The DEI Thread

I received an update from him. I highly suggest every man on this forum begin fighting against DEI and woke policies if there are any in your workplace. The only reason this garbage got traction to begin with is because of weak men.
It got traction because the Big 3 (Blackrock, State Street, and Vanguard) who combined control the S&P 500 demanded it. Larry Fink, the CEO of Blackrock brags about it. Right now you are behind enemy lines, and if speaking out will cost you a good job, you are best off to stay quiet and start to look to move elsewhere.
 
It got traction because the Big 3 (Blackrock, State Street, and Vanguard) who combined control the S&P 500 demanded it. Larry Fink, the CEO of Blackrock brags about it. Right now you are behind enemy lines, and if speaking out will cost you a good job, you are best off to stay quiet and start to look to move elsewhere.

You can do as you wish, but the men here can make their own decisions. Nobody got anywhere being quiet and keeping their heads down. Plus there are other options, like informing people with larger audiences and platforms.
 
You can do as you wish, but the men here can make their own decisions. Nobody got anywhere being quiet and keeping their heads down. Plus there are other options, like informing people with larger audiences and platforms.
Spreading information is of the utmost importance. Putting the spotlight on these satanic beings who are pushing this deadly policy is one way of spreading the information. I agree.
 
In Chicago, several years ago they said the written test for the fire department was too racist. So now they make people take an incredibly easy exam. If you pass you get put on a long waiting list with basically no chance of ever being called. Maybe nepotism or dei can help you.

But there's no way to stand out. The exam is pass/fail and they don't care about getting the best applicants. Imagine not caring about getting the best to fight fires and protect the city.
 


NEW: VDH weighs in on the LA fires: “It's something like a DEI Green New Deal hydrogen bomb — the alarming symptoms of a society gone mad."

An incisive, two-minute breakdown of the political and ideological issues that led to this disaster:

“It was a total systems collapse from the idea of not spending money on irrigation, storage, water, fire prevention and forest management, a viable insurance industry, a DEI hierarchy, you put it all together and it's something like a DEI Green New Deal hydrogen bomb."

"Gavin Newsom was fiddling, he's almost Nero Newsom. And this has been something that is just unimaginable."

"The systems breakdown. And to finish, what we're seeing in California is a state with 40 million people. And yet the people who run it feel that it should return to a 19th century pastoral condition. They are de-civilizing the state and de-industrializing the state and de-farming the state. But they're not telling the 40 million people that their lifestyles will have to revert back to the 19th century, when you had no protection from fire."

"You didn't have enough water in California. You didn't have enough power. You didn't pump oil. So we are deliberately making these decisions not to develop energy, not to develop a timber industry, not to protect the insurance industry, not to protect houses and property. And we're doing it in almost a purely nihilistic fashion."

"And Karen Bass should resign. She came to the airport back from Africa. She had nothing to say. She was confronted at the airport. Why were you in Africa? Why did you cut the fire department? They cut the fire department by almost $18 million. They gave fire protective equipment to Ukraine's first responders. And she had nothing to say. She had nothing to say because she couldn't say anything."

"I don't want to be too pessimistic or bleak tonight, but this is one of the most alarming symptoms of a society gone mad."

"And if this continues, and if this were to spread to other states, we would become a third world country if we're not in parts already."
 
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