Fotografía de autor

Sobre El Autor

Heather Mac Donald is an American political commentator, journalist and writer. She was born in California on November 23, 1956. She received her B.A. in English from Yale University, graduating with a Mellon Fellowship to Cambridge University, where she earned her M.A. in English and studied in mostrar más Italy through a Clare College study grant. Her J.D. is from Stanford University Law School. She has worked as a non-practicing lawyer for Honorable Stephen Reinhardt, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, has been an attorney-adviser in the Office of the General Counsel of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and a volunteer with the Natural Resources Defense Council in New York City. Her awards include the Civilian Valor Award (2004) from New Jersey State Law Enforcement Officers Association; the 2008 Integrity in Journalism award from the New York State Shields; the 2008 Eugene Katz Award for Excellence in the Coverage of Immigration from the Center for Immigration Studies; and the 2008 Eugene Katz Award for Excellence in the Coverage of Immigration from the Center for Immigration Studies and the 2012 Quill & Badge Award for Excellence in Communication from the International Union of Police Associations. Her writings have also appeared in the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, New York Times, The New Republic, Partisan Review, and other leading publications. She is the author of the bestseller The War on Cops: How the New Attack on Law and Order Makes Everyone Less Safe. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos

Obras de Heather Mac Donald

Obras relacionadas

The Best American Legal Writing 2009 (2009) — Contribuidor — 18 copias
Race Relations: Opposing Viewpoints (2005) — Contribuidor — 11 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Mac Donald, Heather
Fecha de nacimiento
1956-11-23
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugar de nacimiento
California, USA
Educación
Stanford University (JD)
Cambridge University
Yale College (AB|1978)
Ocupaciones
lawyer
essayist
Organizaciones
Manhattan Institute

Miembros

Reseñas

The Diversity Delusion, Heather MacDonald, author
This author has written such a controversial book that I am sure it will not be featured in libraries anywhere, nor in schools or in book discussions. However, it should be required reading. She bucks the crowd, and much like Charles Murray who identified societal problems that went against the Progressive, woke establishment, she was, and will continue to be, rebuffed and vilified. Honestly discussing the ability for some to achieve is not racism. It is simply the reality. Before we train an unqualified person to be a surgeon, that person must have a basic knowledge, at least, of science. However, the way things are going today, that will not be required. All that will be necessary is a particular background in order to create a diverse environment not based on qualifications, but based on irrational regulations and standards.
There are differences in demographic achievement, not necessarily due to demographics, but certainly due to excuses for failure and success. Those that work hard, generally achieve, those that make excuses, generally do not. Mac Donald has carefully laid out the culture today that rewards failure rather than success at the expense of results, which will be mediocre, if anything, rather than excellent.
Offering certain populations of people, a leg up without requiring that leg to move up, inspires that failure. To compensate for failure, the “woke” movement has insisted that failure be considered success and has rewarded those least qualified with easier admission standards and/or an elimination of any standards whatsoever, when their purpose seems better served. Thus, those who could provide the most to society are possibly the least likely to gain admission to schools that offer them the greatest advantage to do so and be successful. Often, appropriate training is substituted for the discussion of subjects better suited to roundtable discussions. Perhaps these schools will eventually lose their reputations, but an entire generation of mediocre achievers will be the result.
To deny reality is to create an alternate reality. Who wants to choose a lawyer to defend them that is unqualified, that passed through the system and received a license to practice law based solely on skin color or immigration status? Who wants a doctor that was at the bottom of their class because they neither did the work nor were able to do it, but were accepted simply because of the policy of “equity”. Creating equity as opposed to equality, based on false standards and substandard requirements, is not common sense and it is destroying the quality of our education, its students and its graduates. Our once great country is becoming a third world country as it “dumbs” down our society by pretending those unable to compete honestly are qualified to perform in their chosen professions. A tall person cannot be made short without surgery, a short person needs lifts in their shoes to become tall, but will not grow taller. A person unwilling to engage in a conversation with opposing opinions, with different ideas, cannot grow. Their only option, to hide their bigotry, is to shut down speech they disagree with entirely. This is what seems to be happening to our society. We no longer have the option to freely speak to each other without fear of cancellation, of a loss of our ability to earn a living and of societal shaming for behavior that is not shameful.
When a person of exceptional intelligence is denied an education because there is someone else who wants it who is not exceptional, who has not succeeded in school, but earns a place based solely on skin color or background, the end result will be an unqualified product. Progressives have decided that the need for diversity requires that a person should have a leg up and be educated over someone more qualified. So, they will be rewarded with the same degree as students who succeed, though that person might fail in the end and take others with him/her, depending on the duties he/she is hired to perform. The end result is the education of fools by fools, the education of the unqualified at the expense of those more qualified who would not only succeed but would benefit society, not detract from it. If these policies persist, we will turn out a future of unfit, poorly educated and unqualified servants of the people.
The book is excellent. It cites every possible abuse of power by the students, universities and those that fund them, as they fight for ideas that make no sense in a place of higher learning. These places should expand the mind, not constrict it so it can only tolerate narrow-minded ideas or its own echo. However, the book tends to be repetitive, so great is the abuse today of those in the marketplace of ideas, who do not agree with the substandard regulations and march to the beat of a different drummer. As one reads, it becomes obvious that the propaganda and brainwashing of our population into believing that social constructs are more important than enlarging our minds with a real education about our history and our achievements in science and music, medicine and law, that it has perhaps gone too far to be reversed. The idea of forcing diversity and inclusion into all areas, regardless of the ability of the prospect, has been embedded in the minds of our students by angry, agitators rather than educators for far too long.
Americans are not victims, they are achievers, or at least they used to be. The influence of America was so far reaching that everyone wanted to come here, and still they do come, but the results of their coming seem to have changed the trajectory of the country from one of success to one training failures. It feels as if the students, uneducated and unprepared, have taken over and reversed the results of years of success. The children are guiding the parents. We need to stress enlightenment and improvement, not equity and inclusion. If one honestly earns their place in society, they will be included! We have to find the adult in the room again, not the elephant. We need to solve the problems not make them worse.
… (más)
1 vota
Denunciada
thewanderingjew | 2 reseñas más. | Jan 15, 2023 |
Another good outing from Heather Mac Donald, collecting some of her pieces on the Theory, critical and otherwise, infecting scholarship, not just the humanities, mind you, but even the hard sciences, academe, our universities, and, ultimately, our society. Eye-opening and informative, anger-inducing, et cetera. Read in conjunction with Douglas Murray's The Madness of Crowds: Gender, Race, and Identity, Pluckrose and Lindsay's Cynical Theories: How Activist Scholarship Made Everything about Race, Gender, and Identity―and Why This Harms Everybody, and other works that have recently been released.… (más)
 
Denunciada
tuckerresearch | 2 reseñas más. | May 23, 2022 |
Another great critique of leftist ideas, especially in the university. Not as good as Douglas Murray's Madness of Crowds.
2 vota
Denunciada
Foeger | 2 reseñas más. | Jan 3, 2022 |

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ISBNs
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Idiomas
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