By Howard Levitt
Is our own workplace liberalism moving toward wokeness?
On the one hand, there is the King, who has modified his inaugural speech, albeit slightly, to make it welcoming to all faiths, not just the Church of England. That is traditional liberalism upon which North America has evolved. It is the stuff upon which human rights legislation advanced and employers developed, if not full affirmative action plans, then, at the very least, the encouragement of minority hires. And we are all much better off for it.
Is our own workplace liberalism moving toward wokeness?
This all came to mind when I received a letter from a reader berating me for attacking The Halton District School Board for permitting that parody of a teacher to walk around with giant prosthetic breasts when it had an absolute legal right to require the teacher to be a role model and dress respectfully.
The reader said that it was not the school board‘s fault but that of the Human Rights Commission, which would doubtless punish the board if it required the trans teacher in question to dress and act properly. He wrote that, while the rest of us would be punished for coming to work barefoot, this teacher can get away with it because of radical activism amongst human rights bodies and other analogous entities.
And that is the point of this column.
Not long ago, I would have characterized human rights commissions of being guilty of progressive overreach. But in the ideological battle to the bottom, they have become the sensible adults.
It is the universities, portions of the public sector and legions of workplace consultants and investigators that are increasingly making frontal assaults on sensibility.
Given their loud voices, too many companies are drinking their Kool-Aid.
The result: workplace division which will ultimately imperil the very progress they purportedly, and at considerable personal profit, promote.