I expect you know that our tech oligarchs lean decidedly to the left. On political and cultural matters these world leaders in high tech have supported calls for gender equity and diversity.
Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg made herself the
leader of the band. Apparently, she does not have enough to do at Facebook and bringing up her children as a single parent, so
she made herself a feminist heroine.
And yet, leaning in, as
she put it, is about the worst advice you can give. Leaning in is macho
posturing. It is a threatening gesture. Most women, by the laws of Darwin,
understand that if you are weak you cannot long survive by threatening people who
are stronger than you are. Given the choice between leaning in and shutting up, most women will opt for the latter... on safety grounds.
The ideologically driven Sandberg does not care about the results of her bad advice.
Now, she has taken umbrage over the fact that one of the
obvious results of the #MeToo movement is that senior males in companies and
departments are far less likely to mentor young women. It’s what happens when
the war for social justice goes too far. It damages women. Sandberg thinks that
men should speak up in favor of women—especially those women who are competing
with them for promotions and bonuses.
As normally seems to happen, the ideologically driven
Sandberg has lost her sense of reality. If it offends her ideology it
will have to change. How many women’s careers will that one cost?
Sandberg is a classical overachiever, but she has certainly
achieved great things in the corporate world. We cannot say the same about
Melinda Gates. The wife of the world’s richest dupe is a philanthropist
extraordinaire. He earned it. She is redistributing it. Now she wants to direct her venture capital investing toward
projects led by women and minorities. She has chosen explicitly to ignore white males... because they are privileged, like her husband.
To some it’s called giving back. To others it’s called the
wages of guilt.
About these two cultural warriors I would ask a simple question:
Did they or their husbands amass their fortunes by following the gospel of
diversity? Did they build great companies by hiring for diversity or by hiring
for merit? Didn’t Bill Gates once remark that he loved the programmers in India
because they seemed to have a programming gene?
In truth, Facebook and Microsoft and Google and many of the
other players in this space made their fortunes by hiring a large majority of
white and Asian males. It’s the truth. It’s a fact.
So, why are they turning toward diversity?
Do they believe that they can eliminate competition by forcing
new companies to adopt policies that will cause them to tear themselves apart
over diversity quotas and to hire less qualified staff. If new companies follow the gospel of diversity will they naturally become weaker competitors?
Do the tech oligarchs believe that their own monopoly control of the
marketplace will allow them to make a few diversity hires, because they are so
rich and so successful that they can afford a handicap?
Within the competitive marketplace, the munificent
benevolence of the high tech oligarchs looks to be less about charity and more about
destroying the competition.
I doubt that they are motivated by anything other than the
milk of human guilt, but still, as a business strategy their promotion of policies that they did not use to make their fortunes ensures that no one will ever build a company as big as theirs, that no
one will be able to compete with them, and that they will continue to rule
the world.
Of course, the fly in this ointment is quite simply that
international competitors have not joined the diversity chorus. In time, the
absurd moral preening that the high tech oligarchs have made a signature is
going to cost them dearly.
Forget about higher taxes. Maybe it's time to break up the high tech monopolies.
As Scott Adams says, "Beware the advice of successful people; they do not seek company."
ReplyDeleteThey preach diversity because their mostly very liberal employees demand it. It flows from the very conservative idea of "Keeping the Troops Happy".
ReplyDeleteIt’s so easy to say yes to that which has no consequence.
ReplyDelete