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.
  • @tburkhol
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    915 hours ago

    It’s a lot easier to point at online trolls’ anti-woke criticism of your art than to admit you made shitty art.

    • Flying Squid
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      215 hours ago

      It’s also very easy for a loud but small group to control the narrative about a movie and get people to assume it isn’t a good movie. Even before the movie comes out, it’s already box office poison. It happened with Captain Marvel. The minute that movie was announced, the anti-woke brigade went into high gear and found every reason to badmouth the fact that Disney dared to make a movie where a woman was the hero.

      • @Feathercrown
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        12 hours ago

        It’s true that that can happen, but you can’t assume it’s the case for all criticism. For example, I agree that Captain Marvel was a bad movie for a lot of reasons. However, The Marvels avoided these issues and consequently I think it was a solid movie. Both movies received hate online, although interestingly I think The Marvels got less hate despite having 3x as many women protagonists. So, how do you know which criticisms are anti-feminist and which are legit? It’s a case-by-case thing, really. Some movies definitely get the anti-woke backlash more than others though. The only analysis I’m confident is incorrect is “all criticism of [movie] is [legit / just anti-woke hate]”, because there are always a variety of takes being lumped together inaccurately.

        • Flying Squid
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          -112 hours ago

          Well for one thing, you can check and see if the criticisms were made before the movie even came out.

          For another, you can check and see who is making them.

          Neither of these are difficult, but people don’t bother.

          • @Feathercrown
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            212 hours ago

            That doesn’t seem reliable. For one, we know information about the movie before it comes out. This means you can make preliminary judgements about the movie. They may be proven wrong later, but they are not baseless. And I don’t trust most people on the internet to judge a stranger’s character accurately enough to determine their motives behind a movie review.

            • Flying Squid
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              012 hours ago

              This means you can make preliminary judgements about the movie.

              This is what is known as “judging a book by its cover.” It used to be that people were warned against it.

              I would bet you think movie trailers aren’t trustworthy. You should if you don’t.

              • @Feathercrown
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                212 hours ago

                Movie trailers reveal far more than a book cover does.

                Anyways, it’s not like this issue goes away after the movie comes out. People still have opinions and other people still judge if they’re based on anti-woke sentiment or not.