularly intense echo
chamber because it is in the
middle of Silicon Valley and is so
life-encompassing as a place to work.
With free food, internal meme boards
and weekly companywide meetings,
Google becomes a huge part of its
employees’ lives. Some even live on
campus. For many, including myself,
working at Google is a major part of
their identity, almost like a cult with
its own leaders and saints, all
believed to righteously uphold the sacred
motto of "Don’t be evil."
Echo chambers maintain themselves by
creating a shared spirit and
keeping discussion confined within certain
limits. As Noam Chomsky once
observed, "The smart way to keep people passive
and obedient is to
strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but
allow very lively
debate within that spectrum."
But echo
chambers also have to guard against dissent and
opposition. Whether it’s in
our homes, online or in our workplaces, a
consensus is maintained by shaming
people into conformity or
excommunicating them if they persist in violating
taboos. Public shaming
serves not only to display the virtue of those doing
the shaming but
also warns others that the same punishment awaits them if
they don’t
conform.
In my document, I committed heresy against
the Google creed by
stating that not all disparities between men and women
that we see in
the world are the result of discriminatory
treatment.
When I first circulated the document about a month ago to
our
diversity groups and individuals at Google, there was no outcry or
charge of misogyny. I engaged in reasoned discussion with some of my
peers on these issues, but mostly I was ignored.
Everything
changed when the document went viral within the company
and the wider tech
world. Those most zealously committed to the
diversity creed—that all
differences in outcome are due to differential
treatment and all people are
inherently the same—could not let this
public offense go unpunished. They
sent angry emails to Google’s
human-resources department and everyone up my
management chain,
demanding censorship, retaliation and
atonement.
Upper management tried to placate this surge of outrage
by shaming
me and misrepresenting my document, but they couldn’t really do
otherwise: The mob would have set upon anyone who openly agreed with me
or even tolerated my views. When the whole episode finally became a
giant media controversy, thanks to external leaks, Google had to solve
the problem caused by my supposedly sexist, anti-diversity manifesto,
and the whole company came under heated and sometimes threatening
scrutiny.
It saddens me to leave Google and to see the company
silence open
and honest discussion. If Google continues to ignore the very
real
issues raised by its diversity policies and corporate culture, it will
be walking blind into the future—unable to meet the needs of its
remarkable employees and sure to disappoint its billions of users.
As
a reminder, a survey of Google employees reflected the company's
divisions.
Of 440 Google employees who responded to a Blind
survey on Tuesday
and Wednesday, 56% said they disagreed with Google’s
decision to fire
Mr. Damore.
(6) Why I Was Fired by Google - James
Damore
https://www.wsj.com/articles/why-i-was-fired-by-google-1502481290?mg=prod/accounts-wsj
Why
I Was Fired by Google
James Damore says his good-faith effort to discuss
differences between
men and women in tech couldn’t be tolerated in the
company’s
‘ideological echo chamber’
By James Damore
Aug. 11,
2017 3:54 p.m. ET
I was fired by Google this past Monday for a document
that I wrote and
circulated internally raising questions about cultural
taboos and how
they cloud our thinking about gender diversity at the company
and in the
wider tech sector. I suggested that at least some of the
male-female
disparity in tech could be attributed to biological differences
(and,
yes, I said that bias against women was a factor too). Google Chief
Executive Sundar Pichai declared that portions of my statement violated
the company’s code of conduct and "cross...
(7) It may be illegal for
Google to punish James Damore
https://www.cnbc.com/2017/08/07/it-may-be-illegal-for-google-to-punish-engineer-over-anti-diversity-memo-commentary.html
Why
it may be illegal for Google to punish that engineer over his now
viral
anti-diversity memo
An unnamed male software engineer at Google sent an
internal memo to
co-workers on Friday challenging some of the tech giant's
diversity efforts.
There have been a lot of calls for the man's dismissal
from both inside
and outside the company.
However, it could be
illegal for Google to fire — or discipline — the
employee.
Many
inside and outside of Google have called for the man's dismissal.
However,
there are at least three ways the law may keep the company from
imposing any
discipline.
First, federal labor law bars even non-union employers like
Google from
punishing an employee for communicating with fellow employees
about
improving working conditions. The purpose of the memo was to persuade
Google to abandon certain diversity-related practices the engineer found
objectionable and to convince co-workers to join his cause, or at least
discuss the points he raised.
In a reply to the initial outcry over
his memo, the engineer added to
his memo: "Despite what the public response
seems to have been, I've
gotten many personal messages from fellow Googlers
expressing their
gratitude for bringing up these very important issues which
they agree
with but would never have the courage to say or defend because of
our
shaming culture and the possibility of being fired." The law protects
that kind of "concerted activity."
Second, the engineer's memo
largely is a statement of his political
views as they apply to workplace
policies. The memo is styled as a
lament to "Google's Ideological Echo
Chamber." California law prohibits
employers from threatening to fire
employees to get them to adopt or
refrain from adopting a particular
political course of action.
Danielle Brown, Google's newly installed vice
president of Diversity,
Integrity, & Governance, made it clear that the
engineer's memo does not
reflect "a viewpoint that I or this company
endorses, promotes or
encourages."
An employee does not have free
reign to engage in political speech that
disrupts the workplace, but
punishing an employee for deviating from
company orthodoxy on a political
issue is not allowed either. Brown
acknowledged that when she wrote that "an
open, inclusive environment
means fostering a culture in which those with
alternative views,
including different political views, feel safe sharing
their opinions."
Third, the engineer complained in parts of his memo
about company
policies that he believes violate employment discrimination
laws. Those
policies include support programs limited by race or gender and
promotional and hiring scoring policies that consider race and gender.
It is unlawful for an employer to discipline an employee for challenging
conduct that the employee reasonably believed to be discriminatory, even
when a court later determines the conduct was not actually prohibited by
the discrimination laws. In other words, the engineer doesn't have to be
right that some of Google's diversity initiatives are unlawful, only
that he reasonably believes that they are.
Brown is correct that an
employee has no right to engage in workplace
discourse that offends
anti-discrimination laws; employees may not
engage in unlawful harassment
under the guise of protected concerted
activity or political
grievances.
The lawful response to this software engineer's memo,
however, appears
to be continuation of the dialogue he started rather than
termination of
his employment.
Commentary by Dan Eaton, a partner
with the San Diego law firm of
Seltzer Caplan McMahon Vitek, where his
practice focuses on defending
and advising employers. He also is a professor
at the San Diego State
University College of Business Administration where
he teaches classes
in business ethics and employment law. Follow him on
Twitter
@DanEatonlaw.
(8) Text of James Damore's Anti-Diversity
screed at Google
https://www.gizmodo.com.au/2017/08/exclusive-heres-the-full-10-page-anti-diversity-screed-circulating-internally-at-google/
Exclusive:
Here's The Full 10-Page Anti-Diversity Screed Circulating
Internally At
Google
Kate Conger
Aug 6, 2017, 8:00am
A software
engineer's 10-page screed against Google's diversity
initiatives is going
viral inside the company, being shared on an
internal meme network and
Google+. The document's existence was first
reported by Motherboard and
Gizmodo has obtained it in full.
In the memo, which is the personal
opinion of a male Google employee and
is titled "Google's Ideological Echo
Chamber", the author argues that
women are underrepresented in tech not
because they face bias and
discrimination in the workplace, but because of
inherent psychological
differences between men and women.
"We need to
stop assuming that gender gaps imply sexism", he writes,
going on to argue
that Google's educational programs for young women may
be misguided.
==
{quote}
On average, men and women biologically differ in many
ways. These
differences aren't just socially constructed
because:
They're universal across human cultures [...] I'm simply stating
that
the distribution of preferences and abilities of men and women differ
in
part due to biological causes and that these differences may explain why
we don't see equal representation of women in tech and leadership.
[...]
Women, on average, have more:
Openness directed towards
feelings and aesthetics rather than ideas.
Women generally also have a
stronger interest in people rather than
things, relative to men (also
interpreted as empathizing vs. systemizing).
These two differences in
part explain why women relatively prefer jobs
in social or artistic areas.
More men may like coding because it
requires systemizing and even within
SWEs, comparatively more women work
on front end, which deals with both
people and aesthetics. [...]
We always ask why we don't see women in top
leadership positions, but we
never ask why we see so many men in these jobs.
These positions often
require long, stressful hours that may not be worth it
if you want a
balanced and fulfilling life.
Status is the primary
metric that men are judged on[4], pushing many men
into these higher paying,
less satisfying jobs for the status that they
entail. Note, the same forces
that lead men into high pay/high stress
jobs in tech and leadership cause
men to take undesirable and dangerous
jobs like coal mining, garbage
collection, and firefighting, and suffer
93% of work-related deaths.
[...]
The Harm of Google's biases
I strongly believe in gender and
racial diversity, and I think we should
strive for more. However, to achieve
a more equal gender and race
representation, Google has created several
discriminatory practices:
Programs, mentoring, and classes only for
people with a certain gender
or race [5]
A high priority queue and
special treatment for "diversity" candidates
Hiring practices which can
effectively lower the bar for "diversity"
candidates by decreasing the false
negative rate
Reconsidering any set of people if it's not "diverse"
enough, but not
showing that same scrutiny in the reverse direction (clear
confirmation
bias)
Setting org level OKRs for increased
representation which can
incentivise illegal discrimination [6]
These
practices are based on false assumptions generated by our biases
and can
actually increase race and gender tensions. We're told by senior
leadership
that what we're doing is both the morally and economically
correct thing to
do, but without evidence this is just veiled left
ideology[7] that can
irreparably harm Google.
Why we're blind
We all have biases and
use motivated reasoning to dismiss ideas that run
counter to our internal
values. Just as some on the Right deny science
that runs counter to the "God
> humans > environment" hierarchy (e.g.,
evolution and climate change)
the Left tends to deny science concerning
biological differences between
people (e.g., IQ[8] and sex differences).
Thankfully, climate scientists and
evolutionary biologists generally
aren't on the right. Unfortunately, the
overwhelming majority of
humanities and social scientists learn left (about
95%), which creates
enormous confirmation bias, changes what's being
studied, and maintains
myths like social constructionism and the gender wage
gap[9]. Google's
left leaning makes us blind to this bias and uncritical of
its results,
which we're using to justify highly politicized programs.
[...]
My concrete suggestions are to:
De-moralize
diversity.
As soon as we start to moralize an issue, we stop thinking
about it in
terms of costs and benefits, dismiss anyone that disagrees as
immoral,
and harshly punish those we see as villains to protect the
"victims."
Stop alienating conservatives.
Viewpoint diversity is
arguably the most important type of diversity and
political orientation is
one of the most fundamental and significant
ways in which people view things
differently.
In highly progressive environments, conservatives are a
minority that
feel like they need to stay in the closet to avoid open
hostility. We
should empower those with different ideologies to be able to
express
themselves.
Alienating conservatives is both non-inclusive
and generally bad
business because conservatives tend to be higher in
conscientiousness,
which is require for much of the drudgery and maintenance
work
characteristic of a mature company. [...]
Deloitte drops
workplace diversity groups for women, minorities
http://www.newspapers2day.com/news/deloitte-drops-workplace-diversity-groups-for-women-minorities
https://www.bizjournals.com/houston/news/2017/07/31/deloitte-drops-workplace-diversity-groups-for.html
Deloitte
is doing away with employee groups focused on women and
minorities, a new
diversity approach one scholar says must be
accompanied by serious and
intelligent discussions.
Tuesday 08 August 2017 - 06:45:44
The New
York-based financial advisory firm has the right idea, because
employee
affinity groups marginalize people, said Christina Hoff
Sommers, a gender
politics and feminism scholar.
A recent Bloomberg report detailed
Deloitte's plans for replacing
affinity groups for women and minorities with
"inclusion councils" that
include people who used to be in different
single-identity groups. They
also will include white men…. Many large U.S.
companies have had
single-identity workplace groups for years…. For
instance, Target Corp.
says on its corporate website that it has more than
100 networks for
employees with common interests, plus six councils that
represent
African-American, Asian-American, LGBT, Hispanic, military and
female
employees. The councils provide networking and professional
development
opportunities…. But Deloitte decided to dismantle those types of
groups
after learning that many millennial employees don't like to be
labeled
by a single part of their identity. About 57 percent of Deloitte
employees are millennials.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-07-19/deloitte-thinks-diversity-groups-are-pass
Deloitte
Thinks Diversity Groups Are Passé
The firm is nixing employee affinity
groups for women and
minorities—fixtures at many large companies—and
replacing them with
inclusion councils that have white men.
By Jeff
Green
July 19, 2017, 8:00 PM GMT+10
[...] With diversity progress
stalling in parts of corporate America,
Deloitte is beginning to shift away
from traditional approaches built
around gender, race, or sexual orientation
and instead working to get a
broader buy-in, particularly from white males.
After 24 years, WIN, the
women’s initiative at Deloitte, will end. Over the
next 18 months the
company will also phase out Globe, which supports gay
employees, and
groups focused solely on veterans or minority employees. In
their place
will be so-called inclusion councils that bring together a
variety of
viewpoints to work on diversity issues.
"We are turning it
on its head for our people," says Deepa
Purushothaman, who’s led the WIN
group since 2015 and is also the
company’s managing principal for inclusion.
Deloitte will still focus on
gender parity and underrepresented groups, she
says, but not in the same
way it has for the past quarter-century, in part
because millennial
employees—who make up 57 percent of Deloitte’s
workforce—don’t like
demographic pigeonholes.
"By having everyone in
the room, you get more allies, advocates, and
sponsors," Purushothaman says.
"A lot of our leaders are still older
white men, and they need to be part of
the conversation and advocate for
women. But they’re not going to do that as
much if they don’t hear the
stories and understand what that
means."
Xerox Corp. is often credited with creating in the late 1960s the
first
employee resource group (ERG), based on race, after riots shook major
U.S. cities. Since then, groups focused on gender, sexual orientation,
disability, and veteran status have emerged. According to a 2014 report
by the Society for Human Resource Management, which offers the most
recent data from the organization, only 15 percent of large companies
had ERGs for women or minorities. But they’re fixtures at lots of
high-profile companies, from Citigroup’s Pride organization for LGBT
employees to General Motors’ GM African Ancestry Network to Apple’s
Women@Apple.
No company in recent memory
has been as vocal as Deloitte about the need
to turn the page, surprising
some diversity advocates. "I have to say
that is really unusual," says
Jennifer Brown, a consultant who helps
companies create employee programs
focused on racial or gender identity.
"I have not heard of a single company
doing that." [...]
Deloitte says its diversity shift is leading to
enhanced inclusion of a
key constituency: men. Brent Bachus, a 21-year
veteran who’s now
managing director for talent inclusion and engagement,
says that before
he was assigned to the inclusion effort a few years ago, he
sometimes
didn’t see a direct connection between himself and the firm’s
women or
minority business resource groups because he didn’t fit any of the
criteria for joining one. "I don’t know that I necessarily felt like I
knew what role I was being expected to play, or if I even had a role,"
he says. With the inclusion council, he adds, he and other managers are
expected to have a direct role in creating an environment that will keep
employees of all backgrounds from leaving the company and help attract
new talent. [...]
BOTTOM LINE - Diversity groups for specific genders
or races have been
around since the 1960s. Deloitte thinks it’s time to move
beyond them.
https://www.businessinsider.com.au/deloitte-replacing-diversity-groups-for-minority-employees-2017-7?r=US&IR=T
Deloitte
has decided diversity groups for minority employees are a relic
of the
past
RICHARD FELONI
JUL 21, 2017, 1:25 AM
Deloitte US has
decided that it’s time to move past diversity groups
focused on gender,
sexual orientation, ethnicity, or even veteranship,
Bloomberg
reported.
Over the next 18 months, the accounting and consulting firm
will phase
out groups like the Women’s Initiative (WIN) and LGBT group
Globe, and
replacing them with "inclusion councils" where all employees are
welcome. It’s primarily an attempt to bring the majority — white men —
into the conversation.
It’s not an abandonment of any progressive
principles, WIN’s national
director Deepa Purushothaman told Bloomberg. "By
having everyone in the
room, you get more allies, advocates, and sponsors. A
lot of our leaders
are still older white men, and they need to be part of
the conversation
and advocate for women. But they’re not going to do that as
much if they
don’t hear the stories and understand what that
means."
Bloomberg reported that leadership at Deloitte is associating
ERGs
(employee resource groups), which emerged in the US in the civil rights
movement of the 1960s, with Baby Boomers and Generation X, and
associating total inclusion movements with millennials.
In June,
Deloitte US CEO Cathy Engelbert announced that she was a
steering committee
member of the CEO Action for Diversity and Inclusion
initiative, where 175
senior executives across the US publicly committed
to shared diversity
goals.
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