What I found was companies cravenly sacrificing employees—some of them working-class people of color—who did nothing wrong.
My latest @TheAtlantic.
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theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/…
“For the first time in my life,” he told me, “I wasn’t living check to check.”
Within two hours, Cafferty was suspended. Within a week, he was fired.
He is no white supremacist.
The man who took his photo admitted he likely misinterpreted the interaction.
Most Americans don’t even know the “new meaning” of the OK-symbol.
There's not a shred of evidence Cafferty did anything wrong.
But to prove their anti-racism, the all-white team of investigators @SDGE was apparently willing to shatter the life of a brown man.
They refused to answer any of my specific questions about the evidence they brought to bear on this decision or the process of terminating Cafferty.)
(Shor is the progressive data analyst who tweeted the main findings of a paper by Omar Wasow in the American Political Science Review, and was then fired from his job at @CivisAnalytics.)
But... how do I put this politely... the evidence for that assertion is... difficult to come by.
Some activists explicitly asked Civis to fire Shor for his tweets.
And the company’s CEO, @danrwagner, explicitly told his employees he fired Shor over the Tweets.
(Oops.)
When I asked Civis’ Head of Communications for a list of its leadership team, she gave me an all-white, all-male list.
In the past months, there has been a lot of internal discontent about this lack of diversity.
Is it conceivable that Civis might be more interested in a superficial show of anti-racism than in addressing its own lack of diversity?
🤔
When I pressed Civis for any kind of evidence that Shor was fired for reasons unrelated to his tweets, the response was pretty revealing. Civis asked to withdraw its original, on-the-record statement claiming that Shor was not fired over his tweet.
The racial reckoning of the past month can, and hopefully will, be very positive.
There is still a lot of racism in America. We must not tolerate it.
But that makes it all the more important not to punish people who, you know, did nothing wrong.
These incidents damage the lives of innocent people without achieving any noble purpose.
These injustices are liable to provoke a political backlash.
If a lot of Americans come to feel that those who supposedly oppose racism are willing to punish the innocent to look good in the public’s eyes, they could well grow cynical about the enterprise as a whole.
Those of us who want to build a better society should defend the innocent because movements willing to sacrifice justice in the pursuit of noble goals have, again and again, built societies characterized by pervasive injustice.
No matter how worthy the cause they invoke, you should not trust anyone who seeks to abandon these fundamental principles.
All Cafferty wants is his job back. You can sign this petition to put pressure on @SDGE to right an egregious wrong.
change.org/p/sdge-reinsta…
If any leaders of organizations that work with Civis read this thread, you might want to consider how you feel about innocent people being fired in your name...
There's lots more there than can fit into even as long a Twitter thread as this one.
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