Those numbers are balanced against the number assigned to the interviewer because of people like you.
How so?
If a person's numbers are out of whack, they get to review a two hour human resources video. Two or more strikes and they're done.
Ok, so it sounds like you weren't hiring workers, but rather shuffling workers already hired by your company to different areas of the company or business.
So you're working solely within the people your company already hired.
You made it sound like you were hiring workers. Doesn't sound like that's what you did. So you exaggerated and embellished a little bit, there, didn't you?
Gosh, you should know by now that I fucking hate it and take it personally when you try to bullshit me like that. And to that point, why is it always that with you, the deeper we get into something, the more that something begins to change and morph into something completely different?
So you weren't involved in the sourcing of candidates at all. Your role seems to have been internal personnel re-allocation. Basically, human resources. So you weren't a hiring manager, were you?
The problem is when people like you want to weight the numbers by racial identity.
That isn't what I want, nor is it anything close to what I said.
All I said was that I want all candidates to be considered, regardless of their race.
For you, that's a major problem because it means you can't coast by on mediocrity anymore, and have to actually put in work.
Expanding the pool of candidates shouldn't make your job harder, it should make your job easier because now you're looking at all candidates, not just the ones you're familiar with.
This was never done at my level. It's doesn't take a rocket scientist to start seeing a pattern when some level above us passes on well qualified applicants and hires lesser qualified applicants. They are assessing a higher number: quotas. Percentages. Public Appearances. It all adds up.
But by your own admission, you're not the hiring manager. You're just reallocating already hired personnel in the company. YOU'RE NOT BRINGING NEW PEOPLE INTO THE COMPANY.
So what the fuck makes you think your experience has anything to do with affirmative action? You're not dealing with new hires, you're dealing with people someone else already hired.
You understand that distinction, right?