A majority of Americans across nearly all demographic groups said DEI initiatives have made no impact on their personal careers, according to a newly released Harris Poll/Axios Vibes survey.

Why it matters: Republican lawmakers and activists have vilified DEI, a term for diversity, equity and inclusion policies used by employers. Companies have responded by rolling back programs.

  • Yet Americans — and businesses — have a generally positive to at least indifferent view on the subject.
  • On balance, most demographic groups were more likely to say DEI benefited their career than hindered it.
  • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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    16 hours ago

    Yes.

    It’s a true fact that a hospital could cut its costs tremendously if they were to secretly euthanize people with terminal illnesses. Stating this fact does not mean that I am in favor of secretly euthanizing people with terminal illnesses. It happens to be quite the opposite.

    In one of my other comments in this thread I said what I’d like to see:

    Personally, I wish that companies would just go ahead and do their best to not be biased in who they employ and who they cater to, and that that would be enough.

      • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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        16 hours ago

        It doesn’t have anything to do with that. You’ve brought things into the discussion that I have not said anything about.

        This is the statement that I was responding to:

        DEI generates more revenue because it broadens customer bases.

        And I pointed out that it doesn’t always broaden the customer base, it sometimes narrows it. There are customers who will avoid a product that is associated with DEI initiatives.

        I’m not saying they should or shouldn’t. I’m not even saying why they would avoid it, or why they would claim to avoid it. Just that in some situations DEI initiatives don’t broaden the customer base.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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          16 hours ago

          You literally said that:

          Not necessarily. A lot of recent TV shows, movies, and video games have had their creators publicly blaming “anti-woke backlash” for poor performances.

          So again, what does this have to do with the talent of actors in movies?

          • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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            16 hours ago

            Oh, I think I may have figured out where the misunderstanding lies. You think that when I said “poor performances” I was talking about acting performances. I was talking about performance at the box office.

            Studios don’t really care about the quality of the performance, they just care about the profit.