We do ours online and it's easier to click through it than it is to tell them no. I got kids to feed and all.

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

I was bitter about it because they refused to respect true, effective egalitarian policies like transparent pay scales, supporting men and women who wanted to take parental leave, or allowing for remote work, but wanted to pawn us all off with some pronoun stickers or company board quotas, or whatever.

DEI washing, is a thing.

Companies want these training days to point at something in case they have complaints or lawsuits. Hey we did our best, we spent x amount of money, we sent all our employees to the courses. Companies which provide this 'training' get money for very little, pointless work. Employees just have to sit through the process. I think that is my reading, I don't think anyone involved 'believes' in any of this. (?)

Yeah, checking the compliance boxes, but improving nobody's working conditions.

Yes, it's easy. Pay off this scam company. Both pretend they are helping.

They pretend to care. We pretend to believe them.

But everybody knows it's all make believe. Where are the believers? How does something like this stop?

It's an industry. Government couldn't afford to make more pretend desk-jobs for middle-class, overeducated daughters, so they outsourced IT to private industry with these special compliance positions.

Ha yes the bullshit jobs industry. A bit like the alphabet agencies maybe?

We have UBI, it's just not evenly distributed and it involves sending an email once in a while.

I'd be interested to see how this apparent wave in the 70s of p much the same industry faded away

You can tell the difference between real and fake DEI because the former tends to make the company a more-attractive employer to a wide range of people. Including straight, white guys.

Yes, I agree. 🫂

Out of curiosity what you do online is just a form filling process? Or is it a group zoom call with 'tasks' and whatnot?