ArmyRick
Army.ca Veteran
- Reaction score
- 2,763
- Points
- 1,010
Experiences differ I guess.I've lived the white guy in Canada experience of not getting randomly pulled over, not being harshly punished, not wondering if I didn't get jobs or other selections because I'm white. I've been bullied for some things sure, which was terrible, but wasn't just because of the colour of my skin.
I think anyone who claims they don't see colour and it doesn't matter is full of shit, and it clearly still does in Canada and everywhere else. I would my experience to be the norm for everyone (without the bullying part) but pretending it is is just insulting I think.
People I served with had to hide who they were at the start of their career, or had friends that got tossed out for being LGBT, so if little things like pronouns in sig blocks, positive space ambassadors and some other things help continue on a 180 from that, then why not? I don't think it should be an advantage, but I'm not going to pretend that people aren't being disadvantaged for who they are or what colour their skin is, so it's not a meritocracy now, and not going to pretend it is.
served 1990-2018. Infantry. The attitudes and lets call it what it actually is, sexism has changed drastically. And lets throw in anti-gay/lesbian/trans bigotry. Those attitudes got a hell of a lot better in the time I served. In fact, those prejudices I observed were 98% gone by 2004-2006 time frame. Possibly earlier. And it didn't have a damn thing to do with pronouns in signature blocks. Notta. It was REAL LEADERSHIP that did it. Nothing else. And if you have to ask what that means then that is a reflection on you.
Trivial bullshit being forced on the rank and file didn't make things better. Only a bureaucrat would think that.