Boston Herald

PC intoleranc­e costs ‘anti-diversity’ techie his job

- By RICH LOWRY Rich Lowry is editor of National Review.

The first thing to know about the instantly infamous “anti-diversity screed” written by a then anonymous Google software engineer — who has since been fired and revealed as one James Damore — is that it isn’t anti-diversity or a screed.

The loaded descriptio­n, widely used in the press and on social media, is symptomati­c of the pearl-clutching over the memo, which questions the premises and effectiven­ess of Google’s diversity policies.

The document was meant — before getting splashed on the internet — as an internal conversati­on-starter. The author posits that innate difference­s between the sexes may account for the disparity between men and women in the male-dominated world of high tech.

He states repeatedly that he believes in diversity, and there’s no reason to doubt his self-descriptio­n as a classical liberal. His exclamatio­n-point-free memo is hardly a rant. He expresses the hope that “open and honest discussion with those who disagree can highlight our blind spots and help us grow.”

How naive. The witless and inflamed reaction to his document instead underlines his point about “a politicall­y correct monocultur­e that maintains its hold by shaming dissenters into silence.”

It is one thing to disagree with the memo; it is another thing to believe the views therein should be forbidden. Entreprene­ur Elissa Shevinsky believes that the memo could run afoul of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act — that is, it might be illegal.

In a companywid­e email issued Monday, Google chief executive Sundar Pichai said portions of the memo had violated the company’s code of conduct and crossed the line “by advancing harmful gender stereotype­s in our workplace.”

A line in Damore’s memo about women being more prone to anxiety has drawn particular ire — as if the author made this up. As the publicatio­n Stanford Medicine notes, “Women are twice as likely as men to experience clinical depression in their lifetimes; likewise for post-traumatic stress disorder.” An article in the journal Neuroscien­ce & Biobehavio­ral Reviews likewise says that “female-biased conditions include depression, anxiety disorder, and anorexia nervosa.”

This doesn’t mean that men are superior, just that they are different, and more prone to other problems — among them, alcohol- and drug-dependency, schizophre­nia, dyslexia, autism, Tourette syndrome and attention deficit disorder. It’s not bias against men, or in favor of women, to note these tendencies.

Sex difference­s are value-neutral. From Stanford Medicine again: “Women excel in several measures of verbal ability — pretty much all of them, except for verbal analogies.” On the other hand, men “have superior visuospati­al skills.” Which is better? It depends on who’s asking, and why.

Women tend to be better with people, men with things. Is either of those superior? Women tend to put more emphasis on family, men on their status. Does that speak better of women or men?

As the Google author cautions, “Many of these difference­s are small and there’s significan­t overlap between men and women, so you can’t say anything about an individual given these population level distributi­ons.”

In light of these difference­s, though, it is foolhardy to expect 50/50 gender parity in profession­al life, and otherworld­ly to believe such difference­s don’t have a role in the predominan­ce of men in, say, software engineerin­g.

Obviously, the field should be open to women, and Neandertha­l behavior in the workplace should be stamped out. But a company that believes implicit bias accounts for gender imbalances must be allergic to certain inconvenie­nt facts. Damore raised them and paid the price.

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