The left will fail in trying to reverse Trump’s DEI death sentence
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 is unlikely to reverse the fatal blow 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:
- PBS allocated $1.3 million to âallow indigenous journalists to challenge existing narratives about climate change.â
Cecilia Loving, the networkâs recently resigned senior VP of DEI, launched âindigenous healing circles.â
According to The Free Pressâ Josh Code, an internal 2023 presentation explained that âthe vulnerability, intimacy, and trust developed through the safe container of circles supports our endorphin system, which in turn stimulates more trust.â
- Trumpâs new Department of Government Efficiency unearthed $101 million in US Department of Education DEI grants, including one for âfaculty workshops entitled âDecolonizing the Curriculum.ââ
Another aimed to âhelp students understand/interrogate the complex histories involved in oppression, and help students recognize areas of privilege and power on an individual and collective basis.â
- A âvast DEI bureaucracyâ within the US military has promoted ârace- and sex-based scapegoating and stereotyping,â reports Arizona State Universityâs Center for American Institutions.
- MaineHealth hospital DEI executive Ryan Polly hosted an âantiracist prayerâ in 2023.
He beseeched fellow Caucasians to apologize for being white and âchallenge the systems that have been designed to give us the advantage and oppress everyone else.â
Trumpâs Jan. 21 executive order buried these racist shenanigans.
âLongstanding Federal civil-rights laws protect individual Americans from discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin,â Trumpâs order began.
âAs President, I have a solemn duty to ensure that these laws are enforced for the benefit of all Americans.â
Trump then lamented that DEI policies ânot only violate the text and spirit of our longstanding 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.â
Also, Disney, Harley-Davidson, Walmart and other companies are pounding private-sector nails into DEIâs casket.
So, what will replace DEI or, more accurately, outlive its demise?
âAssuming Trumpâs order to abolish DEI programs survives judicial challenges, the various civil rights acts Congress has passed will remain in force,â predicts Roger Pilon, the Cato Instituteâs Senior Fellow in Constitutional Studies.
âWhat will end is the discrimination those DEI programs entail â in the name of anti-discrimination.â
âThe end of DEI heralds the return of meritocracy,â says Horace Cooper, a fellow co-founder of Project 21, the black-conservative network.
âSmart blacks, browns and whites need not fear they wonât be allowed to achieve. A merit-based society is far from the return of Jim Crow. Jim Crow specifically stood for the notion that talent had to take a back seat to race.âÂ
âIt was immoral, yes, but it was also inefficient because it precluded on the basis of race individuals regardless of how capable they were. Americaâs Golden Era absolutely requires a full-throated embrace of merit. I, for one, welcome it!â
âThe near disappearance of deliberate, invidious discrimination against legally protected classes gave rise to the DEI complex in the first place,â explains the Manhattan Instituteâs Heather Mac Donald, author of the jaw-dropping jeremiad âWhen Race Trumps Merit.â
âIf actual, invidious discrimination were such a problem, the race hustlers would not have found a substitute for it. Real discrimination will remain illegal and actionable â if anyone can find it.â
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 âGood riddance!â to DEIâs obsessive, relentless clawing at this countryâs racial wounds, so that they never heal.
Deroy Murdock is a Manhattan-based Fox News contributor.
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