Job discrimination: 1 in 5 won’t hire Trump supporters

It’s not legal in most cases, and certainly not right, but 1 in 5 left-leaning bosses “will not hire” supporters of President Trump, and huge majorities of hiring managers want to know the positions job candidates have on highly controversial issues including race and immigration, according to a sweeping new survey.
What’s more, job seekers reluctant to cough up their views and positions in interviews can’t hide them because nearly all employers sift through social media posts, mostly Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, of those they are considering for jobs.
“Workplace discrimination is a real and pressing issue, and candidates get their applications sidelined or overlooked due to these factors all the time,” according to the survey from Airtasker provided exclusively to Secrets.
“And even when they do make it past the hiring filter, employees can also be the victims of prejudice and biased behavior when interacting with their bosses and colleagues,” according to the survey.
Not surprisingly, about half of those interviewed said that talking politics on the job is a no-no.
But even being political off the job can be a danger.
In a section titled “Lets talk Trump,” the survey found that 20% of left-leaning hiring managers will not hire Trump supporters. Remarkably, 9% of right-leaning hiring managers won’t either.
Right-leaning bosses, by a margin of 2-1, however, would hire Trump supporters.
And if they are hired, Trump supporters face some discrimination and criticisms from colleagues. The study analysis said that 28% joke about Trump supporters, and “23% observed people being both overly critical and making assumptions about that person’s character.”
Hiring bosses also press to know the views of job candidates on some of the most controversial issues.
According to the analysis:
The majority of hiring managers said it was important to understand a candidate’s stance on racial equality (65%), gender equality (59%), and LGBTQ+ rights (54%). Another 38% felt the same about immigration, and 32% would want to know about an applicant’s politics.
While not as many hiring managers actually turned away a job seeker based on a strongly held belief, each of these controversial topics led to some level of rejection: For example, 29% of hiring managers vetoed a candidate for his or her stance on racial equality, and 27% did so for gender equality. Even if those people had been hired instead of passed over, it’s important to understand that a U.S.-based company can still terminate you for your political opinions.

I Asked Thousands of Biologists When Life Begins. The Answer Wasn’t Popular

Shortly after being awarded my Ph.D. by the University of Chicago’s department of Comparative Human Development this year, I found myself in a minor media whirlwind. I was interviewed by The Daily WireThe College Fix, and Breitbart. I appeared on national television and on a widely syndicated radio program. All of this interest had been prompted by a working paper associated with my dissertation, which was entitled Balancing Abortion Rights and Fetal Rights: A Mixed Methods Mediation of the U.S. Abortion Debate.
As discussed in more detail below, I reported that both a majority of pro-choice Americans (53%) and a majority of pro-life Americans (54%) would support a comprehensive policy compromise that provides entitlements to pregnant women, improves the adoption process for parents, permits abortion in extreme circumstances, and restricts elective abortion after the first trimester. However, members of the media were mostly interested in my finding that 96% of the 5,577 biologists who responded to me affirmed the view that a human life begins at fertilization.
It was the reporting of this view—that human zygotes, embryos, and fetuses are biological humans—that created such a strong backlash. It was not unexpected, as the finding provides fodder for conservative opponents of Roe v. Wade, the 1973 case in which the U.S. Supreme Court had suggested there was no consensus on “the difficult question of when life begins” and that “the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, [was] not in a position to speculate as to the answer.”
* * *
The U.S. abortion debate has raged for generations, and remains divisive to this day. As a lawyer, mediator and researcher, I sought to assess whether there is room for compromise. I believed that such an approach could help Americans on both sides develop a shared understanding of the main issues—particularly surrounding the question of when life begins. My approach was similar to that implemented by Yale Professor Dan Kahan in his 2003 gun-control debate manifesto, in which he declared his objective as “not to take any particular position on gun control but instead to take issue with the terms in which the gun control debate is cast.” I was being idealistic, yes, but this approach was not without precedent.
“This dissertation seeks to explain why the abortion debate persists and whether it can be resolved,” I wrote in my dissertation’s introduction. “While the U.S. Supreme Court was able to end the national segregation controversy with its holding in Brown v. Board [of Education], the Court has twice failed to end the national abortion controversy [in the landmark Supreme Court cases of Roe and Planned Parenthood v. Casey in 1992]. The controversy has been resilient for decades, and it grows as some states pass laws to ban abortions throughout pregnancy, and other states legalize abortion throughout pregnancy. [T]his dissertation aims to understand whether the national controversy surrounding abortion is trivial or insurmountable.”
I employed a theoretical approach that was recently codified by graduates from my department: “[A] proposal to have a synthetic approach to social psychological research, in which qualitative methods are augmentative to quantitative ones, qualitative methods can be generative of new experimental hypotheses, and qualitative methods can capture experiences that evade experimental reductionism.” In practice, this meant going back and forth between qualitative and quantitative methods, leading in-person mediations with small groups, reviewing literature, and conducting surveys of Americans and the experts whose opinions they respected. My research timeline was roughly as follows, with each step being guided by what I already had learned from the previous steps:
  • I led discussions between pro-choice and pro-life law students. Little progress was made because both sides were caught up with the factual question of when life begins.
  • I surveyed thousands of Americans using Amazon’s MTurk service. I found that most Americans believe that the question of “when life begins” is an important aspect of the U.S. abortion debate (82%); that most believe Americans deserve to know when a human’s life begins in order to give informed consent to abortion procedures (76%); and that most Americans believe a human’s life is worthy of legal protection once it begins (93%). Respondents also were asked: “Which group is most qualified to answer the question, ‘When does a human’s life begin?’” They were presented with several options—biologists, philosophers, religious leaders, Supreme Court Justices and voters. Eighty percent selected biologists, and the majority explained that they chose biologists because they view them as objective experts in the study of life.
  • I consulted with biologists, including a female University of Chicago Ph.D. genetics student; a female University of Chicago Ph.D. graduate; and a male professor—the biology expert in my department, who later served on my dissertation committee.
  • I reviewed aggregated lists of biologists’ views in this area, studied the opinions of experts who testified before a 1981 Senate Committee on a Human Life Amendment, and the 2005 South Dakota Abortion Task Force. I also reviewed polls of Americans’ views on the question of when life begins.
  • Since these sources suggested the most common view was that a human’s life begins at fertilization, I designed a survey to understand biologists’ assessment of that view. I emailed surveys to professors in the biology departments of over 1,000 institutions around the world.
  • As the usable responses began to come in, I found that 5,337 biologists (96%) affirmed that a human’s life begins at fertilization, with 240 (4%) rejecting that view. The majority of the sample identified as liberal (89%), pro-choice (85%) and non-religious (63%). In the case of Americans who expressed party preference, the majority identified as Democrats (92%).
These data were not as surprising as some might imagine. Philosophers such as Peter Singer and Judith Jarvis Thomson have outlined abortion defenses that recognize a fetus’ humanity, while also rejecting the argument that fetuses have rights, or arguing that a pregnant person’s right to abort supersedes a fetus’ right to life. Unfortunately, that did not stop some academics from being angered by the very idea of being asked about the ontogenetic starting point of a human’s life. Some of the e-mails I received included notes such as:
  • “Is this a studied fund by Trump and ku klux klan?”
  • “Sure hope YOU aren’t a f^%$#ing christian!!”
  • “This is some stupid right to life thing…YUCK I believe in RIGHT TO CHOICE!!!!!!!”
  • “The actual purpose of this ‘survey’ became very clear. I will do my best to disseminate this info to make sure that none of my naïve colleagues fall into this trap.”
  • “Sorry this looks like its more a religious survey to be used to misinterpret by radicals to advertise about the beginning of life and not a survey about what faculty know about biology. Your advisor can contact me.”
  • “I did respond to and fill in the survey, but am concerned about the tenor of the questions. It seemed like a thinly-disguised effort to make biologists take a stand on issues that could be used to advocate for or against abortion.”
  • “The relevant biological issues are obvious and have nothing to do with when life begins. That is a nonsense position created by the antiabortion fanatics. You have accepted the premise of a fanatic group of lunatics. The relevant issues are the health cost carrying an embryo to term can impose on a woman’s body, the cost they impose on having future children, and the cost that raising a child imposes on a woman’s financial status.”
Given those responses, one might suspect that I had asked loaded questions such as: “Since the human life cycle begins at conception, isn’t abortion tantamount to murder?” But I didn’t. I asked an open-ended question to ensure that respondents were able to fully express their views on when life begins. Moreover, I asked respondents to assess the following elements of the view that “a human’s life begins at fertilization”:
  • “The end product of mammalian fertilization is a fertilized egg (‘zygote’), a new mammalian organism in the first stage of its species’ life cycle with its species’ genome.”
  • “The development of a mammal begins with fertilization, a process by which the spermatozoon from the male and the oocyte from the female unite to give rise to a new organism, the zygote.”
  • “A mammal’s life begins at fertilization, the process during which a male gamete unites with a female gamete to form a single cell called a zygote.”
  • “In developmental biology, fertilization marks the beginning of a human’s life, since that process produces an organism with a human genome that has begun to develop in the first stage of the human life cycle.”
  • “From a biological perspective, a zygote that has a human genome is a human because it is a human organism developing in the earliest stage of the human life cycle.”
After assessing the above statements and answering an essay question, the respondent biologists were then told that the survey “relates to the controversial public debate surrounding abortion.” It was at this point in the procedure that I received hostile responses, some of which are excerpted above.
In my dissertation, I proposed three possible motivations for these hostile reactions:
  • Motivated Reasoning: Respondents experience cognitive dissonance when they recognize that their view of a fetus as a human complicates their political convictions in regard to abortion policy.
  • Cultural Cognition: Respondents fear that public recognition of the scientific views they are expressing could lead to other people supporting abortion restrictions.
  • Identity-Protective Cognition: Respondents fear that expressing their views may serve to estrange them from pro-choice liberals, on whom they might rely for social, emotional, or financial support.
I understand the subject of my research might have political ramifications. But, as neuroscientist Maureen Condic has noted, “establishing by clear scientific evidence the moment at which a human life begins is not the end of the abortion debate. On the contrary, that is the point from which the debate begins.” Yet the reception to my research suggests that many are going to ignore my findings out of fear of political repercussions.
I have concluded that one of the biggest reasons the abortion debate can’t be bridged is mistrust. I think this is primarily due to the stakes being so high for both sides. One side sees abortion rights as critical to gender equality, while the other sees abortion as an epic human rights tragedy—as over a billion humans have died in abortions since the year 2000.
Despite the one-sided stance of the majority of 2020 presidential candidates, my research indicates that Americans on both sides agree that the nation’s abortion laws should both ensure some abortion access while also providing some protections for humans in the womb. Indeed, I found that a majority of both pro-choice and pro-life Americans supported a compromise that restricted access after the first trimester of pregnancy, as described at the outset of this essay. This combination of policies is quite similar to the law of the land in many of the most socially liberal countries of Europe, which tend to balance abortion rights with fetal rights.
In my research, I was not advocating for such a compromise. However, advancing my own preferred outcome was not the point of my academic project. My goal was to use my training to establish common ground, learn whether a compromise was possible, and report on the most likely form such a compromise might take. An important takeaway is that both sides do agree on the arbiters of the question of when life begins.
While the justices in Roe could not answer the difficult question of when life begins, the U.S. Supreme Court might well revisit this question in the future. The Court can trust the uncensored viewpoints of biologists and acknowledge that scientific experts affirm the view that a human’s life begins at fertilization—even if some would prefer that this fact be hidden from view.

Steve Jacobs Tweets at @drstevejacobs.
Featured image: Stop Abortion Bans Rally, St. Paul, Minnesota, May 21, 2019.

Who will win the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination?

I've been engaging with folks, mostly libtards over at this Predictit.org thread.
https://www.predictit.org/markets/detail/3633/Who-will-win-the-2020-Democratic-presidential-nomination

It's got half a million posts.  Trying to keep up with the thread is like drinking from a fire hose.  And DISQUS boots us off the thread, re-threads the discussion, deletes conversations, and generally messes things up. 

So I've decided to respond to my inbox items from that thread and post them  from here , that way they're easier to keep track of and I can just ban some libtard if I get sick of them.

Democrats target your gun rights

Democrats target your gun rights

Exclusive: Lowell Ponte slams leftist politicians who want complete gov't control


To some, his remarks sounded like a spontaneous outpouring of emotion. But within minutes of the debate ending, his campaign was marketing pre-printed tee-shirts bearing his carefully rehearsed sound bite.
The framers of America's Constitution enshrined the right to keep and bear arms as the Second Amendment in its Bill of Rights because guns were the most tangible guarantee of power in the hands of the people. This is precisely why progressive Democrats, who want all power in the hands of government, hate gun rights.
But until recently, Democrats trod carefully on the issue of guns. They limited their lust for power to the big cities they ruled, where regulations made the keeping and bearing of arms difficult.
Democrats faced problems restricting guns elsewhere. They lacked the votes to amend the Second Amendment out of existence.
They depended on white, blue-collar, hunter-gun-owning and working-class voters to get elected. But lately Democrats have largely abandoned the white working class.
Decades ago, liberal Senator Frank Church (D-Idaho) decided the only way to banish a hundred million American firearms would be for police and soldiers to kick down people's doors in the middle of the night. This could touch off a revolution, as the British realized after they failed to confiscate colonists' gunpowder and bullets at Lexington and Concord. This cost of gun control, said Church, was simply too great to pay. America won its independence and liberty only because its people were armed. (But this year Australia again conducted surprise raids that confiscated more than 400 firearms.)
Yet now leftist Democrats have decided that 300 million firearms can be taken from 43 percent of the American people, starting with so-called "assault rifles" such as the AR-15. President Barack Obama tried to do this and became the greatest gun salesman in American history. But a RAND Corporation study found all such attempts at gun control failed to reduce crime or violence.
Today's Democrat far-left gun grab has boosted gun sales by an additional 15 percent because Democrats have largely dropped any pretense of wanting only a few kinds of firearms. It is now obvious they aim to confiscate every civilian rifle, shotgun and handgun. Gun control is not really about guns, but about control. Democrats cannot impose an all-powerful socialist dictatorship while citizens remain armed.
Democrats are betting on the stupidity and ignorance of the Millennial generation (averaging six I.Q. points lower than previous generations) to give away our Constitutional gun rights in the wake of a few heavily publicized shootings. The liberal media conceal how many of these shooters are actually leftists – e.g., the El Paso shooter is a radical eco-terrorist; the Dayton shooter was a Marxist-socialist, a Satanist, and a supporter of Elizabeth Warren and the leftist terrorist group Antifa.
And now the Democratic Party and its media comrades seek to gain power from atrocities committed by their fellow leftists. Many Americans smell this deception, which is why the latest polls by Quinnipiac and ABC-Washington Post show concocted "support" for more gun control falling by an average of 6 points.
Democrats are quick to call for seizing "assault rifles," but they usually duck and run when asked to define this weapon. A recent exception was former Vice President Joe Biden, who declared that an "assault rifle" was any gun that had "more than one bullet in its magazine."
In other words, this leading Democratic candidate for president would confiscate every semi-automatic rifle or handgun, and even any revolver or weapon with a clip capable of carrying more than one bullet. He would outlaw the vast majority of all firearms owned by Americans. And Biden is the most "moderate" of Democratic candidates. His running mate will inevitably be to his left, and if Biden is elected would be only a heartbeat away from completely disarming America.
Meanwhile, San Francisco has declared the National Rifle Association a "domestic terrorist organization," and 28 percent of Democrats tell Rasmussen it should be illegal to be an NRA member. But the Democratic masked shock troops of terrorist Antifa are rapidly arming, according to the New Republic, and will be ready to take control when law-abiding Americans are disarmed by dishonest, easily abused "red flag" laws.
We should, however, disarm mentally ill megalomaniac Democrat politicians and other leftists obsessed with confiscating the constitutional rights of fellow Americans.

YOUTUBE has deplatformed RIGHT SIDE BROADCASTING NETWORK!!!!

YOUTUBE has deplatformed RIGHT SIDE BROADCASTING NETWORK!!!!
RSBN ^ | Sept. 15, 2019 | Right Side Broadcasting Twitter
Posted on 09/15/2019 8:41:50 PM PDT by 4Liberty
After 300 million + views of President @realDonaldTrump rallies and 4 years following the rules on YouTube, our live streaming ability was taken away with no explanation. We have ZERO copyright or community violations on our account. We are shocked. Why, @YouTube ? #FreeRSBN
(Excerpt) Read more at twitter.com ...


http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3779015/posts

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"Our Streaming ability has been revoked by Youtube.""As you can see our account is free from any violations":
1 posted on 09/15/2019 8:41:50 PM PDT by 4Liberty

To: 4Liberty
2 posted on 09/15/2019 8:42:46 PM PDT by 4Liberty (The taxpayers can always take one more for the team. - The Government)

To: 4Liberty
This BS has to stop with all of them: Twatter, Goolag and Theftbook.
Bring on the anti-trust lawsuits!
3 posted on 09/15/2019 8:43:13 PM PDT by romanesq (8Chan and its child porn, violence and murders are kaput. So is the QAnon grift with it.)

To: 4Liberty
The left is basically chosing to have the election NOW, alllll this stuff is related to 2020.
This has antiTrust written all over it.
4 posted on 09/15/2019 8:43:52 PM PDT by gaijin

To: 4Liberty
This will not go unnoticed by President Trump.
5 posted on 09/15/2019 8:44:33 PM PDT by Trumpnado2016 (Welcome to Trump World.)

To: 4Liberty
6 posted on 09/15/2019 8:45:33 PM PDT by 4Liberty (The taxpayers can always take one more for the team. - The Government)

To: 4Liberty
Democrats cannot win on a straight vote so they are going to attempt to undermine the election by shutting out their opposition. This is only the beginning.
7 posted on 09/15/2019 8:47:18 PM PDT by Reno89519 (No Amnesty! No Catch-and-Release! Just Say No to All Illegal Aliens! Arrest & Deport!)

To: 4Liberty
Do they have any options?
8 posted on 09/15/2019 8:47:38 PM PDT by Raycpa

To: 4Liberty
This is INSANE!!! We are losing our country folks!!
9 posted on 09/15/2019 8:47:41 PM PDT by pollywog (" O thou who changest not....ABIDE with me")

To: gaijin
10 posted on 09/15/2019 8:47:43 PM PDT by gaijin

To: 4Liberty
What the hell???
11 posted on 09/15/2019 8:48:09 PM PDT by nutmeg

To: 4Liberty
Go to other platforms. Daily Motion for one—but there are others. The more that make the exodus to other platforms, the more Google will squeal.
12 posted on 09/15/2019 8:48:30 PM PDT by Fungi

To: Trumpnado2016
This will not go unnoticed by President Trump.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I sure HOPE NOT!!!!!!
13 posted on 09/15/2019 8:48:32 PM PDT by pollywog (" O thou who changest not....ABIDE with me")

To: gaijin
Leftist CENSORSHIP by Big tech, Google/YouTube!!
14 posted on 09/15/2019 8:49:59 PM PDT by 4Liberty (The taxpayers can always take one more for the team. - The Government)

To: gaijin
The left is basically chosing to have the election NOW, alllll this stuff is related to 2020.
This has antiTrust written all over it.
__________________________________
It has “ANTI-TRUMP” written all over it as well...
I noted their tweet:
This streaming ban will severely impact our ability to travel to and broadcast Trump rallies.
15 posted on 09/15/2019 8:50:18 PM PDT by Freedom56v2

To: 4Liberty
bttt
16 posted on 09/15/2019 8:51:22 PM PDT by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire. Or both.)

To: 4Liberty
They discuss this fact in this video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5T5lZTwl8gM&t=2s
Then there is this:
Twitter Goes On A Weekend Banning Spree As Election Season Ramps Up:
https://news.gab.com/2019/09/15/twitter-goes-on-a-weekend-banning-spree-as-election-season-ramps-up/
___________________________________________________________
The Social media companies are all going full tilt to influence the elections. The DOJ needs to press charges for Election interference.
17 posted on 09/15/2019 8:52:12 PM PDT by Revel

To: romanesq
But the fweeee market will worknit all out!
18 posted on 09/15/2019 8:54:15 PM PDT by Phillyred (Kieran Hussie)

To: Raycpa
It just happened about an hour ago, I don’t know what RSBN plans in response. Watch the RSBN video by Joe Sales (sp) pleading for the public’s help. RSBN has a clean record, they have no YouTube policy violations — other than what Leftists have decided is “wrong think”!
19 posted on 09/15/2019 8:54:58 PM PDT by 4Liberty (The taxpayers can always take one more for the team. - The Government)

To: 4Liberty
Dan Bishop's appearance with President Trump and Bishop's resulting VICTORY in North Carolina was the last straw for YouTube, apparently.And ANOTHER Trump rally set for TOMORROW in New Mexico!
It's time to declare these social media sites MASS COMMUNICATIONS PLATFORMS where individual's first amendment rights to FREE SPEECH shall NOT be censored.
20 posted on 09/15/2019 8:55:03 PM PDT by CivilWarBrewing (Get off my back for my usage of CAPS, especially you snowflake males! MAN UP!)


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