The Folly of Equity

Estimated Reading Time: 5 minutes

“Equity” has replaced “equality” as the latest buzzword in America’s never-ending game of Victimology, which in turn has replaced the board game of Monopoly in popularity.

As Vice President Kamala Harris has said, “Equitable treatment means we all end up in the same place.”  In other words, equity means equal outcomes, not equality under the law or equality of opportunity.

When I first saw a photo of Harris, I thought she looked Italian, given her swarthy complexion, dark hair and prominent nose. But, looks aside, her Jamaican father and East Indian mother were nothing like my Italian parents and grandparents, at least in terms of accomplishments and social standing.

Her dad was a tenured professor at Stanford, and her mom had a PhD in endocrinology and nutrition. My dad was a non-union tile setter, and my mom, a clerk. My dad’s dad was an immigrant coal miner in southern Illinois before moving to St. Louis to work in low-wage jobs. My mom, who was orphaned as an infant, was raised by her immigrant aunt and uncle in a tiny four-flat on a waiter’s pay. They never owned a car.

My ancestors didn’t play Victimology. I never heard them express racial or class resentment towards upper-income White Anglo-Saxon Protestants who dominated the professions and the top levels of government and industry. Nor did they ever complain about the ugly stereotypes, prejudices and discrimination faced by Italians and other Southern Europeans for the first half of the twentieth century. Fortunately, my grandparents made it to America before the Immigration Act of 1924 closed the immigration gates to people like them—people who were seen as inferior and non-white.

I took the example of my forebears with me to my first formal job, where I started working at the age of fifteen as the only non-black on an otherwise all-black staff of porters, janitors, cooks, and waiters at an exclusive country club, where membership was closed to blacks, Jews and Italians. On my first day, my boss, a black man named Jewell, told me to clean the disgustingly filthy employee restroom in the dark, dingy basement of the clubhouse. For extra money on my off-hours, I would wash and wax the big Pontiacs and Buicks of the black waiters, all of whom had learned their trade, manners, and impeccable dress and grooming as waiters on Pullman trains. They were at the top of the employee pecking order, and Henry, the head waiter, was on top of them.

That experience probably led me to being at the leading edge of equal rights, equal opportunity, and affirmative action over my corporate career, culminating in the diversity movement, which was born in 1990 from the landmark Harvard Business Review article by R. Roosevelt Thomas Jr, “From Affirmative Action to Affirming Diversity.” My work in this regard included the conducting of racial sensitivity training to address unconscious biases.

Now, self-righteous Americans who haven’t done a damn thing but virtue signal about race or play Victimology have typecast ethnics like me as white, privileged and racist, thus revealing their profound ignorance of the full racial/ethnic history of their country. At the same time, they espouse the Marxist notion of equal outcomes, which proved to be a fantasy under communism and is total folly in a liberal, capitalist democracy, where citizens continually change places on the socioeconomic ladder, as demonstrated by Kamala Harris and her parents.

The levelers have a lot of work to do. This commentary ends with the list below of 107 selected racial/ethnic groups in the US ranked by their median household income, which ranges from $126,705 for East Indians to $45,903 for Burmese. (Income doesn’t include the considerable amount of transfer payments and tax credits that go to lower-income Americans.)  

There are many more unique ethno-cultural groups in the US than those on the list.  How do the levelers propose making the rankings more equitable?  Do they even track all of these groups and know how many are corporate executives, members of boards of directors, members of Congress, students in the Ivy League, doctors, lawyers, or other professionals?  Do diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives include all of these groups or exclude many of them? Which ones are included and excluded?

The levelers won’t answer such questions because they know that the game of Victimology is rigged.

Rank   Ethnicity

1           East Indian
2           Taiwanese
3           Australian
4           Filipino
5           South African
6           Basque
7           Indonesian
8           Latvian
9           Macedonian
10         Pakistani
11          Iranian
12         Lebanese
13         Austrian
14         Russian
15         Lithuanian
16         Chinese
17         Japanese
18         Turkish
19         Swiss
20        Slovene
21         Italian
22         Greek
23         Israeli
24         Romanian
25         Ukrainian
26         Serbian
27         Croatian
28         Bulgarian
29         Slovak
30         Swedish
31          Czech
32          Norwegian
33          Scottish
34          Polish
35          Danish
36          Portuguese
37          Belgian
38          English
39          Welsh
40          Hungarian
41           Finnish
42           Armenian
43           Korean
44           Canadian
45           Irish
46           French Canadian
47           Argentine
48           German
49           Chilean
50           Syrian
51           Hmong
52           Scotch-Irish
53           Guamanian
54           Bolivian
55           Vietnamese
56           Albanian
57           Cambodian
58           Spanish
59           French
60           Panamanian
61            Dutch
62           Ghanaian
63           Nigerian
64           Cajun
65           Bangladeshi
66           Guyanese
67           Samoan
68           Egyptian
69           Palestinian
70           Ecuadorian
71            Colombian
72           Peruvian
73           Thai
74           Laotian
75           Polynesian
76           Barbadian
77           Brazilian
78           Nepalese
79           Costa Rican
80           Belizean
81            Assyrian/Chaldean/Syriac
82           Nicaraguan
83           Micronesian
84           Native Hawaiian
85           Trinidadian and Tobagonian
86           Jamaican
87           Uruguayan
88           Jordanian
89           West Indian
90           Salvadoran
91           American
92           Haitian
93           Pennsylvania Dutch
94           Cuban
95           Mexican
96           Cape Verdean
97           Venezuelan
98           Ethiopian
99           Puerto Rican
100         Moroccan
101         Appalachian
102         Guatemalan
103         Iraqi
104         Honduran
105         Dominican
106         Afghan
107         Burmese

Source:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ethnic_groups_in_the_United_States_by_household_income

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