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|    Communist Democrats Push 'Racial Equity     |
|    27 Dec 21 11:11:08    |
      XPost: alt.politics.republicans, tx.politics.republic, seattle.politics       XPost: alt.fan.sean-hannity, rec.arts.tv, alt.global-warming       From: except_you_faggots@cnn.com              Audits call for abolition of standards of 'merit'              Democrats want to subject tech companies to mandatory "racial equity       audits" conducted by their political allies, a move which could       cement the party's control of Silicon Valley.              A small group of organizations with close ties to Democratic       politicians and progressive donors conducts the majority of these       audits, which advocates say are needed to promote racial justice.       But in practice, equity auditors often push companies to hire more       left-wing activists and former Democratic party officials, often       from the auditing organizations themselves. The audits also call for       the abolition of standards of "merit" and the ability for a special       executive to veto any company project.              Racial equity audits are the chief service offered by "diversity,       equity, and inclusion" consultants, a cottage industry connected by       a revolving door of Democratic staffers and funded by liberal       donors. Equity auditors have made a killing from school districts       that pay handsomely for consultants to revamp curricula, the       Washington Free Beacon has reported. Now, racial equity auditors are       setting their sights on corporate America.              Democratic officials have called for audits of major companies. One       proposal from House Democrats would fine companies $20,000 a day for       not completing biennial, independent "racial equity audits." In       June, five Democratic senators called on Google parent company       Alphabet to conduct an audit. The Democratic letter cited Color of       Change, a left-wing nonprofit pushing for audits.              Last week, Color of Change president Rashad Robinson was invited to       testify to Congress and called for "independent auditors" to vet new       products from tech companies before they’re released. Robinson did       not mention that the "independent auditors" are closely affiliated       with Color of Change.              In that hearing, Sen. Cory Booker (D., N.J.) said Alphabet should       "work with civil rights groups who have developed a framework to       guide tech companies on how to conduct racial equity audits."              Booker's call appears to be a veiled reference to Color of Change,       which released a "tech framework" explaining how companies should       conduct audits. The framework calls for the destruction of an       "objective definition of merit" in order to "attract Black talent."       It also requires that every tech company employ an executive with       power to veto any product they believe has a disparate effect on       black users. Among other powers, the executive should have "hiring       and firing power, power over promotions, and power over the flow of       people, product, and money."              Color of Change also calls on tech companies to evaluate every       employee in "anti-discrimination accountability systems" in       performance reviews. According to Color of Change, tech companies       should be required to avoid the use of any dataset that "is the       product of real-world prejudice or further perpetuates       discrimination," a vague definition that could be used to shut down       almost any machine-learning research.              Beyond "hiring underrepresented groups," says Color of Change,       organizations need to increase the "awareness" of all employees       through "comprehensive racial justice trainings and initiatives."       These trainings from outside groups will create "a critical mass of       employees that are aware of the origins and effects of white       supremacy and anti-Blackness across all vertical and horizontal work       streams."              Color of Change has already succeeded in using racial equity audits       to shape big tech policy. In 2018, it successfully pushed Facebook       into completing an audit that called for more restrictions on       Trump's posts. Color of Change itself pushed for Trump to be       permanently banned from the platform. After the audit was released,       Facebook hired an Obama administration Justice Department official       to lead the company's civil rights strategy.              The audits fit within a broader push from Biden administration       officials to promote racial justice goals in government policy. The       Securities and Exchange Commission is pushing companies to include       audit proposals from shareholders in their proxy statements. Federal       Trade Commissioner Kelly Slaughter has argued her department has a       mandate to tackle "structural and systemic racism."              Democratic officials and lawmakers have close personal and       professional relationships with activist auditors. Laura Murphy, who       pioneered corporate racial equity audits, was invited to conduct her       first audit in 2016 by Vanita Gupta, a close friend who now serves       as associate attorney general.              Before joining the Biden Justice Department, Gupta led the       Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, a nonprofit that       has called for tech companies to "reduce online activities and       disinformation" that harm minority groups. The conference       commissioned a report by Murphy on "Key Elements of a Civil Rights              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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