• Wrench@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    What the hell does RTO have to do with women specifically? It’s a mandate regardless of gender.

    Reads article.

    Ahh. Nothing. One department happened to be more heavily impacted for females, so suddenly it makes Dell a “boys club” (someone quoted in the article). The only reason provided was the possibility of women with spouses in the military that couldn’t move.

    Yeah, that’s really stretching there and then slapped into the title for rage bait.

    RTO mandates are newsworthy by their own right. No need to rage bait with nonsense to accompany it.

    • SkyNTP@lemmy.ml
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      9 months ago

      Of those adversely affected, most have more than eight years of experience at Dell and most are 40–55 year old women, we’re told.

      I think you are basically arguing that the policy is equal, whereas the article is basically arguing that the policy isn’t equity. Two different values. You are not wrong, it’s an equal policy. But the article is right in saying that the policy isn’t equity.

      • Wrench@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Our first source cited personal experience of the return-to-office order’s impact and told us only two men were affected, compared to 29 women. Our source made calculations about the impact using internal data, and suggested women will bear the brunt of the RTO mandate.

        “Per sample data pulled, this group is disproportionately female,” with women whose partners serve in the military perhaps especially impacted as life in uniform often means relocation.

        Again, that’s a huge leap they are making.

        The sample set could have simply been from a female heavy department. Other departments could be disproportionately male afflicted. We have no idea what their sampling covered, and given how incredibly biased the source seems to be, that’s more than enough reason for me to doubt their methodology.

        Again, RTO is not inheritantly sexist, as this article claims. If you’re intentionally targeting departments with disproportionate representation to specifically marginalize them, then that’s discrimination. If this is a corporate policy expanding many departments, and one happens to be disproportionately represented by a gender, then it’s far harder to substantiate claims of prejudice.

            • phillaholic@lemm.ee
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              9 months ago

              Counting the number of women vs number of men affected by a change is not cherry picking data. It suggests that there is systemic bias in the way the change was decided upon. Systemic bias may not be intentional.

              • Wrench@lemmy.world
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                9 months ago

                Good lord. Re-read the quoted text from the article.

                Even their source isn’t claiming that the distribution that they cite represents all the people negatively affected by the RTO order, they explicitly say this is one person’s anecdotal experience on a very small sample size.

                And then they immediately project this small cherry picked sample with claiming the mandate itself is sexist. And it appears to be the source of the unverified sample itself that makes that extreme assertion on sexism. Which is extraordinarily sus.

                Reading comprehension and critical thinking.

                • phillaholic@lemm.ee
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                  9 months ago

                  Any policy that impacts a disproportionate amount of one gender over the other in any group small or large has the highly likely chance of systemic bias. You seem quick to call me an idiot, but you don’t seem to understand the meaning behind the term, or how it doesn’t mean the people in charge are sexist assholes who hate women. It can be completely unconscious.

                  If the outcome of your decision has consequences like this, the suggestion is you should reevaluate your decision to figure out if you’ve missed something.

                  It’s been claimed that Dell lacks representation of women in higher levels, so it’s possible those making decisions lack the experience that lead them into this outcome. Again, this in no way means they are an intentionally trying to get rid of women.

      • BombOmOm@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Unless an org has clones 1-for-1 by literally every metric, then by your usage, nothing is equity, ever.

    • yarr@feddit.nl
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      9 months ago

      What the hell does RTO have to do with women specifically? It’s a mandate regardless of gender.

      Nothing. This is very lazy journalism and boring rage-bait.

      As a generalization, take any bad thing “Rising mortgage rates”:

      “Mortgage Rate Hike Disproportionately Impacts Women, Minority Communities”

      As the Federal Reserve continues to raise interest rates in an effort to curb inflation, recent studies suggest that these measures may be adversely affecting women and minority communities more than their counterparts. The reason behind this disparity lies in existing wealth gaps between various demographic groups.

      Women and minority households tend to have lower median household income levels compared to white men, according to data from the US Census Bureau. This means they often start with smaller down payments for homes and rely on riskier loans, such as adjustable-rate mortgages…


      Congratulations, you have now turned a generic news story into some cheap click-bait. Note: with a small amount of work you can apply this technique to any negative news story.

    • ALoafOfBread@lemmy.ml
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      9 months ago

      No. This is not legally correct in the US. Discrimination can be direct (women have to RTO, but men don’t) or indirect (everyone has to RTO, but women are statistically way more likely to be forced to quit their jobs due to the change). This is called disparate impact and is a serious issue.

      Now, is this happening in this case? Possibly. Likely too early to tell.