A short COTD for a change—Michael R., whose first comment was on this post in 2009, not long after Ethics Alarms was launched, has made a trenchant observation that seems obvious once you read it, but had never occurred to me in this degree of clarity.
His comment follows yesterday’s post about the New York Times being sued for discriminating against a white, male job applicant. The paper is denying it, of course, but as I asked in the post, “Does anyone believe that the woke, left-biased, victim-mongering, knee-jerk Democratic New York Times, after declaring that its staff was “too white” and “too male” has not been systematically discriminating against whites and men?”
Interestingly, Ann Althouse offered a poll to her readers on exactly that question…
…and here are the results as I write this:
Michael’s observation slapped me across my metaphorical face with the realization that approving of “good discrimination” is the result of the societal embrace of the Golden Rationalization, “Everybody does it,” in epidemic proportions. This is ironic, because the same unethical reasoning is what supported slavery and, after that, routine anti-black discrimination and prejudice for so long.
I worked in the administration of an institution that was all-in on “affirmative action”-–note that this is one of the great cover-phrases of all time, like “pro-choice,” allowing something that is unethical and illegal to be framed as something else—in the late Seventies when it took the culture by the throat. The institution was Georgetown Law Center, which is still committed to the self-contradictory policy Michael R.’s comment focuses upon: you may recall that its Dean essentially dismissed a new faculty member for daring to suggest that Justice Jackson, the DEI nomination of Joe Biden, was taking the place of more qualified candidates.
There was once a utilitarian argument for affirmative action; indeed I made it myself once upon a time. But a nation founded on equal justice and individual responsibility cannot maintain integrity while accepting any form of racial and gender discrimination without end. The fact that so many of our friends, relatives and colleagues can’t figure this out points to a widespread lack of ethical analytical skills. It is, I think, the same faulty and unethical reasoning that has spawned the rationalization of illegal immigration.
Here is Michael R’s Comment of the Day on the post, “The New York Times Is Shocked—SHOCKED!—That Anyone Would Think It Discriminates Against White Males!”
* * *
I have tried to explain why racially discriminatory programs are wrong to people at my institution, but it just doesn’t work. It is impossible to get them to understand that they can’t discriminate based on race. Most of them have grown up in a world where the courts have ruled that race-based discrimination is permissible. Explaining to them that it was illegal the whole time is just incomprehensible. I mean, it does seem implausible that every single federal and state court in the entire country ruled that the law that said you can’t discriminate based on race ruled that you could discriminate against SOME races. Explaining that they never made it legal, they just ruled it was permissible makes it worse. How can judges give people permission to violate the law for 60 years?
Remember, the Milgram experiment showed that as few as 10% of the population is capable of critical thinking. Most of those people are dismissed as troublemakers by society for their crime of critical thinking.



We can hope Josh is right in saying, “Maybe a reckoning is slowly coming.”
Yes it is. Just look at the politics of young males. They’ve spend their entire lives being the scapegoat of the left and they’re sick of it. The progressives have radicalized a generation against them and they’re going to get their reckoning.
I am in the minority of respondents to Ann Althouse’s poll.
I have no doubt (also no proof, by the way) that the New York Times has been discriminating against white men.
At the same time, I have worked as a hiring manager. In my experience, there is usually “something wrong with” every candidate who doesn’t get a sought-after promotion. Often there is also “something wrong with” the candidate who does get the promotion, but the things that are right outweigh whatever is wrong, and/or the successful candidate has fewer wrong characteristics than the unsuccessful candidates do.
Both things can be true: that the New York Times practices employment discrimination against white men, and that there may well have been “something wrong with” this particular white man who didn’t get the promotion he wanted.
In any case, I’m glad he’s suing.
What was “wrong” with this candidate could be that he once voiced a “wrong” opinion at the water fountain. That AND the fact that he was a white male. And wouldn’t the NYT have some obligation to tell him the reason he wasn’t promoted? Unless the writer left out key details, I think the ~97% correctly defaulted to the obvious position given who we’re talking about here.
When I read that Althouse post, I didn’t vote. I have no doubt that the NYT discriminates against white men, they as much as said so with their “Call to Action”, but that doesn’t mean they discriminated against this particular white male.
It would seem that his job performance got him the interview, but I suspect there was something in the interview that made them decide he wasn’t ready for the promotion.
Still, I wish him success if this suit helps chip away at quotas.