the captians wench
sewing wench
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2005
- Posts
- 12,258
I just saw a news report on a Connecticut court case. The case, basically, was about a firefighter (or some sort of service officer) who was turned down for a promotion, even though his test scores were the highest, because the state was worried about offending minority candidates.
This just highlighted something that was covered during a meeting I attended Wednesday at work. It stressed the importance of diversifying our management. They went as far as saying we should look for minorities to promote and that should be our focus.
This really made me uncomfortable.
I grew up in an inter-racial household. My step-father was also born in 1930, so he went through all the segregation and the start of affirmative action. When his nieces and nephews sung the praises of affirmative action he stopped them in their tracks. He would ask this question "is it any more right for you to get the job because you're black than it is for you to not get the job because you're black?" He was very big on being judged, and judging solely on a person's merits and character rather than by race, whether it's beneficial or not.
So am I just weird here feeling the same way? Do I just "not get it"? I don't understand how it's any more fair, or any less discrimination, for me to be overlooked for a position because I'm white than it is if I were a minority. And the fact that this was blatantly flaunted at this meeting really makes me uncomfortable.
This just highlighted something that was covered during a meeting I attended Wednesday at work. It stressed the importance of diversifying our management. They went as far as saying we should look for minorities to promote and that should be our focus.
This really made me uncomfortable.
I grew up in an inter-racial household. My step-father was also born in 1930, so he went through all the segregation and the start of affirmative action. When his nieces and nephews sung the praises of affirmative action he stopped them in their tracks. He would ask this question "is it any more right for you to get the job because you're black than it is for you to not get the job because you're black?" He was very big on being judged, and judging solely on a person's merits and character rather than by race, whether it's beneficial or not.
So am I just weird here feeling the same way? Do I just "not get it"? I don't understand how it's any more fair, or any less discrimination, for me to be overlooked for a position because I'm white than it is if I were a minority. And the fact that this was blatantly flaunted at this meeting really makes me uncomfortable.