A majority of Americans across nearly all demographic groups said DEI initiatives have made no impact on their personal careers, according to a newly released Harris Poll/Axios Vibes survey.

Why it matters: Republican lawmakers and activists have vilified DEI, a term for diversity, equity and inclusion policies used by employers. Companies have responded by rolling back programs.

  • Yet Americans — and businesses — have a generally positive to at least indifferent view on the subject.
  • On balance, most demographic groups were more likely to say DEI benefited their career than hindered it.
  • earphone843
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    13 hours ago

    Being in enterprise IT I’m intimately familiar with this mindset.

    • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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      12 hours ago

      I’ve always felt bad for IT. They hire enough and give you just enough resources to limp along, but never enough to actually do your job well. And I feel like every few years they have to run a skeleton crew so small that something major happens to remind them why they pay you at all.

      • earphone843
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        12 hours ago

        At my last job, we had to get CFO approval to buy a bag of zip ties, and the PO was denied. It was like $3.

        But yeah, we had offices in India with an IT team there, and one of the C-suite assholes loved to tell us how he could replace us with 10 Indians for what they paid us.

        At one point, a coworker stopped giving a fuck and said, “You’re full of shit. If you could do that, you already would have.”

        • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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          12 hours ago

          At my last job, I had three meetings to discuss why we needed SSDs instead of rotational hard disks for a build server. The cost of the employees attending the meetings several orders of magnitude exceeded the cost of the purchase.

        • Bronzebeard@lemm.ee
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          12 hours ago

          The cost of the CFO taking the time to look at that approval was more than the zip ties.