Damning study reveals what DEI does to people — and unsurprisingly, it's really bad



Few public and private institutions proved resistant in recent years to infection by the race-obsessive ideology underpinning the diversity, equity, and inclusion movement. The body politic appears, however, to be experiencing a belated immune response.

The U.S. Supreme Court's decision last year in Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. Harvard/UNC, for instance, helped pave the way for the dismantling of DEI on college and university campuses nationwide. Lawsuits and federal civil rights complaints targeting companies' DEI initiatives immediately followed. Likely keen to avoid similar legal challenges and facing pressure from normalcy advocates, multiple American organizations once captive to the race-obsessed program, including Ford, Harley-Davidson, Tractor Supply, Jack Daniel's, and Walmart, have abandoned DEI.

A study published Monday by the Network Contagion Research Institute and Rutgers University provided strong justification for why Americans should dismantle the remainder of the DEI regime sooner rather than later, noting that race-obsessed programming is divisive, counterproductive, and helps create authoritarians.

'Some DEI programs not only fail to achieve their goals but can actively undermine efforts.'

The study, titled "Instructing Animosity: How DEI Pedagogy Produces the Hostile Attribution Bias," noted at the outset that a Pew Research Center study found in 2023 that over half of American workers have DEI meetings or trainings at work.

While the re-education that the majority of American workers are compelled to undergo is supposedly intended to increase empathy in interpersonal interactions, cultivate inclusive environments, and maximize diversity on the basis of immutable characteristics and sexual preferences, the study indicated that there is evidence to suggest "that some DEI programs not only fail to achieve their goals but can actively undermine efforts."

"Specifically, mandatory trainings that focus on particular target groups can foster discomfort and perceptions of fairness," said the study. "DEI initiatives seen as affirmative action rather than business strategy can provoke backlash, increasing rather than reducing racial resentment. And diversity initiatives aimed at managing bias can fail, sometimes resulting in decreased representation and triggering negativity among employees."

The researchers collected various DEI education materials used across three groupings — race, religion, and caste — in "interventional and educational settings," excerpted rhetoric from the materials, then employed the excerpts in psychological surveys "measuring explicit bias, social distancing, demonization, and authoritarian tendencies." Participants in the study were also tasked with reviewing the materials or neutral control materials.

The results were damning.

The researchers found that across all three groupings, participants "engendered a hostile attribution bias, amplifying perceptions of prejudicial hostility where none was present, and punitive responses to the imaginary prejudice."

In one test, researchers split 423 Rutgers University students into two groups. One group read an apolitical control essay about American corn production while the other read an essay incorporating racist CRT propaganda from Ibram X. Kendi and Robin DiAngelo.

After each group completed reading their assigned materials, participants were presented with a "racially neutral scenario" — where a student's application to an elite East Coast university was rejected following his interview by an admissions officer — and asked questions about their perceptions of racism in the interaction. The scenario did not mention the race of either the hypothetical student or the admissions officer.

'Exposure to anti-oppressive narratives can increase the endorsement of the type of demonization and scapegoating characteristic of authoritarianism.'

The group previously provided with propaganda from Kendi and DiAngelo reportedly "developed a hostile attribution bias ... perceiv[ing] the admissions officer as significantly more prejudiced than did those who read the neutral corn essay."

According to the researchers, "Participants exposed to the anti-racist rhetoric perceived more discrimination from the admissions officer (~21%), despite the complete absence of evidence of discrimination. They believed the admissions officer was more unfair to the applicant (~12%), had caused more harm to the applicant (~26%), and had committed more microaggressions (~35%)."

Simply put, Kendi and DiAngelo had students seeing racism and unfairness that wasn't there.

In the other groupings, participants provided DEI materials similarly turned out nastier than the control group.

For instance, in the caste study, Adolf Hitler quotes resonated with participants who were exposed to DEI materials when the word "Jew" was swapped out for "Brahmin."

"These findings suggest that exposure to anti-oppressive narratives can increase the endorsement of the type of demonization and scapegoating characteristic of authoritarianism," wrote the researchers.

"When DEI initiatives typically affirm the laudable goals of combating bias and promoting inclusivity, an emerging body of research warns that these interventions may foster authoritarian mindsets, particularly when anti-oppressive narratives exist within an ideological and vindictive monoculture," said the study. "The push toward absolute equity can undermine pluralism and engender a (potentially violent) aspiration of ideological purity."

The paper concluded, "The evidence presented in these studies reveals that while purporting to combat bias, some anti-oppressive DEI narratives can engender a hostile attribution bias and heighten racial suspicion, prejudicial attitudes, authoritarian policing, and support for punitive behaviors in the absence of evidence for a transgression deserving punishment."

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An Illinois school district promoted radical social justice curriculum in special-needs classrooms, instructed students to not to say 'All Lives Matter'



The District 65 school district in Evanston, Illinois — a suburb just outside Chicago — urged special-needs students not to use the phrase "All Lives Matter" prior to hosting a week of events dedicated to indoctrinating students with woke talking points from the Black Lives Matter agenda.

The Daily Wire reported that the school district hosted a "BLM Week of Action" this past February. The program was reportedly sponsored by a national organization called "BLM at School," which demands the inclusion of "black history and ethnic studies" in K-12 curriculum, restorative justice discipline, the funding of a "counselors not cops" program, and the hiring of more black educators.

To explain to its learning-disabled students why they could not say "All Lives Matter," District 65 schools presented them with a slide show that emphasized concepts found in critical race theory.

The slide titled "Why don't we say 'All Lives Matter'" showed students a comic strip where a smug-looking man uses a garden hose to pour water on a perfectly fine house while the one adjacent to it is on fire. The cartoon man smugly proclaims, "All houses matter."

This slide had a speaker's note attached to it that read: "This is important! Even if it remains here for the adults! This is a tricky concept but should be talked about even if it's just for the adults in the room."

The slide show also compelled instructors to have special-needs students "stand in a circle" facing one another and put their hands in the circle made up of their peers. Students were instructed to "notice how everyone has different color skin."

Teachers were instructed to ask their students, "Who in this circle has brown skin?"

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a parent of a third-grade student in the district said that he was "disturbed" by the instructional materials.

"I think they're trying to undermine arguments that kids might hear outside the school," the parent continued. "I believe they're trying to put a division between children and parents. It's so shocking. You hear about this stuff, but then to see it right in front of you."

A slide near the end of the presentation directed teachers to "read aloud" from a book called "Giant Steps to Change the World" authored by filmmakers Spike Lee and Tonya Lewis Lee.

A note in the speakers' section for this part of the presentation said, "White people need to be taking giant steps."

Congressional Democrats introduce bill declaring an 'unconditional war on racism'



Democrats in the House of Representatives recently introduced a bill hoping to declare an “unconditional war on racism,” which, if passed, would establish a new federal agency called the “Department of Reconciliation.”

The bill was introduced as H. Res. 919 by Rep. Al Green (D-Texas), and its full title is “Declaring an unconditional war on racism and invidious discrimination and providing the establishment of a Cabinet-level Department of Reconciliation charged with eliminating racism and invidious discrimination.”

H. Res 919 invokes Lyndon B. Johnson’s declaration of an “unconditional war on poverty” and Barack Obama’s inaccurate assessment that if LBJ “hadn’t declared ‘unconditional war on poverty in America,’ millions more Americans would be living in poverty today.”

The bill also states that “racism and invidious discrimination — like poverty in 1964 — remain pervasive in our country” and that “systemic and institutionalized racism and invidious discrimination exist in virtually all areas of American life, including policing, criminal justice, housing, banking, voting, employment, education, the environment, and health care.”

Just before stating its resolution to declare unconditional war on racism, the bill states that in “the aftermath of the tragic death of George Floyd” it is necessary for “Congress to take decisive, immediate and long-term legislative action to address the elimination of racism and invidious discrimination.”

In its resolution, H. Res 919 resolves to condemn racism and discrimination as “antithetical to the United States Constitution,” declares an “unconditional war on racism” in which Congress will provide the resources for racism’s defeat, and establishes a Cabinet-level Department of Reconciliation that is tasked with developing a “comprehensive national strategy to eliminate racism.”

The bill stipulates that the Department of Reconciliation will operate with a budget “equivalent of not less than 10 percent of the Defense Department’s budget.”

The head of this department would be the secretary of reconciliation and would be appointed by the president and approved by the Senate in the typical form for selecting Cabinet-level secretaries.

Ibram X. Kendi, a public intellectual and one of the most prominent voices behind the “anti-racist” movement, has previously called for an “anti-racist” amendment to the United States Constitution that would create a Department of Anti-Racism.

Kendi said, “The DOA would be responsible for preclearing all local, state and federal public policies to ensure they won’t yield racial inequity.”

Following the end of apartheid in South Africa, a Truth and Reconciliation Commission was established by the country’s “Promotion of National Unity and Reconciliation Act.” The TRC was led by Desmond Tutu and, despite not dissolving South Africa’s racial tensions, is generally viewed as a successful endeavor.

In 2008, Canada launched a similar initiative to address concerns of Canada’s indigenous populations.

Investigation: The University of Virginia paid Ibram X. Kendi $541 per minute for 'antiracist' lecture



The University of Virginia (UVA) recently paid tens of thousands of dollars for the privilege of hosting popular critical race theorist Ibram X. Kendi for a one-hour lecture on “racial equity,” reveals a new investigation from the Daily Wire.

An investigative reporter at the Daily Wire, Gabe Kaminsky, wrote that UVA paid Ibram X. Kendi “$32,500, or about $541 per minute.”

UVA hired Kendi through the Penguin Random House Speakers Bureau. The lecture was a free event held in late April of 2021. According to UVA, 876 people attended.

Kendi, author of the 2019 New York Times bestseller “How to Be an Antiracist,” has published several well-selling books through One World, an imprint of Penguin Random House.

In an interview conducted to promote “How to Be an Antiracist,” Kendi claimed that it was not possible for capitalism and antiracism to coexist.

He said, “I classify racism and capitalism as these conjoined twins … the origins of racism cannot be separated from the origins of capitalism the origins of capitalism cannot be separated from the origins of racism. The life of racism cannot be separated from the life of capitalism, and vice versa.”

Despite Kendi’s disdain for the American economic system, capitalism has enabled him to sell hundreds of thousands of book copies.

Kendi’s books, along with his public and sponsored appearances, have propelled him into stardom. Because of public intellectuals like Kendi, critical race theory (CRT) has infiltrated virtually every aspect of American life.

CRT finds some of its most avid supporters in academia. Public schools teaching curricula predicated on the worldview emphasized by CRT caused an uproar from parents across the nation. In Virginia, parents resisting tax-subsidized CRT indoctrination helped to turn the tide of Virginia’s recent gubernatorial race in favor of Glenn Youngkin.

When asked why the university paid someone with such strongly contested views to speak on campus, UVA spokesperson Brian Coy said, “The University of Virginia welcomes speakers from a broad array of perspectives to our Grounds every academic year and we often do pay speakers fees or other compensation. Offering our community access to a diverse set of speakers and points of views is an important part of our academic mission.”

However, according to the Daily Wire, UVA does not have a record of paying tens of thousands of dollars to host culturally or politically conservative speakers. The university even refused to officially recognize the UVA chapter of Young America’s Foundation (YAF). YAF is known for helping students bring prominent conservative speakers to their campuses.

UVA paid Kendi to participate in the school’s Racial Equity Speaker Series that featured other critical race theorists like Eduardo Bonilla-Silva of Duke University. Silva, who has claimed that America has normalized “the standards of white supremacy,” was paid $10,000 to appear on a Zoom event for the university.

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Boston Globe and 'Antiracist' author Ibram X. Kendi to create newspaper



The Boston Globe editorial team and "How to be an Antiracist" author Ibram X. Kendi are joining forces to create a news outlet dedicated to reframing the national conversation on race.

What are the details?

"The Emancipator," as it will be called, is the brain child of Kendi and Boston Globe editorial page editor Bina Venkataraman. The two reportedly met last summer as nationwide protests raged on following the death of George Floyd to discuss how to take advantage of ongoing conversations about race. Then last week they announced the plans.

The publication is to be styled after historic abolitionist newspapers started in Boston in the 19th century and aims to "amplify critical voices, ideas, debates, and evidence-based opinion in an effort to hasten racial justice," according to a news release announcing the initiative.

The outlet will be a one-part scholastic, one-part journalistic work that will "feature oped contributions from world-leading experts and community voices captured by student journalists," the release continued.

Today, the @AntiracismCtr and @GlobeOpinion are announcing a partnership: the resurrection of the first antislavery… https://t.co/gqfgoNkE9S
— Ibram X. Kendi (@Ibram X. Kendi)1615902554.0

Kendi, who is the founding director of the Boston University Center for Antiracist Research, said he hopes the new publication will be as influential as its namesake was in advancing the country toward the end of slavery. Perhaps his publication, he suggested, would lead to the end of all racism and inequality.

"When The Emancipator was first founded in 1820, it was very difficult for people to believe that slavery, 45 years later, would be no more, just as I think there are many people today who can't imagine that there could be a nation without racism and inequality," Kendi said. "This reimagined platform will marry the best of scholarship and journalism to analyze, comment, and seek truth about the racial problems of our time."

In his New York Times bestselling book, Kendi advances the viewpoint that America is a fundamentally racist country and that Americans, in general, are inherently racist. The ideas outlined in his book have since made their way into numerous classrooms across the country.

What else?

The new publication, set to launch this summer, is supported by Boston University and the Boston Globe and has been awarded a hefty seven-figure budget.

It will undoubtedly articulate ideas from a fixed leftist perspective. The project will be guided by an advisory board featuring a host of prominent progressive writers and pundits, including "1619 Project" creator Nikole Hannah-Jones and MSNBC political analyst Joy Reid.

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