Anonymous ID: 05bd09 May 13, 2024, 4:27 a.m. No.20860185   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0194 >>0235 >>0429

NY Judge Merchan expands gag order to prevent Trump from talking about his daughter who was paid $4 MILLION by Adam Schiff to push Russia collusion

 

6:39 PM · May 12, 2024

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https://twitter.com/larryelder/status/1789787522874142770

Anonymous ID: 05bd09 May 13, 2024, 4:33 a.m. No.20860205   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Questionable research claiming benefits to “diversity, equity, and inclusion,” in corporations has been cited by at least 51 federal government entities, according to a College Fix analysis.

A Department of Labor Employee Security Benefits Administration rule expanding the use of “environmental, social, and governance criteria,” for retirement fund managers is just one example of how a series of papers from McKinsey and Company have been used to justify DEI initiatives.

The Biden administration’s proposal cited two studies by McKinsey and Company that claim diverse leadership is associated with higher profits.

These and two other McKinsey papers are now under scrutiny.

“The DoL citing McKinsey studies to argue for regulation weakens the case for ESG,” economist Alex Edmans said in a comment to The Fix. “It suggests that the DoL has already decided that it wants to regulate and searches for any study that will support this idea, regardless of its quality.”

Business scholars Jeremiah Green and John Hand recently found flawed methodology in three of McKinsey’s studies and questioned the company’s body of research. Edman, a professor at London Business School, wrote in March that the fourth study has “the same basic errors.”

McKinsey has not addressed these findings despite inquiries from The Fix.

“McKinsey is a consultancy, not a research organisation, and the goal of its papers is marketing rather than scientific inquiry,” Edmans told The Fix. “That the DoL quotes McKinsey studies with very basic flaws, rather than scientific research, shows that it is engaging in advocacy rather than evidence-based policy.”

Such advocacy occurred throughout the government after McKinsey began publishing its work in 2015. The Fix found that at least 51 executive branch agencies and sub-agencies cited the studies to push diversity agendas. The Fix’s analysis relied on media coverage, available lists of agencies, and hundreds of filtered Google searches.

Officials across multiple presidencies sought to diversify their staff, using the research as justification.

Critics of DEI expressed concern about race-conscious policies in comments to The Fix.

“The real bottom line is that no ideology, movement, or social initiative inside the free market will ever outperform merit,” Mike Markham, program coordinator for Color Us United, said.

“Some believe that ethnic minorities can never get a fair shake in the marketplace,” Markham said. “As long as that belief – however unfounded it may be in any given situation – persists, the DEI flock will look to make excuses for favoring certain individuals.”

Markham said taxpayer-funded entities “should never be in the business of promoting false, divisive, and harmful ideologies.”

The McKinsey citations span across almost all cabinet-level departments, including four under President Joe Biden’s Defense Department.

 

https://www.thecollegefix.com/flawed-dei-research-cited-by-51-federal-agencies/