Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:comments are largely negative. NYT readers have turned the corner on diversity measures, I guess.
NYT subscribers are pretty old now, right? The comments being negative doesn't shock me. Their reader base demos have to be a concern for the NYT.
No. Unless your consider 42 old. Their demos are enviable.
I’m always shocked when a link is posted here and someone says “paywall”. Who doesn’t subscribe to the NYT? I’m not always a fan, but can’t imagine not having access to the NYT.
https://gitnux.org/new-york-times-readership-statistics/
Do you work for the NYT?
I ask only because I know very few people who DO subscribe. I'm 33.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:comments are largely negative. NYT readers have turned the corner on diversity measures, I guess.
NYT subscribers are pretty old now, right? The comments being negative doesn't shock me. Their reader base demos have to be a concern for the NYT.
No. Unless your consider 42 old. Their demos are enviable.
I’m always shocked when a link is posted here and someone says “paywall”. Who doesn’t subscribe to the NYT? I’m not always a fan, but can’t imagine not having access to the NYT.
https://gitnux.org/new-york-times-readership-statistics/
Do you work for the NYT?
I ask only because I know very few people who DO subscribe. I'm 33.
Everyone I know subscribes. Age group 35-50.
No one I know subscribes because it’s moved so far to the left
Seriously? We were longtime subscribers to the WaPo and watched as it moved further and further left. Same with the NYT. Ended those and now subscribe to the WSJ. So, so much better in every way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:comments are largely negative. NYT readers have turned the corner on diversity measures, I guess.
NYT subscribers are pretty old now, right? The comments being negative doesn't shock me. Their reader base demos have to be a concern for the NYT.
No. Unless your consider 42 old. Their demos are enviable.
I’m always shocked when a link is posted here and someone says “paywall”. Who doesn’t subscribe to the NYT? I’m not always a fan, but can’t imagine not having access to the NYT.
https://gitnux.org/new-york-times-readership-statistics/
Do you work for the NYT?
I ask only because I know very few people who DO subscribe. I'm 33.
Everyone I know subscribes. Age group 35-50.
No one I know subscribes because it’s moved so far to the left
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:comments are largely negative. NYT readers have turned the corner on diversity measures, I guess.
NYT subscribers are pretty old now, right? The comments being negative doesn't shock me. Their reader base demos have to be a concern for the NYT.
No. Unless your consider 42 old. Their demos are enviable.
I’m always shocked when a link is posted here and someone says “paywall”. Who doesn’t subscribe to the NYT? I’m not always a fan, but can’t imagine not having access to the NYT.
https://gitnux.org/new-york-times-readership-statistics/
Do you work for the NYT?
I ask only because I know very few people who DO subscribe. I'm 33.
Everyone I know subscribes. Age group 35-50.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's obvious why the opponents don't care. Supporters likely believe that those might be compensated with lower income populations from all races, which might be less privileged than URMs from very wealthy familiesAnonymous wrote:I think it's telling that most of this thread is about side issues like "are Jews white?", "what are the demographics of the NYT comments section?", etc.
No one wants to discuss the fact that there are going to be a lot fewer URMs on T80 college campuses next fall. Neither supporters of AA nor opponents of it seem interested in this fact.
Weird.
Idk, before the decision ,opponents were telling us this was an important step forward to a color blind society. You'd think they'd be crowing about how we're closer to a meritocracy now that undeserving URMs have been shown the door. And supporters were telling us the sky would fall oi AA were abolished, but no one is acting like the sky is falling now. Basically no one wants to touch it.
It would be one thing if it was just ivies, which people hate, but this story is about the whole T80, which includes a lot of state flagships.
I think people - on both sides - are in denial about the size of the gaps that exist between URM students and whites/Asians. Not gaps, chasms.
They think it'll be a few less blacks here and there. But it's gonna be a 30% or more decline. If AOs really juke it. No one is ready for this.
Based on interviewing, this chasm exists after college as well. We get a ton of pressure to lower standards when hiring candidates to increase our diversity numbers.
At my job, the “diverse” employees have proven themselves better employees than the older white men.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's obvious why the opponents don't care. Supporters likely believe that those might be compensated with lower income populations from all races, which might be less privileged than URMs from very wealthy familiesAnonymous wrote:I think it's telling that most of this thread is about side issues like "are Jews white?", "what are the demographics of the NYT comments section?", etc.
No one wants to discuss the fact that there are going to be a lot fewer URMs on T80 college campuses next fall. Neither supporters of AA nor opponents of it seem interested in this fact.
Weird.
Idk, before the decision ,opponents were telling us this was an important step forward to a color blind society. You'd think they'd be crowing about how we're closer to a meritocracy now that undeserving URMs have been shown the door. And supporters were telling us the sky would fall oi AA were abolished, but no one is acting like the sky is falling now. Basically no one wants to touch it.
It would be one thing if it was just ivies, which people hate, but this story is about the whole T80, which includes a lot of state flagships.
I think people - on both sides - are in denial about the size of the gaps that exist between URM students and whites/Asians. Not gaps, chasms.
They think it'll be a few less blacks here and there. But it's gonna be a 30% or more decline. If AOs really juke it. No one is ready for this.
Based on interviewing, this chasm exists after college as well. We get a ton of pressure to lower standards when hiring candidates to increase our diversity numbers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's obvious why the opponents don't care. Supporters likely believe that those might be compensated with lower income populations from all races, which might be less privileged than URMs from very wealthy familiesAnonymous wrote:I think it's telling that most of this thread is about side issues like "are Jews white?", "what are the demographics of the NYT comments section?", etc.
No one wants to discuss the fact that there are going to be a lot fewer URMs on T80 college campuses next fall. Neither supporters of AA nor opponents of it seem interested in this fact.
Weird.
Idk, before the decision ,opponents were telling us this was an important step forward to a color blind society. You'd think they'd be crowing about how we're closer to a meritocracy now that undeserving URMs have been shown the door. And supporters were telling us the sky would fall oi AA were abolished, but no one is acting like the sky is falling now. Basically no one wants to touch it.
It would be one thing if it was just ivies, which people hate, but this story is about the whole T80, which includes a lot of state flagships.
I think people - on both sides - are in denial about the size of the gaps that exist between URM students and whites/Asians. Not gaps, chasms.
They think it'll be a few less blacks here and there. But it's gonna be a 30% or more decline. If AOs really juke it. No one is ready for this.
It's gonna be a decline? I think we're ready for it.
Well if you just point blank hate black people, I guess it won't be that much of a shock or worth discussing...
No, it's more a matter of not taking people seriously who say "gonna". There's nothing much to discuss in that case.
Anything specific you found wrong with the analysis, or do you just have the extreme attachment to prescriptivist grammar typical of midwit schoolmarms?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's obvious why the opponents don't care. Supporters likely believe that those might be compensated with lower income populations from all races, which might be less privileged than URMs from very wealthy familiesAnonymous wrote:I think it's telling that most of this thread is about side issues like "are Jews white?", "what are the demographics of the NYT comments section?", etc.
No one wants to discuss the fact that there are going to be a lot fewer URMs on T80 college campuses next fall. Neither supporters of AA nor opponents of it seem interested in this fact.
Weird.
Idk, before the decision ,opponents were telling us this was an important step forward to a color blind society. You'd think they'd be crowing about how we're closer to a meritocracy now that undeserving URMs have been shown the door. And supporters were telling us the sky would fall oi AA were abolished, but no one is acting like the sky is falling now. Basically no one wants to touch it.
It would be one thing if it was just ivies, which people hate, but this story is about the whole T80, which includes a lot of state flagships.
I think people - on both sides - are in denial about the size of the gaps that exist between URM students and whites/Asians. Not gaps, chasms.
They think it'll be a few less blacks here and there. But it's gonna be a 30% or more decline. If AOs really juke it. No one is ready for this.
It's gonna be a decline? I think we're ready for it.
Well if you just point blank hate black people, I guess it won't be that much of a shock or worth discussing...
No, it's more a matter of not taking people seriously who say "gonna". There's nothing much to discuss in that case.
Anything specific you found wrong with the analysis, or do you just have the extreme attachment to prescriptivist grammar typical of midwit schoolmarms?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's obvious why the opponents don't care. Supporters likely believe that those might be compensated with lower income populations from all races, which might be less privileged than URMs from very wealthy familiesAnonymous wrote:I think it's telling that most of this thread is about side issues like "are Jews white?", "what are the demographics of the NYT comments section?", etc.
No one wants to discuss the fact that there are going to be a lot fewer URMs on T80 college campuses next fall. Neither supporters of AA nor opponents of it seem interested in this fact.
Weird.
Idk, before the decision ,opponents were telling us this was an important step forward to a color blind society. You'd think they'd be crowing about how we're closer to a meritocracy now that undeserving URMs have been shown the door. And supporters were telling us the sky would fall oi AA were abolished, but no one is acting like the sky is falling now. Basically no one wants to touch it.
It would be one thing if it was just ivies, which people hate, but this story is about the whole T80, which includes a lot of state flagships.
I think people - on both sides - are in denial about the size of the gaps that exist between URM students and whites/Asians. Not gaps, chasms.
They think it'll be a few less blacks here and there. But it's gonna be a 30% or more decline. If AOs really juke it. No one is ready for this.
It's gonna be a decline? I think we're ready for it.
Well if you just point blank hate black people, I guess it won't be that much of a shock or worth discussing...
No, it's more a matter of not taking people seriously who say "gonna". There's nothing much to discuss in that case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's obvious why the opponents don't care. Supporters likely believe that those might be compensated with lower income populations from all races, which might be less privileged than URMs from very wealthy familiesAnonymous wrote:I think it's telling that most of this thread is about side issues like "are Jews white?", "what are the demographics of the NYT comments section?", etc.
No one wants to discuss the fact that there are going to be a lot fewer URMs on T80 college campuses next fall. Neither supporters of AA nor opponents of it seem interested in this fact.
Weird.
Idk, before the decision ,opponents were telling us this was an important step forward to a color blind society. You'd think they'd be crowing about how we're closer to a meritocracy now that undeserving URMs have been shown the door. And supporters were telling us the sky would fall oi AA were abolished, but no one is acting like the sky is falling now. Basically no one wants to touch it.
It would be one thing if it was just ivies, which people hate, but this story is about the whole T80, which includes a lot of state flagships.
I think people - on both sides - are in denial about the size of the gaps that exist between URM students and whites/Asians. Not gaps, chasms.
They think it'll be a few less blacks here and there. But it's gonna be a 30% or more decline. If AOs really juke it. No one is ready for this.
It's gonna be a decline? I think we're ready for it.
Well if you just point blank hate black people, I guess it won't be that much of a shock or worth discussing...
Anonymous wrote:Scenario 4 is the dream but, sadly, it has remained just that even after years of effort by very smart individuals and very motivated institutions.
Until that nut is cracked, all secondary schools should have to report average gpa to effectuate scenario 3; secondary school PSAT and SAT info is already known to all colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's obvious why the opponents don't care. Supporters likely believe that those might be compensated with lower income populations from all races, which might be less privileged than URMs from very wealthy familiesAnonymous wrote:I think it's telling that most of this thread is about side issues like "are Jews white?", "what are the demographics of the NYT comments section?", etc.
No one wants to discuss the fact that there are going to be a lot fewer URMs on T80 college campuses next fall. Neither supporters of AA nor opponents of it seem interested in this fact.
Weird.
Idk, before the decision ,opponents were telling us this was an important step forward to a color blind society. You'd think they'd be crowing about how we're closer to a meritocracy now that undeserving URMs have been shown the door. And supporters were telling us the sky would fall oi AA were abolished, but no one is acting like the sky is falling now. Basically no one wants to touch it.
It would be one thing if it was just ivies, which people hate, but this story is about the whole T80, which includes a lot of state flagships.
I think people - on both sides - are in denial about the size of the gaps that exist between URM students and whites/Asians. Not gaps, chasms.
They think it'll be a few less blacks here and there. But it's gonna be a 30% or more decline. If AOs really juke it. No one is ready for this.
It's gonna be a decline? I think we're ready for it.