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After DEI, What’s Next?

A magnifying glass examining diversity, equity, and inclusion.

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Ding dong, DEI is dead! But what will replace it?

Democrats will try to give mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to diversity, equity, and inclusion. But the Left cannot reverse the fatal wounds that President Donald Trump dealt this system of state-sponsored racism, as Fox News anchor Will Cain correctly describes it.

Fetishistic, twisted, and cruel programs such as these are now kaput:

Trump’s Jan. 21 executive order dispatched these racist shenanigans before a firing squad.

“Long-standing federal civil rights laws protect individual Americans from discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin,” Trump’s order began. “As President, I have a solemn duty to ensure that these laws are enforced for the benefit of all Americans.”

Trump then lamented that DEI policies “not only violate the text and spirit of our long-standing federal civil rights laws, they also undermine our national unity, as they deny, discredit, and undermine the traditional American values of hard work, excellence, and individual achievement in favor of an unlawful, corrosive, and pernicious identity-based spoils system.”

Also, Disney, Harley-Davidson, Walmart, and other companies are pounding private-sector nails into DEI’s casket.

So, what will replace DEI or, more accurately, outlive its demise? These small-government leaders are highly optimistic about what tomorrow will bring:

Specifically, post-DEI, the Civil Right Act of 1964 will function, as will America’s entire antidiscrimination infrastructure—from the U.S. Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division to attorneys general’s offices in all 50 states to equal-employment agencies in city halls across America. Hundreds of public interest law firms and thousands of individual attorneys will remain all too eager to file private lawsuits on behalf of those who claim discrimination in workplaces, public schools, and government contracts.

If firefighters, police officers, or teachers do not get raises or promotions because their bosses hate blacks, despise Hispanics, cannot stand gays, or are terrified of women, those folks can sue for promotions, raises, back pay, and other forms of relief. DEI’s demise will not resurrect Jim Crow, unleash homophobes, or empower male chauvinists.

What will vanish are conference rooms full of “diversity consultants” who badger white people into feeling guilty about their pallor while telling blacks that their dark skin will cripple their progress and condemn them to poverty and injustice, because that’s how “the system” works. 

Coca-Cola’s DEI efforts urged employees to become “less white” by being “less oppressive,” “less arrogant,” and by making a “break with white solidarity.” The United Federation of Teachers announced a seminar on how to develop “resistance against the harmful effects of whiteness in our lives.” After a backlash erupted, the teachers union stood down. Seattle hosted a training program for “white city employees” to acknowledge their “complicity in the system of white supremacy.” The Seattle School Board declared that “math is a tool for oppression.”

Trump is burying this destructive nonsense.

As DEI is lowered into its grave, the civil rights protections secured by the Freedom Riders, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and other heroes of Black History Month will keep protecting genuine victims of actual discrimination, whenever they emerge.

Meanwhile, Americans can wish a fond “good riddance!” to DEI’s obsessive, relentless clawing at this country’s racial wounds, so that they never heal.

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