Resumes including ‘they/them’ pronouns are more likely to be overlooked, new report finds
Of course they are. It’s a warning sign of trouble to come.
A public record of some of my thoughts. Feel free to comment, but don't expect me to respond.
Resumes including ‘they/them’ pronouns are more likely to be overlooked, new report finds
Of course they are. It’s a warning sign of trouble to come.
Why?
I saw this online.
My sources are telling me: Tucker was all set to go live tonight. He probably had plans to talk about the lawsuit and clear his name. Producers were prepping guests and slots of Monday’s show. Corporate nixed the idea and Tucker up and quit!
Or … has Carlson gone too far, with speeches like this?
I like the speech. This was my favorite part.
Maybe we should all just take ten minutes a day to say a prayer about it. [“It” being moral corruption in society.] I’m serious. Like, why not? And I’m saying that to you, not as some kind of evangelist, I’m literally saying that to you as an Episcopalian. The Samaritans of our time. I’m coming to you from the most humble and lowly theological position you can. I’m literally an Episcopalian. Okay? And even I have concluded it might be worth taking just ten minutes our of your busy schedule to say a prayer for the future, and I hope you will.
He’s slandering the Samaritans by comparing them to the Episcopalians, but ….
I am more and more convinced that we have three possible futures.
I can’t see any other possible future based on the mess we’re in.
Today I saw a statistic that 40 percent of teens who “come out” (as LGBT+&SGF or whatever) are thrown out of their homes. I doubt that number (97.3% of internet statistics are lies), but I’m sure some percentage of kids are kicked out when they “come out.”
What are we to make of the phenomenon? Should a kid ever get thrown out of his house? And in what situations?
I recently heard an interview with Dennis Prager in which he criticized the notion of “unconditional love.” He says a lot of Christian callers to his radio show promote the idea, but he maintains it’s not biblical and makes no sense.
Hmm. Here’s how I would evaluate the question.
First, we have to make a distinction between (1) unconditional love in the sense that you always want the best for someone, and (2) having no conditions on a relationship — like remaining under Dad’s roof no matter what you do. That is clearly stupid. There has to be a point at which even a beloved son is kicked out.
Second, we have to make a distinction between chosen and unchosen behaviors. For example, if we assume (as seems to be the case) that homosexuality is not a choice, there’s a big difference between kicking a kid out because he’s gay and kicking him out because he keeps bringing his boyfriends home.
It seems some people believe that accepting homosexuality requires accepting anything that homosexuals do, which is ridiculous. Accepting heterosexuality does not mean that you allow your daughter to bring all her boyfriends home.
Third, we have pretty much lost the idea that a family is allowed to have standards. There seems to be an assumption that parents are to love their children unconditionally, by which people mean that they have to put up with just about whatever they do — short of repeatedly trying to burn the house down, or something like that.
Parents can have standards, and they can say “if you want to live under my roof, you’ll do _____.”
Within limits, of course. And there’s the rub. How far do the limits go? What can parents insist on?
The point of the statistic was to make us feel bad for these poor, homeless kids, as if they are victims of an intolerant society.
I’m sure some are and some aren’t.
Perhaps some were kicked out simply for being gay, while others were kicked out for outrageous behavior.
… I’ve created a new daily podcast in which I reflect (very briefly) on issues affecting the publishing industry.
I hope Budweiser gets enough of a bloody nose from their recent PR blunder that it sets wokeness back a little (and I fully support the boycott), but there’s one aspect of this anti-Budweiser campaign that bothers me as a homebrewer and somewhat of an arm-chair beer expert.
People keep saying Budweiser is bad beer. That’s nonsense. Budweiser is expertly crafted to convert a European style for American tastes. That’s a big part of why it sells so well.
It’s not my style of beer. I prefer beers that have more to them. But not liking a style does not make it “bad beer.”
That would be like saying that a Camry is a bad car because you prefer SUVs. Your personal preference does not change the quality of the product.
Americans tend to prefer lighter beers. That’s been true for a very long time, and that’s why most American beers are brewed the way they’re brewed — to give people what they prefer. And judging by the sales, lots of people like Budweiser products.
There are situations where it’s fair to criticize a product that a lot of people like. For example, someone might say that those weird slices of “cheese food” are not real cheese.
Fair enough. They’re often only 50 percent cheese, mixed with other stuff.
But Budweiser is not “beer mixed with non-beer.” It doesn’t use strange ingredients. (Unless you think beer can’t include rice.) It’s just a light version of a Bohemian lager. And if it weren’t for this Mulvaney nonsense, I might go have one. My throat’s a little dry right now.