mikeh, on 2016-December-08, 10:43, said:
why would anyone want to criticize opinions that another poster expressed about someone's views, without reading the posts that attracted the criticism, so as to see whether the criticisms were valid?
We could go on ad nauseam
But before I finally give up on responding to you, Kaitlyn, let me ask you two questions.
1. Do you stand by your assertion that if you were a business owner you would be reluctant to hire a black person out of fear that such a person is more likely than a white person to sue you based on a fake claim of discrimination should you later fire the person for cause?
2. Do you agree or disagree that such an attitude on the part of a business owner is a racist attitude? Don't worry about 'defending it on its merits'....every racist can tell you WHY their racism is justified. Simply affirm or deny that in your opinion the holding of that view is racist. Yes or no is all that is required.
1. As I posted before, I gave a test to measure expected programming talent when I needed to hire programmers. As far as I was concerned, that was the only criteria on which i hired someone.
If I had met the number of people that I wanted to hire plus one, I would have tested further. To me, ability to perform the job is more important than any other factor.
Fortunately I was not ever in a position where I would have to hire someone without being able to test them first. However, when I did do the hiring, discrimination lawsuits were not in my cognitive space, but my HR department apparently had their own biases (as in I was the only person that worked for that small company that would not be considered beautiful or handsome - at least until I did my hiring; it was okay for not attractive people to be hidden in a part of the building where nobody ever had to see them.)
In any event, I'd like to think that I could always have some other way to choose between candidates other than race, sex, or religion.
Plus, you say 'fake' suit - I am assuming that the person suing would think it was legitimate.
2. If the person does it because he doesn't want to work with black people, he is being racist.
If the person does it because he has researched the issue and found that on average the costs for handling discrimination suits, even for "good" employers, was $133 per employee for white people but $372 per employee for black people, and the two people were otherwise exactly equal, then he is making a business decision. The result appears racist, I realize. However, someone from Mars who doesn't give a rat's *** about race but is doing hiring only based on financial factors make make that decision. Does that make him a racist? Why don't you get this? It's such a simple concept. It's scary to me that virtually nobody agrees with me on this.
So, my answer to you is that: If the person is strictly thinking bottom line and has no other biases whatsoever, he is not being racist. If the person has some unconscious bias that is making him think that way, he is being racist, although it's going to be hard to show him that. And yes, I'll admit that this may be happening to me, but I'm not aware of it.
As I pointed out before, I would still try to find some other way to break the tie.
I'll try to put this another way. Out of college, I tried to get a job which didn't pay a lot. I didn't get the position because the interviewer determined that with my level of education, I would be likely to work a few months and then leave for a higher paying job, whereas somebody less educated would stay longer. He may have been right; he may have been wrong. Is he discriminating against me because of my education? No, he is simply making a financial decision that I would be a worse choice because there is some chance that I would be trained and then leave.
Isn't it possible that someone is making a strictly financial decision based on studies, and doesn't care about race themselves?