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[return to "For black CEOs in Silicon Valley, humiliation is a part of doing business"]
1. darth_+Cj1[view] [source] 2020-06-16 22:44:36
>>saeedj+(OP)
For everyone arguing "honest mistake" or "just chance", think about the person at the receiving end. For the person making that mistake, it could be their first, but for the person at the receiving end it could be the hundredth, and that too, not without consequences. The first 3-4 times I got "randomly selected" for additional screening at the airport, I was like whatever. But years later after my probably 100th "random selection", I am mostly just upset. Watching traveler after traveler go around you, staring at you, while you're being subjected to additional search, your baggage laid out open in front of everyone, while being asked questions like "have you recently been in contact with any chemicals?" and so on. It is humiliating. And this is just one aspect of their life. Imagine having to face "honest mistakes" everyday in all kinds of different aspects of your life.
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2. sfj+aH1[view] [source] 2020-06-17 01:32:41
>>darth_+Cj1
Did you ever think it might be the way you dress or your demeanor? Obviously, it could be racial also, but how could you know that?
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3. darth_+Dw6[view] [source] 2020-06-18 17:16:08
>>sfj+aH1
Ahh yes, the good ol' "how you dress", "how you carry yourself", "your personal hygiene", "how you talk" or one of the other hundred responses I get from people immediately when I talk about the unfair treatment I've seen in my life. All I can say is no it has nothing to do with how I dress, because half of those "random checks" were during my business trips when I worked for a major consulting firm. So I doubt my suit and tie had anything to do with it.
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