When I was in The Army we had a saying "We all wear green". Before that it was treat others how you want to be treated. Both of these worked just until post Gen X.
Veteran here: Ah yes, when women weren’t allowed in most jobs, sexual assault was a sport & homosexuals could lose their careers, or even go to jail. “The good old days”
@@josephfolkemer that literally isn't the point. The point, which flew right over your head, is we shouldn't be aholes to each other. Some of us Vets from that era understand treating people w/respect. Try a little critical thinking.
@@uwillnevahno6837 Critical thinking is great; indeed, it was taught in my local college in the 1990's (when I first attended). When I went back and finished my degree, critical thinking had been completely replaced by critical theory. DEI is forced, and every element of critical theory is treated as real.
@@dwaynecarpenter9106 critical thinking is a skill Joseph lacks. Treating others w/respect is generally learned at home and reinforced out in the world.
@@uwillnevahno6837 1. Critical thinking is not taught. It is learned. 2. Homes today are vastly different than homes were before some 25, 50, 75 years ago. Respect and civility are portray through action and behavior and both are less today in family life and societal life. ...lost in translation somewhere on the way to this current time and point.
Yes. Because its dominant in almost all the major governmental, corporate and cultural institutions. The universities have/had forced these beliefs into their hiring and enrollment.
In name of diversity equity and inclusion, these young people end up supporting a movement that practices uniformity (of thought), exclusion (of wrongthinkers), and heirarchy (a morality that flows downward from academia imposed onto the plebs).
That's odd you say that. Because far left organizations tend to be against hierarchical structures. Strict hierarchies tend to be synonymous with the right wing & more authoritarian organizations. Antifa for example, is strictly anarchist in nature, opting for a more horizontal alignment, rather than a top-down vertical hierarchy.
I think DEI, I think 1984. Just forced social rules used to beat down different perspectives and independent thought. Im tired of being told that immutable characterstics matter more than a person's choices.
Yes, just sat through some today. Mandatory training. You had to pass the test in order to finish. The correct answers for the DEI questions or obviously slanted towards the goodness of DEI. So the answers yes it’s forced.
@@nobody8717 I had the job before DEI ever got big. And no one is forcing me out of the job because of this terrible program. For sure I will outlast it. The corporation can force me to listen, but it can’t force me to believe.
If I were president I would put the Republicans in charge of the budget, and the Democrats in charge of taxes. This would result in sustained budget surpluses that would reverse our National Debt over time. So not left, not right, but correct.
@@KevinBeavers I would fill Congress and the Senate with historians and philosophers not lawyers. We would end up a better society and not repeat the past which we are absolutely doing.
I wouldn't say always, but it's a red flag. Probably haven't met an egalitarian with such a narrow focus. Feminism is a sexist movement though. It's in the name.