First they came for the drones.
Kathleen Parker
A glimpse at the USDAs diversity thought police
February 24
By KATHLEEN PARKER
The Washington Post
No, not the unmanned kind that kill strangers from a safe distance but the sort who sit in meeting rooms and repeat slogans until they absorb the proper way of thinking. The killers, figuratively speaking, are the diversity trainers who numb the human mind with rote instruction on emotional correctness.
Would that it were unnecessary to say figuratively speaking, but in an era when fundamentalist literalism is on the rise, it is necessary to be clear. Signal: The following may include exaggerations and sarcasm.
Then again, hyperbole is superfluous when real life is so absurdly over the top. Thanks to Judicial Watch, the conservative-leaning watchdog group, and The Daily Caller, we have learned about the United States Department of Agricultures magical diversity training programs, i.e. professional development opportunities, wherein employees learn how they ought really to think about things.
Lessons include such angst-inspiring tropes as the U.S. has destroyed other nations, we all commit sins of discrimination, and America should repent.
One does not have to be a flag-waving, uber-patriot to find this repugnant.
The sessions recently highlighted are not new. Most corporate employees and all American students have been exposed to this wee-minded busy-ness. More than a decade ago, I wrote that the demise of newspapers was owing more to the Human Resources Department than to the explosion of the Internet. The tidy-desk memo mentality of management bean-counters began killing newspapers long before pajama-clad bloggers began mastering hyperlinks.
Once you kill the spirit, the rest is a matter of decomposition.
Exhibit A is sensitivity trainer Samuel Betances of Souder, Betances and Associates, who appears in clips culled from a 3.5-hour Cultural Sensitivity Training session that have been featured prominently in conservative media in recent days. As detailed by Caroline May at The Daily Caller, Betances leads a group through a process of self-enlightenment.
I want you to say: If we work for a federal agency. Say that. (Audience repeats) We have discriminated in the past. (Audience repeats) Say: Every federal agency, (Audience repeats) has discriminated against African-Americans, (Audience repeats) Hispanics, (Audience repeats) Native American Indians, (Audience repeats) and other groups (Audience repeats), Betances preaches.
In other clips, Betances regales his audience with a little history lesson. Not only did the U.S. steal the lands that are increasingly being populated by illegal immigrants (Texas, California, Arizona) hence, implicitly, they have a right to re-occupy but Americas founding fathers took their governing cues from Native Americans. Oh, and they stole their symbol, too the bald eagle.
I feel so bad about all this that Id like to cede the lower U.S. to Mexico and adopt the chicken as the national symbol. Theres no end to the ways by which nations can make recompense to those whose fates were altered by history. Shouldnt we all just pack up and return whence we came?
This is, of course, emotional extortion designed to engineer behavior while enriching people who have invented an industry around the notion that people can be numbed into niceness and, therefore, more easily managed.
There was a time when such lessons, otherwise known as manners, were taught in every American home. Said homes were not privileged in most cases but they were occupied by a mother and father who, though they perhaps did not adore each other every waking moment, were at least committed to the mutual task of rearing thoughtful, well-behaved children.
Sensitivity training, alas, is one of the many legacies of our sundering of the family, which has led necessarily to greater dependence on third parties to instruct and order. We are unlikely to hear much about that in the next government diversity seminar and, soon enough, there will be none left to recognize that there is something wrong with this picture.
To reach Kathleen Parker, send email to kathleenparker@washpost.com.




