“Didn’t Earn It”

I hadn’t seen or heard the derisive (but accurate!) nickname for DEI, as in “diversity, equity and inclusion” until I saw the Scott Adams “X” post above. I think he’s right. When a quick, pointed and accurate characterization makes people slap their foreheads and think, “Wait, why have I been willing to accept this nonsense?,” it can move metaphorical mountains.

The DEI fad has already been destructive to the economy, the workforce, society and its institutions beyond all imagining, making it one of the more damaging outgrowths of “The Great Stupid,” which really got rolling when its Three Horsemen of the Apocalypse equivalent (the fourth horse was a scratch, thank goodness) began galloping together in 2020. They were the George Floyd Freakout, the Black Lives Matter Scam, and the Wuhan Virus Panic, and together they brought virtue-signaling overdrive, progressive preening and an attack on core American and ethical values, not to mention civilization.

DEI , like the slogan “black lives matter,” was another ingenious manipulation of language to trap the slow of thought and the weak of character into going along with a movement that was intrinsically dishonest and unfair. Who could be against such benign concepts as diversity, equity and inclusion? But the objective was and is obliterating the cultural acceptance of merit as the aspirational basis of the American ideal. Along the way, the DEI industry itself emerged as an engine of waste and carnage with mostly underwhelming and undeserving drivers at the controls, as Harvard University demonstrated for us spectacularly.

Oh, we know how this will go: “Didn’t Earn It” will be roundly attacked a racist slur. Long screeds will be published to dispute “the lie”: the beneficiaries of DEI did earn it, the public will be told, just as anyone with ancestors on distant branches of the family tree who were victims of slavery at least a century and a half ago “earned” million of dollars in reparations today. (That response will anchor DEI to an absolutely indefensible policy goal: perfect.) Eventually, because this is what the dishonest and relentless far Left does, it will come up with another moniker, because DEI will finally have the aura of stench about it that it should—you know, just as “illegal aliens” became “undocumented workers” and are now “migrants” (or “visitors”), “performing major surgery on minors because they have been encouraged to believe they are the ‘wrong’ sex” became “gender-affirming care,” and the classic, “aborting the innocent unborn” was recast as “a woman’s choice.”

Never mind. “Didn’t Earn It” is an ethical tool to combat an unethical practice and ideology that is wasting financial and human resources.

I recommend using it.

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Pointer: Instapundit

12 thoughts on ““Didn’t Earn It”

  1. “and the classic, “aborting the innocent unborn” was recast as “a woman’s choice.”

    Or the latest euphemism: health care. They are seriously using this in pro-abortion commercials. They don’t use the word “abortion” at all…just “health care”. Because who can be against that?

  2. Panic, and together they brought virtual-signaling overdrive, what is virtual;-signaling? Unless you meant virtu-signalling and got ganked by spell check?

    • Ah, you must be new in these parts! I can’t type, and only proof-read a little better. I’ve been slowly reducing my typos, then something like that turns up. Fixed it. Thanks.

  3. First-time reader. Definitely subscribing. Excellent commentary. Wondering if I’m the first (and only?) black, female Conservative to sub to your blog? Excited to dig in. Also, DEI definitely means “Didn’t Earn It.” Cheers to that and you. Well done.

    • To answer your question, definitely not. Stay on the lookout for Mrs. Q’s outsatdning comments here. And there may be more: there are quite a few commenters who never give any hints about their demographics…

      Meanwhile, welcome. So glad to meet you!

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