Andy McCabe Says It’s Unlikely the J6 Pipe Bomber Case Was Ignored, It...
Nature Magazine Retracts Highly Flawed Climate Catastrophe Study
Dem Jim Himes Says Venezuelan Drug Runners Could Be Average Josés Lacking Economic...
The Reich Stuff: Joy Reid Says She Got a Nazi-Like Vibe From Senior...
Dem Mark Warner Blames Trump’s FBI for Not Arresting J6 Pipe Bomber Suspect...
Stardate 90210: Yet Another Awful Star Trek Series Announced
MAZE Posts Epic Mehdi Hasan Self-Own Over Search for the Far-Right, White Pipe...
Bulwark’s Tim Miller Applauds Jamie Raskin’s Investigation Into Trump's 60 Minutes Intervi...
'Major Milestone’: Home in Pacific Palisades Receives Final Approval From the City
When Jake Tapper Said the J6 Pipe Bomber Was a ‘White Man’ and...
Rep. Jerry Nadler Explains Why States Are Refusing to Hand Over SNAP Data:...
Pramila Jayapal: ‘Being Undocumented Isn’t a Crime’ – Federal Law and Half of...
Jim Acosta Says Trump Should Be Impeached Over Hateful Comments About the Somali...
Another ‘Police Brutality’ Story Collapses: Woman Refuses ID to Protect Illegal Boyfriend
JD Vance Is Hearing Rumors That the EU Commission Will Fine X Hundreds...

'Identify your privilege': Christopher Rufo obtains Raytheon's employee guide to 'becoming an anti-racist today'

Our very first post on a Christopher Rufo thread was about DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) training at the Treasury Department, intended to teach white employees to “own” their racism. President Trump’s short-lived ban on critical race theory in the federal government also extended to government contractors, such as Raytheon. On Tuesday, Rufo presented documents from Raytheon’s employee guide to “becoming an anti-racist today.”

Advertisement

“I pledge to check my bias, speak up for others and show up for all.”

Intersectionality essentially means a white man is less oppressed than a white woman, but a black trans woman is more oppressed than both. The more boxes you check, the more intersectionality you have.

Advertisement

Speak up, but also step aside. “Just as the luxury to ignore microaggressions and other injustices is a tenet of privilege, action is the cornerstone of allyship. If you witness a problem, say something. Your privilege will help you be heard.”

Advertisement

Things not to say to a black colleague: “I can’t wait for things to calm down and get back to normal.” Instead, say, “I realize my discomfort is a fraction of what you’re feeling.” Isn’t assuming other people’s feelings a bad thing to do?

We’ve actually seen that “Equality vs. Equity” meme expanded to include “Justice,” which is where the fence around the ballpark is removed so everyone can watch the game, ticket or not.

Advertisement

“Understand and share what ‘defund the police’ really means. It’s about a new, smarter approach to public safety, wherein we demilitarize the police and allocate resources into education, social services, and other root causes of crimes.” So that much-shared New York Times op-ed saying when we say abolish the police, we mean abolish the police was actually arguing for reallocation of police budgets to social services?

Advertisement

Good point — demilitarize the police while we manufacture billions worth of military equipment.

Advertisement

Funny … the slide about what to say to your black colleagues sounds like just like the kind of liberal pandering anti-racism grifter Robin DiAngelo warns about in her new book, “Nice Racism.” Pardon me, black colleague, but I’m taking these steps to become a better ally.


Related:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement