Edward Colston/Trans rights/Stamp collecting
Comments
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Didn't know about the table tennis but yes, him.pinno said:Matthew Syed!? Annoying defensive chopper* with a 12 ft reach.
*Table tennis, before anyone says anything silly (Stevo).1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
I'd argue that it is. Ethnicity is just one small part of diversity and in some situations a very relevant part. But there are plenty of others.nickice said:
That's not really got anything to do with the diversity that rick chasey is talking about, though and it wouldn't be what most people would consider to be diversity. To be fair he has supported some kind of affirmative action previously.rjsterry said:
Not what it's about.nickice said:
Very well put. And Rick Chasey is, I think, a straight white man so I'll look forward to him giving up his position in order to achieve more diversity.Stevo_666 said:
Not sure how you think you can achieve that when people like yourself have made it such a massively sensitive issue and pretty much the worst thing anyone can be called. And you then think people can sit down have a nice little chat with someone over a cup of tea as to why they are racist (even if - patting them on the head - they don't really know they're doing it).rick_chasey said:
It's me obviously.ballysmate said:"There is at least person who some would say has chucked the accusation around quite liberally on here, shall we say"
As Stevo never mentioned any name. who do you think he meant?
Just for the benefit of those with comprehension difficulties, you understand.
So when I wroteI honestly believe if you want to tackle racism seriously you need to be able to be on a level playing field where everyone is working towards less racism.
When you have that, you can then throw out the social baggage that comes from the term and rather than discuss racism in terms of motives (because, on that level playing field, everyone's motive is to not be), and then discuss it in terms of practical decision making and actions.
What do you, or Nick, or Stevo, think I meant when I wrote that?
Personally I prefer to walk the walk and lead by example on this. I'm proud that I've built up my departments to be very good and diverse. I can count Brit, Polish, Dutch, Russian, Hong Kong and Iraqi nationalities in my team. White, Indian, Afro-Caribbean, Middle Eastern and HK Chinese are in the ethnic mix and the gender split is pretty even as well. Decent range of backgrounds and ages as well, although a degree education is generally needed for these types of jobs. The company as whole is also good in this respect.
So what I don't really need is a bunch of do-gooders assuming that sweet FA has been done and anyone of a certain generation needs 're-educating' in this area.
Most of us work as part of some sort of team. Largely because it's just not possible for a single individual to amass all the available skills and expertise in their area of knowledge.
Say you are setting up a team for some complex task. If you decide you want the best possible people and set a rigorous exam for applicants, the top ten scores will all be excellent individuals, but the extent of there knowledge will tend to overlap with all the other high scorers because they all took the same test, leaving some big gaps in the aggregate skills and knowledge of the team.
If the team was more diverse - not necessarily in ethnicity, but anything that is relevant to the the task - then as a team they will cover more of the skills and knowledge 'space' and so have fewer blind spots and perform better overall than the team which just scored highest in the exam.
The tricky bit is working out what the relevant factors to the task are so that you can assess whether you have the diversity you need.1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
Really a post for the Big Corona thread, but I wonder how this would play out in the UK, in the current climate.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-australia-53316097
Unlike other Melburnians, residents of the nine towers cannot leave for any reason - they are subject to a police guard.
Hundreds of police were sent to the sites immediately after the order was announced live on TV by Victoria's Premier Daniel Andrews.
Many residents were caught unaware. When they tried to leave the building, they were stopped.
For many, as news of the confinement spread, alarm and panic followed.
The majority of residents have limited income and come from non-English-speaking backgrounds. Many are migrants - some who arrived as refugees - from African nations, Vietnam and China.
Can such an extreme measure even be called a lockdown?"Science is a tool for cheaters". An anonymous French PE teacher.0 -
Sounds grim if not entirely surprising.blazing_saddles said:Really a post for the Big Corona thread, but I wonder how this would play out in the UK, in the current climate.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-australia-53316097
Unlike other Melburnians, residents of the nine towers cannot leave for any reason - they are subject to a police guard.
Hundreds of police were sent to the sites immediately after the order was announced live on TV by Victoria's Premier Daniel Andrews.
Many residents were caught unaware. When they tried to leave the building, they were stopped.
For many, as news of the confinement spread, alarm and panic followed.
The majority of residents have limited income and come from non-English-speaking backgrounds. Many are migrants - some who arrived as refugees - from African nations, Vietnam and China.
Can such an extreme measure even be called a lockdown?1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
A further thought on this. You raised a couple of examples of organisations apparently overreacting to actions of employees. I think there was a DJ and a boss of a charity. Perhaps this overreaction is partly to do with a lack of understanding in those organisations. If they had the diversity you've illustrated in your firm, then the incidents may not have arisen in the first place, and if they had, management would have been better placed and more confident in dealing with them proportionately.Stevo_666 said:
Not sure how you think you can achieve that when people like yourself have made it such a massively sensitive issue and pretty much the worst thing anyone can be called. And you then think people can sit down have a nice little chat with someone over a cup of tea as to why they are racist (even if - patting them on the head - they don't really know they're doing it).rick_chasey said:
It's me obviously.ballysmate said:"There is at least person who some would say has chucked the accusation around quite liberally on here, shall we say"
As Stevo never mentioned any name. who do you think he meant?
Just for the benefit of those with comprehension difficulties, you understand.
So when I wroteI honestly believe if you want to tackle racism seriously you need to be able to be on a level playing field where everyone is working towards less racism.
When you have that, you can then throw out the social baggage that comes from the term and rather than discuss racism in terms of motives (because, on that level playing field, everyone's motive is to not be), and then discuss it in terms of practical decision making and actions.
What do you, or Nick, or Stevo, think I meant when I wrote that?
Personally I prefer to walk the walk and lead by example on this. I'm proud that I've built up my departments to be very good and diverse. I can count Brit, Polish, Dutch, Russian, Hong Kong and Iraqi nationalities in my team. White, Indian, Afro-Caribbean, Middle Eastern and HK Chinese are in the ethnic mix and the gender split is pretty even as well. Decent range of backgrounds and ages as well, although a degree education is generally needed for these types of jobs. The company as whole is also good in this respect.
So what I don't really need is a bunch of do-gooders assuming that sweet FA has been done and anyone of a certain generation needs 're-educating' in this area.1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
Are you implying that the Aussies would not have put in place this lockdown had the tower residents been Australians?rjsterry said:
Sounds grim if not entirely surprising.blazing_saddles said:Really a post for the Big Corona thread, but I wonder how this would play out in the UK, in the current climate.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-australia-53316097
Unlike other Melburnians, residents of the nine towers cannot leave for any reason - they are subject to a police guard.
Hundreds of police were sent to the sites immediately after the order was announced live on TV by Victoria's Premier Daniel Andrews.
Many residents were caught unaware. When they tried to leave the building, they were stopped.
For many, as news of the confinement spread, alarm and panic followed.
The majority of residents have limited income and come from non-English-speaking backgrounds. Many are migrants - some who arrived as refugees - from African nations, Vietnam and China.
Can such an extreme measure even be called a lockdown?0 -
I'm commenting on the post, not implying anything. Not sure what nationality has to do with it.1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
Welcome to new woke world that you endorse, where every post has to be taken in the view that you are implying racism.rjsterry said:I'm commenting on the post, not implying anything. Not sure what nationality has to do with it.
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If you say so. Personally I prefer to start with taking things at face value.1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
You've just spent the last 6 weeks implying that everything is racist and the first time this wokism gets raised against you, you backtrack faster than a rat up a drain piperjsterry said:If you say so. Personally I prefer to start with taking things at face value.
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Eh? @Blazing_saddles posted the first comment. Ask him what he thinks. I said it sounds grim. Being confined in a building without warning does sound grim. I also commented that it wasn't surprising.coopster_the_1st said:
You've just spent the last 6 weeks implying that everything is racist and the first time this wokism gets raised against you, you backtrack faster than a rat up a drain piperjsterry said:If you say so. Personally I prefer to start with taking things at face value.
Public authorities treating social housing residents rather differently from other residents is not exactly unusual, is it? Was there a bit of racism in there as well? Maybe. @blazing_saddles presumably thought there might be as he posted it in this thread.
I'm not even sure what you mean by "wokism". My predictive text wants to make it something about Woking 😕1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
To me this doesn't constitute lockdown in the accepted sense, it's government sanctioned imprisonment.rjsterry said:
Eh? @Blazing_saddles posted the first comment. Ask him what he thinks. I said it sounds grim. Being confined in a building without warning does sound grim. I also commented that it wasn't surprising.coopster_the_1st said:
You've just spent the last 6 weeks implying that everything is racist and the first time this wokism gets raised against you, you backtrack faster than a rat up a drain piperjsterry said:If you say so. Personally I prefer to start with taking things at face value.
Public authorities treating social housing residents rather differently from other residents is not exactly unusual, is it? Was there a bit of racism in there as well? Maybe. @blazing_saddles presumably thought there might be as he posted it in this thread.
Is it OK simply because it's a tower block and can easily be turned into a temporary prison?
I doubt that the authorities would respond in such a draconian way, should there be a spike in a wealthy (influential) suburb.
I also think there would be a public outcry, if the government tried to use the same tactic towards a similar community, in this country.
Using Coopster's catch all: here I think "Wokism" would inevitably play a part.
"Science is a tool for cheaters". An anonymous French PE teacher.0 -
https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/confederate-statues/
fivethirtyeight, the US polling aggregator (with a fairly stellar track record compared to its peers) is steadfastly neutral on most things (given it's about polling - so they do things like this how trump could improve his electoral odds), also covers other topics when data can be used in interesting ways.
In this instance, Confederate Statues Were Never Really About Preserving History
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No statue has ever been about preserving history.rick_chasey said:https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/confederate-statues/
fivethirtyeight, the US polling aggregator (with a fairly stellar track record compared to its peers) is steadfastly neutral on most things (given it's about polling - so they do things like this how trump could improve his electoral odds), also covers other topics when data can be used in interesting ways.
In this instance, Confederate Statues Were Never Really About Preserving History
Occasionally they are about creating a fictional history, like that ludicrous Boudicca statue in Westminster or the one of Alfred the Great. The Victorians have a lot to answer for.1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
Not convinced by that analysis. Putting statues up 40 odd years after the cessation of fighting would coincide with living memories dying.rick_chasey said:https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/confederate-statues/
fivethirtyeight, the US polling aggregator (with a fairly stellar track record compared to its peers) is steadfastly neutral on most things (given it's about polling - so they do things like this how trump could improve his electoral odds), also covers other topics when data can be used in interesting ways.
In this instance, Confederate Statues Were Never Really About Preserving History
Was discussing the Civil war with a black American academic and she gestured at my obviously Southern colleague and invited me to ask her when the war ended. The jaw dropping answer was “ it hasn’t, we are in a temporary period of abeyance”
The academic explained that this was taught in Southern schools.0 -
You think that's bad? Have a look at Serbian nationalism. Yet another 19th century invention claiming a battle in 1389 as its founding event.surrey_commuter said:
Not convinced by that analysis. Putting statues up 40 odd years after the cessation of fighting would coincide with living memories dying.rick_chasey said:https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/confederate-statues/
fivethirtyeight, the US polling aggregator (with a fairly stellar track record compared to its peers) is steadfastly neutral on most things (given it's about polling - so they do things like this how trump could improve his electoral odds), also covers other topics when data can be used in interesting ways.
In this instance, Confederate Statues Were Never Really About Preserving History
Was discussing the Civil war with a black American academic and she gestured at my obviously Southern colleague and invited me to ask her when the war ended. The jaw dropping answer was “ it hasn’t, we are in a temporary period of abeyance”
The academic explained that this was taught in Southern schools.1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
How can you get an academic job when you literally can't hold down a material historical fact?surrey_commuter said:
Was discussing the Civil war with a black American academic and she gestured at my obviously Southern colleague and invited me to ask her when the war ended. The jaw dropping answer was “ it hasn’t, we are in a temporary period of abeyance”
The academic explained that this was taught in Southern schools.
That's just nonsense.0 -
I meant it was said by my Southern colleague not the academic.rick_chasey said:
How can you get an academic job when you literally can't hold down a material historical fact?surrey_commuter said:
Was discussing the Civil war with a black American academic and she gestured at my obviously Southern colleague and invited me to ask her when the war ended. The jaw dropping answer was “ it hasn’t, we are in a temporary period of abeyance”
The academic explained that this was taught in Southern schools.
That's just nonsense.0 -
Ah right.surrey_commuter said:
I meant it was said by my Southern colleague not the academic.rick_chasey said:
How can you get an academic job when you literally can't hold down a material historical fact?surrey_commuter said:
Was discussing the Civil war with a black American academic and she gestured at my obviously Southern colleague and invited me to ask her when the war ended. The jaw dropping answer was “ it hasn’t, we are in a temporary period of abeyance”
The academic explained that this was taught in Southern schools.
That's just nonsense.
Blows my mind they allow blatant falsehoods to be taught in schools.
Nuts.0 -
You've never been to school?rick_chasey said:
Ah right.surrey_commuter said:
I meant it was said by my Southern colleague not the academic.rick_chasey said:
How can you get an academic job when you literally can't hold down a material historical fact?surrey_commuter said:
Was discussing the Civil war with a black American academic and she gestured at my obviously Southern colleague and invited me to ask her when the war ended. The jaw dropping answer was “ it hasn’t, we are in a temporary period of abeyance”
The academic explained that this was taught in Southern schools.
That's just nonsense.
Blows my mind they allow blatant falsehoods to be taught in schools.
Nuts.1 -
Why what blatant falsehoods are in the UK curriculum?darkhairedlord said:
You've never been to school?rick_chasey said:
Ah right.surrey_commuter said:
I meant it was said by my Southern colleague not the academic.rick_chasey said:
How can you get an academic job when you literally can't hold down a material historical fact?surrey_commuter said:
Was discussing the Civil war with a black American academic and she gestured at my obviously Southern colleague and invited me to ask her when the war ended. The jaw dropping answer was “ it hasn’t, we are in a temporary period of abeyance”
The academic explained that this was taught in Southern schools.
That's just nonsense.
Blows my mind they allow blatant falsehoods to be taught in schools.
Nuts.0 -
I wanted to get back to this.nickice said:
Sexuality? I wouldn't consider that to be anyone's business and certainly wouldn't consider hiring a gay man/woman as adding diversity.rick_chasey said:By background (gender, ethnicity, sexuality, disabilities, education, socioeconomic etc) but also “thought” diversity.
People with different backgrounds often have different perspectives, so one usually follows the other.
I think you're looking at it the wrong way around.
I think there are firms, and industries where it is more difficult to be openly gay and that may prohibit people from either being part of the firm/industry or feeling they are able to be themselves if they are.
To take an extreme, I don't think there are many, if any, openly gay male footballers in the premier league, for example. That's obviously not ideal.
Also if there's a firm or team-wide culture of homophobic jokes/banter, that can put people off working there or make it more difficult for people to fit in.
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What different perspective does a gay person bring simply by virtue of being gay?rick_chasey said:
I wanted to get back to this.nickice said:
Sexuality? I wouldn't consider that to be anyone's business and certainly wouldn't consider hiring a gay man/woman as adding diversity.rick_chasey said:By background (gender, ethnicity, sexuality, disabilities, education, socioeconomic etc) but also “thought” diversity.
People with different backgrounds often have different perspectives, so one usually follows the other.
I think you're looking at it the wrong way around.
I think there are firms, and industries where it is more difficult to be openly gay and that may prohibit people from either being part of the firm/industry or feeling they are able to be themselves if they are.
To take an extreme, I don't think there are many, if any, openly gay male footballers in the premier league, for example. That's obviously not ideal.
Also if there's a firm or team-wide culture of homophobic jokes/banter, that can put people off working there or make it more difficult for people to fit in.
I'm sure there are industries where it might be more difficult to be 'openly gay' but, in my experience, a lot of homophobes don't have anything against the actual fact of being gay more than the caricature of the effeminate gay man (which, interestingly, the majority of gay men don't go for). This is why I think Pride tends to do a disservice to the gay community (having said that a gay friend of mine says they put up with it as he said they're often the same kind of people who fought for gay rights) as it promotes that image.
Regarding the banter, it depends what it is. Surely, the ideal would be that gay people get treated exactly the same as straight people.
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You really can't imagine that a person's sexuality and specifically that it is viewed by a large part of the world as abnormal or deviant, might affect their experiences and form part of their view of the world?nickice said:
What different perspective does a gay person bring simply by virtue of being gay?rick_chasey said:
I wanted to get back to this.nickice said:
Sexuality? I wouldn't consider that to be anyone's business and certainly wouldn't consider hiring a gay man/woman as adding diversity.rick_chasey said:By background (gender, ethnicity, sexuality, disabilities, education, socioeconomic etc) but also “thought” diversity.
People with different backgrounds often have different perspectives, so one usually follows the other.
I think you're looking at it the wrong way around.
I think there are firms, and industries where it is more difficult to be openly gay and that may prohibit people from either being part of the firm/industry or feeling they are able to be themselves if they are.
To take an extreme, I don't think there are many, if any, openly gay male footballers in the premier league, for example. That's obviously not ideal.
Also if there's a firm or team-wide culture of homophobic jokes/banter, that can put people off working there or make it more difficult for people to fit in.
I'm sure there are industries where it might be more difficult to be 'openly gay' but, in my experience, a lot of homophobes don't have anything against the actual fact of being gay more than the caricature of the effeminate gay man (which, interestingly, the majority of gay men don't go for). This is why I think Pride tends to do a disservice to the gay community (having said that a gay friend of mine says they put up with it as he said they're often the same kind of people who fought for gay rights) as it promotes that image.
Regarding the banter, it depends what it is. Surely, the ideal would be that gay people get treated exactly the same as straight people.
And why equate "openly gay" with effeminate. These are two different things.
1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
In the UK, like I mentioned upthread, your sexuality is not your identity and there is no reason to think that there is more diversity between a gay person and a straight person than there is between two straight people.rjsterry said:
You really can't imagine that a person's sexuality and specifically that it is viewed by a large part of the world as abnormal or deviant, might affect their experiences and form part of their view of the world?nickice said:
What different perspective does a gay person bring simply by virtue of being gay?rick_chasey said:
I wanted to get back to this.nickice said:
Sexuality? I wouldn't consider that to be anyone's business and certainly wouldn't consider hiring a gay man/woman as adding diversity.rick_chasey said:By background (gender, ethnicity, sexuality, disabilities, education, socioeconomic etc) but also “thought” diversity.
People with different backgrounds often have different perspectives, so one usually follows the other.
I think you're looking at it the wrong way around.
I think there are firms, and industries where it is more difficult to be openly gay and that may prohibit people from either being part of the firm/industry or feeling they are able to be themselves if they are.
To take an extreme, I don't think there are many, if any, openly gay male footballers in the premier league, for example. That's obviously not ideal.
Also if there's a firm or team-wide culture of homophobic jokes/banter, that can put people off working there or make it more difficult for people to fit in.
I'm sure there are industries where it might be more difficult to be 'openly gay' but, in my experience, a lot of homophobes don't have anything against the actual fact of being gay more than the caricature of the effeminate gay man (which, interestingly, the majority of gay men don't go for). This is why I think Pride tends to do a disservice to the gay community (having said that a gay friend of mine says they put up with it as he said they're often the same kind of people who fought for gay rights) as it promotes that image.
Regarding the banter, it depends what it is. Surely, the ideal would be that gay people get treated exactly the same as straight people.
And why equate "openly gay" with effeminate. These are two different things.
I'm not equating the two, I put it in scare quotes as I didn't know what he meant and found it very vague. It would be a bit strange for me to think being openly gay meant being effeminate given what I wrote just after that.0 -
Fair enough. My misunderstanding. I think it would be more accurate to say that it doesn't have to be a key part of your identity. That said, if you are part of a majority, it's much more likely that your membership of that majority is not considered part of your identity. And vice versa. If you are or perceive yourself to be in a minority, you are more likely to consider membership of that minority part of your identity. For example, whiteness has only really started to be taken up as an important part of people's identity where they perceive (wrongly in most cases) that whiteness is threatened in some way. Where there's no perceived threat, it just becomes a default background of no significance.nickice said:
In the UK, like I mentioned upthread, your sexuality is not your identity and there is no reason to think that there is more diversity between a gay person and a straight person than there is between two straight people.rjsterry said:
You really can't imagine that a person's sexuality and specifically that it is viewed by a large part of the world as abnormal or deviant, might affect their experiences and form part of their view of the world?nickice said:
What different perspective does a gay person bring simply by virtue of being gay?rick_chasey said:
I wanted to get back to this.nickice said:
Sexuality? I wouldn't consider that to be anyone's business and certainly wouldn't consider hiring a gay man/woman as adding diversity.rick_chasey said:By background (gender, ethnicity, sexuality, disabilities, education, socioeconomic etc) but also “thought” diversity.
People with different backgrounds often have different perspectives, so one usually follows the other.
I think you're looking at it the wrong way around.
I think there are firms, and industries where it is more difficult to be openly gay and that may prohibit people from either being part of the firm/industry or feeling they are able to be themselves if they are.
To take an extreme, I don't think there are many, if any, openly gay male footballers in the premier league, for example. That's obviously not ideal.
Also if there's a firm or team-wide culture of homophobic jokes/banter, that can put people off working there or make it more difficult for people to fit in.
I'm sure there are industries where it might be more difficult to be 'openly gay' but, in my experience, a lot of homophobes don't have anything against the actual fact of being gay more than the caricature of the effeminate gay man (which, interestingly, the majority of gay men don't go for). This is why I think Pride tends to do a disservice to the gay community (having said that a gay friend of mine says they put up with it as he said they're often the same kind of people who fought for gay rights) as it promotes that image.
Regarding the banter, it depends what it is. Surely, the ideal would be that gay people get treated exactly the same as straight people.
And why equate "openly gay" with effeminate. These are two different things.
I'm not equating the two, I put it in scare quotes as I didn't know what he meant and found it very vague. It would be a bit strange for me to think being openly gay meant being effeminate given what I wrote just after that.1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
I understand that. It's basically anecdotal but one of my good friends and his ex and other friends don't see it as their identity. Of course, they recognise that the gay rights supporters tended to be people who did see it as their identity. My friend openly admits he never would have fought for gay rights as he prefers a quiet life.rjsterry said:
Fair enough. My misunderstanding. I think it would be more accurate to say that it doesn't have to be a key part of your identity. That said, if you are part of a majority, it's much more likely that your membership of that majority is not considered part of your identity. And vice versa. If you are or perceive yourself to be in a minority, you are more likely to consider membership of that minority part of your identity. For example, whiteness has only really started to be taken up as an important part of people's identity where they perceive (wrongly in most cases) that whiteness is threatened in some way. Where there's no perceived threat, it just becomes a default background of no significance.nickice said:
In the UK, like I mentioned upthread, your sexuality is not your identity and there is no reason to think that there is more diversity between a gay person and a straight person than there is between two straight people.rjsterry said:
You really can't imagine that a person's sexuality and specifically that it is viewed by a large part of the world as abnormal or deviant, might affect their experiences and form part of their view of the world?nickice said:
What different perspective does a gay person bring simply by virtue of being gay?rick_chasey said:
I wanted to get back to this.nickice said:
Sexuality? I wouldn't consider that to be anyone's business and certainly wouldn't consider hiring a gay man/woman as adding diversity.rick_chasey said:By background (gender, ethnicity, sexuality, disabilities, education, socioeconomic etc) but also “thought” diversity.
People with different backgrounds often have different perspectives, so one usually follows the other.
I think you're looking at it the wrong way around.
I think there are firms, and industries where it is more difficult to be openly gay and that may prohibit people from either being part of the firm/industry or feeling they are able to be themselves if they are.
To take an extreme, I don't think there are many, if any, openly gay male footballers in the premier league, for example. That's obviously not ideal.
Also if there's a firm or team-wide culture of homophobic jokes/banter, that can put people off working there or make it more difficult for people to fit in.
I'm sure there are industries where it might be more difficult to be 'openly gay' but, in my experience, a lot of homophobes don't have anything against the actual fact of being gay more than the caricature of the effeminate gay man (which, interestingly, the majority of gay men don't go for). This is why I think Pride tends to do a disservice to the gay community (having said that a gay friend of mine says they put up with it as he said they're often the same kind of people who fought for gay rights) as it promotes that image.
Regarding the banter, it depends what it is. Surely, the ideal would be that gay people get treated exactly the same as straight people.
And why equate "openly gay" with effeminate. These are two different things.
I'm not equating the two, I put it in scare quotes as I didn't know what he meant and found it very vague. It would be a bit strange for me to think being openly gay meant being effeminate given what I wrote just after that.1 -
And nothing wrong with that.1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
If you go somewhere where everyone isn't white, you may change your view.rjsterry said:
Fair enough. My misunderstanding. I think it would be more accurate to say that it doesn't have to be a key part of your identity. That said, if you are part of a majority, it's much more likely that your membership of that majority is not considered part of your identity. And vice versa. If you are or perceive yourself to be in a minority, you are more likely to consider membership of that minority part of your identity. For example, whiteness has only really started to be taken up as an important part of people's identity where they perceive (wrongly in most cases) that whiteness is threatened in some way. Where there's no perceived threat, it just becomes a default background of no significance.nickice said:
In the UK, like I mentioned upthread, your sexuality is not your identity and there is no reason to think that there is more diversity between a gay person and a straight person than there is between two straight people.rjsterry said:
You really can't imagine that a person's sexuality and specifically that it is viewed by a large part of the world as abnormal or deviant, might affect their experiences and form part of their view of the world?nickice said:
What different perspective does a gay person bring simply by virtue of being gay?rick_chasey said:
I wanted to get back to this.nickice said:
Sexuality? I wouldn't consider that to be anyone's business and certainly wouldn't consider hiring a gay man/woman as adding diversity.rick_chasey said:By background (gender, ethnicity, sexuality, disabilities, education, socioeconomic etc) but also “thought” diversity.
People with different backgrounds often have different perspectives, so one usually follows the other.
I think you're looking at it the wrong way around.
I think there are firms, and industries where it is more difficult to be openly gay and that may prohibit people from either being part of the firm/industry or feeling they are able to be themselves if they are.
To take an extreme, I don't think there are many, if any, openly gay male footballers in the premier league, for example. That's obviously not ideal.
Also if there's a firm or team-wide culture of homophobic jokes/banter, that can put people off working there or make it more difficult for people to fit in.
I'm sure there are industries where it might be more difficult to be 'openly gay' but, in my experience, a lot of homophobes don't have anything against the actual fact of being gay more than the caricature of the effeminate gay man (which, interestingly, the majority of gay men don't go for). This is why I think Pride tends to do a disservice to the gay community (having said that a gay friend of mine says they put up with it as he said they're often the same kind of people who fought for gay rights) as it promotes that image.
Regarding the banter, it depends what it is. Surely, the ideal would be that gay people get treated exactly the same as straight people.
And why equate "openly gay" with effeminate. These are two different things.
I'm not equating the two, I put it in scare quotes as I didn't know what he meant and found it very vague. It would be a bit strange for me to think being openly gay meant being effeminate given what I wrote just after that.0 -
Don't get so hung up on the perspective and more, if your firm has culture that is various forms of hostile to being openly gay, you're reducing the talent pool or harming, to varying degrees, the chances of success of certain people in your firm, for something you say yourself shouldn't have anything to do with their success or failure.nickice said:
What different perspective does a gay person bring simply by virtue of being gay?rick_chasey said:
I wanted to get back to this.nickice said:
Sexuality? I wouldn't consider that to be anyone's business and certainly wouldn't consider hiring a gay man/woman as adding diversity.rick_chasey said:By background (gender, ethnicity, sexuality, disabilities, education, socioeconomic etc) but also “thought” diversity.
People with different backgrounds often have different perspectives, so one usually follows the other.
I think you're looking at it the wrong way around.
I think there are firms, and industries where it is more difficult to be openly gay and that may prohibit people from either being part of the firm/industry or feeling they are able to be themselves if they are.
To take an extreme, I don't think there are many, if any, openly gay male footballers in the premier league, for example. That's obviously not ideal.
Also if there's a firm or team-wide culture of homophobic jokes/banter, that can put people off working there or make it more difficult for people to fit in.
I'm sure there are industries where it might be more difficult to be 'openly gay' but, in my experience, a lot of homophobes don't have anything against the actual fact of being gay more than the caricature of the effeminate gay man (which, interestingly, the majority of gay men don't go for). This is why I think Pride tends to do a disservice to the gay community (having said that a gay friend of mine says they put up with it as he said they're often the same kind of people who fought for gay rights) as it promotes that image.
Regarding the banter, it depends what it is. Surely, the ideal would be that gay people get treated exactly the same as straight people.0