7582 stories
·
34 followers

Анекдот дня по итогам голосования за 19 января 2025

1 Share
Норвежский биатлонист Йоханнес Бё объявил о завершении карьеры и излечении от астмы.
Read the whole story
cherjr
6 hours ago
reply
48.840867,2.324885
Share this story
Delete

Анекдот дня по итогам голосования за 18 января 2025

1 Share
– Сколько стоят ваши мандарины?
– 200 руб.
– Ого! Я их в Пятёрочке по 100 беру.
– Ну, и что? Я их тоже в Пятёрочке по 100 беру.
Read the whole story
cherjr
1 day ago
reply
48.840867,2.324885
Share this story
Delete

История дня по итогам голосования за 18 января 2025

1 Share
Веду семинар по истории русской культуры. Второкурсник докладывает про «выбор веры» и принятие христианства. Докладывает скучно, уныло, аудитория почти не слушает.
Я пытаюсь его расшевелить:
– Почему князь Владимир отверг, например, ислам?
– Ой, в исламе столько запретов: вино нельзя, свинину. И потом – обрезание…
– Но кроме запретов, есть и разрешения, многоженство в частности. Князь Владимир к женщинам был неравнодушен, завел бы себе четырех жен, гарем…
Молодой человек оборачивается ко мне и с искренним недоумением в глазах спрашивает:
– А зачем Владимиру гарем после обрезания?

Prepodavan
Read the whole story
cherjr
1 day ago
reply
48.840867,2.324885
Share this story
Delete

Анекдот дня по итогам голосования за 17 января 2025

1 Share
«"В окопах нет атеистов" — это не аргумент против атеистов, это аргумент против окопов».
Писатель Джеймс Морроу
Read the whole story
cherjr
1 day ago
reply
48.840867,2.324885
Share this story
Delete

Анекдот дня по итогам голосования за 16 января 2025

1 Share
Жители Норильска попытались обманом продать Трампу свой город вместо Гренландии.
Read the whole story
cherjr
1 day ago
reply
48.840867,2.324885
Share this story
Delete

Meta’s Abolition of DEI May Be a Turning Point

2 Shares

Last week, Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of Meta, formerly Facebook, made a stunning announcement. He was abolishing the company’s DEI programs and discontinuing its relationship with fact-checking organizations, which he admitted had become a form of “censorship.” The left-wing media immediately attacked the decision, accused him of embracing the MAGA agenda, and predicted a dangerous rise in so-called disinformation.

Zuckerberg’s move was carefully calculated and impeccably timed. The November elections, he said, felt like “a cultural tipping point towards once again prioritizing speech.” DEI initiatives, especially those related to immigration and gender, had become “disconnected from mainstream conversation”—and untenable.

This is no small about-face. Just four years ago, Zuckerberg spent hundreds of millions of dollars funding left-wing election programs; his role was widely resented by conservatives. And Meta had been at the forefront of any identity-based or left-wing ideological cause.

Not anymore. As part of the rollout for the announcement, Zuckerberg released a video and appeared on the Joe Rogan podcast, which now functions as a confessional for American elites who no longer believe in left-wing orthodoxies. On the podcast, Zuckerberg sounded less like a California progressive than a right-winger, arguing that the culture needed a better balance of “masculine” and “feminine” energies.

Executives at Meta quickly implemented the new policy, issuing pink slips to DEI employees and moving the company’s content-moderation team from California to Texas, in order, in Zuckerberg’s words, to “help alleviate concerns that biased employees are excessively censoring content.”

Zuckerberg was not the first technology executive to make such an announcement, but he is perhaps the most significant. Facebook is one of the largest firms in Silicon Valley and, with Zuckerberg setting the precedent, many smaller companies will likely follow suit.

The most important signal emanating from this decision is not about a particular shift in policy, however, but a general shift in culture. Zuckerberg has never really been an ideologue. He appears more interested in building his company and staying in the good graces of elite society. But like many successful, self-respecting men, he is also independent-minded and has clearly chafed at the cultural constraints DEI placed on his company. So he seized the moment, correctly sensing that the impending inauguration of Donald Trump reduced the risk and increased the payoff of such a change.

Zuckerberg is certainly not a courageous truth-teller. He assented to DEI over the last decade because that was where the elite status signals were pointing. Now, those signals have reversed, like a barometer suddenly dropping, and he is changing course with them and attempting to shift the blame to the outgoing Biden administration, which, he told Rogan, pressured him to implement censorship—a convenient excuse at an even more convenient moment.

But the good news is that, whatever post hoc rationalizations executives might use, DEI and its cultural assumptions suddenly have run into serious resistance. We may be entering a crucial period in which people feel confident enough to express their true beliefs about DEI, which is antithetical to excellence, and stop pretending that they believe in the cultish ideology of “systemic racism” and race-based guilt.

DEI remains deeply embedded in public institutions, of course, but private institutions and corporations have more flexibility and can dispatch with such programs with the stroke of a pen. Zuckerberg has revealed what this might look like at one of the largest companies. Conservatives can commend him for his decision, while remaining wary. “Trust but verify,” as Ronald Reagan used to say, is a good policy all around.

Photo by Andrej Sokolow/picture alliance via Getty Images

Donate

City Journal is a publication of the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research (MI), a leading free-market think tank. Are you interested in supporting the magazine? As a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, donations in support of MI and City Journal are fully tax-deductible as provided by law (EIN #13-2912529).

Read the whole story
cherjr
3 days ago
reply
48.840867,2.324885
bogorad
4 days ago
reply
Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories