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4 votes
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US President Donald Trump issues ‘freedom to discriminate’ healthcare order
20 votes -
No Spanish allowed: Texas school museum revisits history of segregation
8 votes -
Armenian MPs call for trans activist to be burned alive after historic speech
10 votes -
The company that sells love to America had a dark secret
8 votes -
New York teacher, fired for a years-old topless selfie, claims sex discrimination in $3M lawsuit
22 votes -
US Appeals Court rules key anti-age discrimination protections don’t apply to job seekers, only employees
10 votes -
Arkansas court rules city can't enforce LGBTQ protections
9 votes -
Data on discrimination
5 votes -
I was a cable guy. I saw the worst of America
42 votes -
Emerging consensus on LGBT issues: Findings from the 2017 American Values Atlas
4 votes -
Prime Minister Scott Morrison faces fresh fight on LGBTI discrimination from new campaign machine
4 votes -
Why tips won. They’re outdated. They’re discriminatory. And they aren’t going anywhere.
15 votes -
"Queer people are allowed to exist – but only as long as they’re of a certain stock": 'The Wound' star Nakhane
5 votes -
Beliefs about homosexuality predict intentions to discriminate
6 votes -
One in three LGBTI managers are afraid to be out at work: study
4 votes -
Anti-transgender legislation devastates trans children — even when it fails
9 votes -
'Distracted boyfriend' advert ruled sexist
19 votes -
House Appropriations Republicans adopt "license to discriminate" amendment
13 votes -
How to destroy people: Japan's untouchables
11 votes -
How the “happiest Muslims in the world” are coping with their happiness
8 votes -
Japanese medical school deducted points from exam scores of female applicants
12 votes -
How hidden bias can stop you getting a job
6 votes -
Australian unions seek to end religious bodies' right to discriminate in hiring
11 votes -
Transgender teenager Aliza Johnson tackles discrimination in regional town
6 votes -
Discrimination based on English (and accent)
I posted an article yesterday about name-blind hiring processes, and it got me thinking of discrimination slightly differently. I actually don't feel that we run into outright racial...
I posted an article yesterday about name-blind hiring processes, and it got me thinking of discrimination slightly differently.
I actually don't feel that we run into outright racial discrimination as much nowadays. Instead it's more subtle. It's not about technical merit, but about cultural fit. Often times, distilling down to one skill - English (both spoken and written).
It brings up questions such as:
- Can a candidate communicate verbally for the job? (Technical, though sometimes this may be judge harder than for a native English speaker that isn't always clear)
- Do they "get" jokes and other subtleties? (Cultural fit)
- Do they have an accent? How heavy is it?
I believe this is for a couple reasons:
- Candidate just can't display enough charm or charisma during the hiring process
- Raise doubts about a candidate's education/upbringing. This in itself is discriminatory (though location is not a protected class), but some regions are though to train their students in more blunt force manners than skills in problem solving
What do you all think?
11 votes -
A jury may have sentenced a man to death because he’s gay. And the Justices don’t care.
17 votes -
It's a piece of cake to bake a pretty cake: LGBT+ discrimination
Well, there comes a time in every community's existence where someone gets an idea for discussion from another thread he wishes were better framed. So buckle in. This discussion is intended to sit...
Well, there comes a time in every community's existence where someone gets an idea for discussion from another thread he wishes were better framed. So buckle in. This discussion is intended to sit at an uncomfortable cultural crossroads.
In the EU, gay spouses are now able to have the same freedom of movement rights as straight spouses. The Supreme Court in the United States ruled that a baker was treated unfairly by a Colorado regulatory commission when they tried to suss out if he discriminated against a gay couple who wanted to purchase a wedding cake.
In Brazil (you thought I was going to let this one be), courts have explicitly allowed conversion therapy to continue.
In Chechnya (a part of Russia that I always seem to struggle to spell), you could be hunted down and tortured or killed if you were gay, with people turning their own family members over to the local government. The local government, in absurdity, claimed after the purge that there were "no gays" in Chechnya, so there could have been no purge.
The point I'm trying to make here is that LGBT+ discrimination is an issue that should touch just about everywhere.
Before we get too deep, a point on terms. Discrimination, strictly speaking, is separating one thing from another. It is not necessarily a hostile act. If I say "you can drive only if your vision is good enough to read signs while you drive," that is discrimination on the basis of your ability to see, but most people aren't likely to say it's unreasonable discrimination (there is a rather obvious safety implication, for starters). Similarly, if you tell women to go to the bathroom in one space, and men to go to the bathroom in another space, that is discrimination based on gender. Is it reasonable discrimination? That might depend on if you're trans, and what state you're in.
This topic has to be more limited than this set up implies it will be. We won't be able to narrow things well enough to have a meaningful discussion otherwise. Today, we're just going to touch on the simple (ha!) matter of whether baking a wedding cake is art, whether refusing a wedding cake to a gay couple is discrimination, and what a government should be expected to do about it. So, the questions:
- Is making a custom wedding cake for a wedding "art"?
- Is refusing a custom wedding cake to a couple because it would be for a cause you do not support discrimination on the basis of that couple's identity?
- How should a just government resolve a dispute between a couple who feel unreasonably discriminated against and an artist who feels compelled to use speech for a cause they do not support?
And a bonus question:
- What role should a judicial branch have in advancing various groups' rights? Does relying on this less democratic method for securing rights open a movement up to counter-reaction or is the counter-reaction simply an inevitable consequence of a movement's success?
22 votes -
US Supreme Court hands narrow win to baker over gay couple dispute
18 votes -
Supreme Court rules narrowly for Colorado baker who wouldn't make same-sex wedding cake
10 votes -
Four ways your Google searches and social media affect your opportunities in life
4 votes -
New Toronto Declaration calls on algorithms to respect human rights
8 votes