Very well, overall -- but with evidence lately that some don't want to get with the tour and join the rest of us here in the 21st Century.
First, ever since Trump started babbling about it, the North American right wing has concluded that DEI is just awful in every way. Somehow, trying to be fair and equitable and thoughtful to people of all genders, colours and religions by learning about different cultures and being willing to listen better is now a very terrible thing -- its particularly mean to those rich white guys like Trump who apparently don't get hired first anymore.
FIRST READING: Saskatchewan professor blogs his way through mandatory anti-racism 'boot camp'Hopper's article begins by describing the workshop content, then continues with the point of view of one participant, a U of S law professor Mickael Plaxton who posted dismissive tweets about his experience on X beginning here and ending here.
Participants told that 'meritocracy' leads to 'inequities'
A University of Saskatchewan law professor provided a unique window into the equity mandates now ubiquitous at Canadian universities by blogging the details of a compulsory anti-racist “learning journey.”
....Michael Plaxton, an expert in criminal law and statutory interpretation, alternately called the course a “mandatory DEI bootcamp” and a “forced march of self discovery.” He noted that it began with a declaration of “we’re not here to debate.”Yeah and you should be embarrassed now, fella, because you got played right royally, by a national media that now has adopted Trump's anti-DEI agenda and will seize on any excuse to echo it.
....Plaxton told National Post that he wasn’t any kind of “crusader on the whole DEI thing,” and that he didn’t think any of the course leaders “were anything other than earnest, well-meaning people.”
“No one was rude to me,” he wrote in an email, adding that he mostly felt “awkward” about the whole affair....






















