The Trump Administration’s Attempt to End Discrimination against White Men
We’ve all seen the ramping up of anti-White hate in recent years. First, Tucker Carlson interviews Harmeet Dhillon, “War on the Discrimination Against White Christians and DOJ Corruption” where it becomes clear that the Civil Right Division of the DOJ was composed of a bunch of left-wing activists who are now having crying sessions and quitting in droves.
Harmeet Dhillon [00:01:35] Well, Tucker, first, I’ll say thank you for having me here. The Civil Rights Division is the sort of the the the color revolution wing of the Department of Justice, okay? You know, whether it’s a Republican or a Democrat administration, there are career lawyers who are very focused on a particular agenda there. And so when I showed up or when I was when the president was elected, I should say there are over 400 attorneys in the Civil Rights Division. And about 200 staff, so a total of about 600 people. And, you know, Kristin Clark, my predecessor, anti-police, you now, open racist, you know got in trouble during her term for not being candid with the Senate during her confirmation hearings on some issues. And so she had a particular agenda. She got in there and she pursued that agenda aggressively and she had all the staff to do it. Now under the first Trump administration. The my predecessor in that job pretty much left it untouched. You know, he told me kind of like there were the career people there, if you wanted to get something done, they went to the US attorney’s offices. Well, you know, I came in with a different perspective. I think it’s part of the promise of this administration under president Trump to fundamentally reform the government in the way that the people voted for. And so that means In the civil rights division, we should be standing up for the civil rights of all Americans, not just some Americans. We shouldn’t be weaponizing the law in a particular way. We should apply those federal civil rights statutes that many of which were passed by and signed by Republican presidents and Republican administrations evenly. And the government shouldn’t be putting its heavy thumb on the scale in most cases. But in egregious instances, we should step forward and right these wrongs. But what I found there was… A number of lawyers, I mean, hundreds of lawyers who were actively in resistance mode, you know, there were memos out there by former government lawyers telling current government lawyers in my department how to resist if you’re given a direct order, ask for clarification, send 20 emails, question it, slow down your response time, say it can’t be done, you know. So I was actually looking out for that when I came and I did my week of training after getting confirmed by the Senate and then. The next week, I was like, okay, guys, it’s time to get to business. I want everyone to be very clear what the agenda is here. So there are 11 sections in civil rights, and I drafted memos for each of those 11 sections for the lawyers and telling them these are the statutes. So for example, Americans with Disabilities Act, this is a statute that we enforce or Title VII, anti-discrimination or some of the other federal civil rights statutes and then that’s the baseline. And then this is the president’s agenda. These are his executive orders that he’s put out there about anti-discrimination, about anti-DEI, about enforcing our laws equally, and that’s the job. You’re going to apply these statutes within the framework of anti-Discrimination even-handedly and without fear or favor. And this catalyzed hundreds of lawyers to quit the Civil Rights Division, so.
…
I mean, there were career lawyers there who were doing the same thing, no matter who’s a president. And so suddenly, their little fiefdom that had remained untouched, like Shangri-La, was suddenly having to be responsive to elections.
Tucker [00:05:37] So that’s the definition of the deep state, what you just described. It really is. Elections have no effect. It’s like, there’s no way to control these people. They act totally independently from the democratic system. I mean, that’s, that the problem right there.
Harmeet Dhillon [00:05:49] Well, that’s what I found. And so, you know, in response to my memos, of course, they began leaking to the press. They began having unhappy hours, which they would invite supervisors, political supervisors to, to make their point that they were unhappy. We got the point. And they had crying sessions, struggle sessions, crying sessions in the DOJ. They cried? Oh, there was, there was open crying in the halls, crying, crying. Crying, yes. And then one of my colleagues described to me, it was the last day, a couple of weeks ago for some of them, they lined up in a phalanx and approached the elevator together and then they left the building together, you know, to show their solidarity for one another there as if they were persecuted. How old are these? High school students or adults? These are 30, 40, and 50-year-old career attorneys in the Department of Justice.
So the NYTimes responds. For Trump, Civil Rights Protections Should Help White Men.
I loved this line from Chicago mayor Brandon Johnson who “praised the number of Black people in top city jobs during remarks at a local church. Speaking to congregants, Mr. Johnson said some of his detractors had claimed he only ever talks about “the hiring of Black people.” “No,” he continued. “What I’m saying is when you hire our people, we always look out for everybody else. We are the most generous people on the planet.” Good to know that Black-run societies are completely fair because Blacks are totally altruistic. I had no idea.
And: “last month, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission launched an investigation at Harvard University, alleging that the school had engaged in discriminatory hiring because it showed a significant increase in the percentage of minority, female and nonbinary faculty earning tenure over the past decade while the rates for white men declined [to 32% of tenure-track faculty].” But that’s just fine with The Times. Couldn’t possibly be discrimination against White men.
It’s great that “Mr. Trump issued an executive order banning the use of ‘disparate impact,’ a legal theory that helps determine whether certain policies disadvantaged certain groups, even unintentionally. Conservatives have denounced disparate impact because it relies on outcome data to allege and prove discrimination — the basis on which Ms. Lucas lodged her charge against Harvard.” Of course disparate impact ignores things like race differences in IQ, proneness to criminality, and different tendencies to be disruptive in school settings.
Listen to this article · 8:31 min Learn more
President Trump has turned to civil rights protections in recent weeks to remedy what he sees as the disenfranchisement of white men.
In his drive to purge diversity efforts in the federal government and beyond, President Trump has expressed outright hostility to civil rights protections.
He ordered federal agencies to abandon some of the core tenets of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, on the basis that they represented a “pernicious” attempt to make decisions based on diversity rather than merit.
But in recent weeks, Mr. Trump has turned to those same measures — not to help groups that have historically been discriminated against, but to remedy what he sees as the disenfranchisement of white men.
The pattern fits into a broader trend in the administration, as Trump officials pick and choose which civil rights protections they want to enforce, and for whom. Across the government, agencies that have historically worked to fight discrimination against Black people, women and other groups have pivoted to investigating institutions accused of favoring them.
“The plain message that they are conveying is: If you even think about, talk about or claim to be in favor of diversity, of equity, of inclusion, of accessibility, you will be targeted,” said Maya Wiley, the president and chief executive of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights. “They’re conveying that white men are the most discriminated against people in American society,” she added, “and therefore entitled to affirmative action.”
The White House has defended its actions as part of an effort to put merit ahead of diversity.
“The Trump administration is dedicated to advancing equality, combating discrimination and promoting merit-based decisions, upholding the rule of law as outlined in the U.S. Constitution,” said Harrison Fields, a White House spokesman.
During his campaign for president, Mr. Trump expressed concern about what he called “a definite anti-white feeling in this country.” Now in his second term, he has made quick work of addressing it. He has made a major push to root out programs that promote diversity, which he has suggested lead to the hiring of incompetent people.
In recent weeks, agencies have launched investigations that signal the administration’s shift in its civil rights enforcement.
On Monday, the administration said it had opened a civil rights investigation into the city of Chicago to see if its mayor or others had engaged in a pattern of discrimination by hiring a number of Black people to senior positions.
The investigation came after Chicago’s mayor, Brandon Johnson, praised the number of Black people in top city jobs during remarks at a local church. Speaking to congregants, Mr. Johnson said some of his detractors had claimed he only ever talks about “the hiring of Black people.”
“No,” he continued. “What I’m saying is when you hire our people, we always look out for everybody else. We are the most generous people on the planet.”
The head of the civil rights division at the Justice Department, Harmeet K. Dhillon, said the comments justified investigating the city’s hiring practices to see if they discriminated against people who are not Black.
The Office for Civil Rights at the Education Department is investigating whether Chicago’s public school system is violating the Civil Rights Act with its “Black Students Success Plan,” alleging that it favors one group of academically underperforming students over others.
And last month, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission launched an investigation at Harvard University, alleging that the school had engaged in discriminatory hiring because it showed a significant increase in the percentage of minority, female and nonbinary faculty earning tenure over the past decade while the rates for white men declined.
In a letter sent to the university on April 25, the acting chairwoman of the E.E.O.C., Andrea R. Lucas, said she had started the investigation based on the university’s expressed desire for “demographic diversification of the faculty.”
Ms. Lucas said she believed the university may have violated the Civil Rights Act by intentionally treating individuals of certain groups differently from another protected class.
While she wrote that other groups could have been discriminated against, including Asians, men, or straight people who applied for jobs or student training programs, her justification was focused almost exclusively on the outcomes of white men.
In her letter, Ms. Lucas cited now-deleted statistics retrieved from the university’s archives that showed that the percentage of tenured white male faculty dropped from 64 percent in 2013 to 56 percent in 2023. She also noted that while white men made up 56 percent of tenured faculty, they represented only 32 percent of tenure-track faculty.
The data, she wrote, gave her “reason to believe that these trends and the underlying pattern or practice of discrimination based on race and sex have continued in 2024 and are ongoing.”
The E.E.O.C. investigation, which was first reported by the conservative news site The Washington Free Beacon, is one of several the administration has launched in its battle to get the nation’s oldest university to bend to the president’s agenda.
In a letter sent to Harvard University, the Trump administration said it was investigating whether the school discriminated against white men in its hiring and promotion practices.
Both the E.E.O.C. and Harvard declined to comment for this article.
Ms. Lucas’s letter to Harvard was sent two days after Mr. Trump issued an executive order banning the use of “disparate impact,” a legal theory that helps determine whether certain policies disadvantaged certain groups, even unintentionally.
Conservatives have denounced disparate impact because it relies on outcome data to allege and prove discrimination — the basis on which Ms. Lucas lodged her charge against Harvard.
“This is obviously hypocritical on its face,” said Michael J. Petrilli, the president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a conservative think tank and a vocal critic of disparate impact analyses. “Here the administration is using statistics to launch an investigation, and just two weeks ago, they said that they were going to ban this practice. So, which is it?”
The E.E.O.C., the nation’s primary litigator of workplace discrimination, has become a powerful tool for the Trump administration as it tries to pressure institutions that do not align with the president’s agenda.
Last month, it began questioning the hiring practices of 20 of the country’s biggest law firms, claiming that their efforts to recruit Black and Hispanic lawyers and create a more diverse work force may have discriminated against white candidates.
The E.E.O.C. investigation into Harvard was also unusual, former E.E.O.C. officials said.
Using diversity statements and data as evidence is extremely rare, as was a charge of this nature being initiated by a commissioner rather than an individual claiming workplace discrimination.
“Aspiring to promote diversity is not the same at all as considering race and gender in an individual hiring decision,” Ms. Yang said. “They’re essentially doing what they falsely disparaged disparate impact of doing.”
In a statement, Mr. Fields, the White House spokesman, reiterated the administration’s position on Mr. Trump’s civil rights goals, and the president’s grievances against Harvard.
“The Trump administration is committed to advancing equality, combating antisemitism, promoting merit-based decisions and enforcing the basic terms of government contracts,” Mr. Fields said.
But civil rights experts said the administration’s goals are clear.
Catherine E. Lhamon, who previously served as the head of the Office for Civil Rights at the Education Department, said the investigations showed a pattern of “performative misapplication of federal civil rights law.”
“The Trump administration’s transparently vendetta-driven investigations categorically do not focus on fulfilling Congress’s guarantee that federal nondiscrimination protections apply equally,” Ms. Lhamon said. “Civil rights, properly understood, do not pit one group against another but protect all of us.”
https://www.perplexity.ai/search/what-means-the-phrase-nicht-ga-ckRogepcRQCfLh9KOvdkYw
The AI will smell anti-Semitism everywhere as
long as questions are not asked in small slices.
https://www.perplexity.ai/search/if-gregory-g-pincus-and-carl-d-OjiLgNRlTkyiDjbFrkSKxg
https://armageddonsafari.substack.com/p/suicidal-american-tourists-cant-quit
Oy vey! https://www.mintpressnews.com/trump-breaks-with-israel/289818/
https://web.archive.org/web/20190904091859/https://www.ticket-to-timbuktu.com/i-met-a-warrior-from-north-sentinel/
Axels T. always entertaining “cannibal jokes” (and
other nonsense). In my opinion one should subtract
at least half of what is claimed by “storytellers” and
self-proclaimed adventurers like Thorer in order to
come somewhat close to reality. You know this kind
of behaviour from outright impostors like v. Däniken.
https://de.zxc.wiki/wiki/Axel_Thorer
https://de.zxc.wiki/wiki/Peter_Nemec
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQoh7ARxhHc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uKNGq2wWj9s
I find it already striking that such a well-tra-
veled cosmopolitan does not want to give so-
mething back to the world in English. Even 30
years ago, this fool claimed that wrestling glo-
rifies violence, presumably just to stir up outra-
ge in order to raise his profile, because bored fa-
mily heirs don’t have any other meaningful tasks.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k7dTbpHcEws
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hIsauor7z1E
Thorer: The most hateful luggage label
ever printed: “Jew-free since 40 years”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cPMqHzIGWXs
One thing I can assure you:
dis iss vilest tourismocaust!
https://archive.is/FkIqh
https://archive.ph/wip/g6v8c
More BS here https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK6mu_4KnTNJrnxqsRncvnzGfmIJhUrqE
Imagine that you, like all Jews, are absolutely blameless and yet are portrayed as a caricature for no reason at all. This should by no means be misinterpreted as hamless “humor”, but is a serious attack on human dignity in general!
https://www.amazon.com/Hatemail-Anti-Semitism-Mr-Salo-Aizenberg/dp/0827609493
https://thejewishstereotypes.blogspot.com/2024/06/three-little-pigs.html
A mischling collected coins as a child, but this should not be seen as another typical stereotype of anti-Semitic prejudice. Later, however, as one of the countless “survivors”, collecting “anti-Semitic postcards” seemed more lucrative, and at the same time sent the important and saving message to the world: “Look what can happen as long as hatred of Jews is not eradicated (along with the haters)!” https://de.zxc.wiki/wiki/Wolfgang_Haney
https://www.amazon.com/Alltagskultur-des-Antisemitismus-im-Kleinformat/dp/3863310632
In the UK “deep state” is known as “the blob”.
If Trump is truly seeking to uproot discrimination against white or any men, he needs to start with the ‘family’ (sic) courts.