Jesse Jackson come after the Silcon Valley

cawacko

Well-known member
I'm not a tech guy but are there a lack of blacks and Hispanics in tech because they are being discriminated against or because blacks and Hispanics tend to study STEM less and those are the degrees from whom tech companies tend to hire most?



Jesse Jackson to take on tech's lack of diversity


Rev. Jesse Jackson plans to lead a delegation to the Hewlett Packard annual shareholders meeting on Wednesday to bring attention to Silicon Valley's poor record of including blacks and Latinos in hiring, board appointments and startup funding.

Jackson's strategy borrows from the traditional civil rights era playbook of shaming companies to prod them into transformation. Now he is bringing it to the age of social media and a booming tech industry known for its disruptive innovation.

"We're talking about a sector that responds to future trends," says Ronald C. Parker, president and CEO of the Executive Leadership Council, a group of current and former African-American Fortune 500 executives who work to increase diversity at the top levels of American business. "He's speaking at one organization. I'm sure the people at Hewlett Packard have and will continue to put some focus on it. Whether it will accelerate is to be seen. But it's a start."

Earl "Butch" Graves Jr., president and CEO of Black Enterprise magazine, says Jackson is shining a light on the fact that technology companies don't come close to hiring or spending what is commensurate with the demographics of their customers.

"Hopefully, what Rev. Jackson is doing will bring attention to the 800-pound gorilla in the room that nobody wants to talk about. It's high time that gets addressed," Graves says.

It's widely recognized that the tech industry lacks diversity: About one in 14 tech workers is black or Latino both in the Silicon Valley and nationally. Blacks and Hispanics make up 13.1 and 16.9 percent of the U.S. population, respectively, according to the most recent Census data.

"Technology is supposed to be about inclusion, but sadly, patterns of exclusion remains the order of the day," wrote Jackson in a letter released Monday to Apple, Twitter, Facebook, HP, Google and others.

Jackson said Tuesday that he isn't singling HP out, he's just using the company's annual meeting to highlight the broader issue.

"This is not exclusive to Hewlett Packard," he said.

As recently as 2011, Allstate, in alliance with Jackson's RainbowPUSH organization, recognized HP for its commitment to diversity.

"While we certainly agree that diversity is an important issue in corporate America, we're puzzled by Rev. Jackson's sudden interest in HP," said HP executive vice president Henry Gomez in a statement emailed to The Associated Press. "Today, HP is the largest company in the world with both a female CEO and CFO and nearly half of our leadership team and Board of Directors are women and minorities. Additionally, nearly 50 years ago, HP established the first Minority Business Program in the United States."

Gomez also points out that in 2013, HP spent nearly $1 billion with almost 500 minority business enterprises in the U.S. and an additional $500 million with businesses owned by women.

"We look forward to seeing Rev. Jackson at our shareholder meeting," Gomez says.

Apple and Google declined to comment on Jackson's grievances. Hewlett-Packard, Facebook and Twitter didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.

Of course, the technology industry isn't without a handful of high-profile black executives. Microsoft named John Thompson, an African-American, as chairman of its board last month after he led a search that culminated in the appointment of Satya Nadella as the software maker's new CEO. Thompson, the former CEO of security software maker Symantec Corp., joined Microsoft's board in 2012.

Another African-American, Denise Young-Smith, runs Apple's human resources department, which oversees the personnel policies governing the iPhone maker's nearly 85,000 employees and contractors. She reports directly to Apple CEO Tim Cook.

And Google's chief legal officer, David Drummond is an African-American who has been one of the company's top executives for the past 12 years.


http://www.sfgate.com/business/tech...-take-on-tech-s-lack-of-diversity-5328762.php
 
uh oh you opening up the flood gates with this topic.

Yeah, I hesitated posting it for that reason. I must admit I'm not Jesse Jackson's biggest fan. Nor am I a big fan of Jesse Jackson coming in and trying to do a shakedown.
I'm all for finding out what we can do to encourage more blacks and Hispanics to want to pursue technology as a career and steer them in that direction during school. My friend, for example, is an Oakland youth activist and runs a program for (mostly black) kids that is half basketball/half science. He's taken these young kids from Oakland down to Stanford to meet with students and professors and to work on their science projects. He runs a great program.

My brother-in-law is black and he's in the tech industry. He's worked for a number of firms in the Silicon Valley and I've asked him if he's seen discrimination in hiring and he said what he's seen is a lack of minority candidates (discounting people from India and Asians).
 
Yeah, I hesitated posting it for that reason. I must admit I'm not Jesse Jackson's biggest fan. Nor am I a big fan of Jesse Jackson coming in and trying to do a shakedown.
I'm all for finding out what we can do to encourage more blacks and Hispanics to want to pursue technology as a career and steer them in that direction during school. My friend, for example, is an Oakland youth activist and runs a program for (mostly black) kids that is half basketball/half science. He's taken these young kids from Oakland down to Stanford to meet with students and professors and to work on their science projects. He runs a great program.

My brother-in-law is black and he's in the tech industry. He's worked for a number of firms in the Silicon Valley and I've asked him if he's seen discrimination in hiring and he said what he's seen is a lack of minority candidates (discounting people from India and Asians).



Well unfortunately there are far too many inner city minority students that have no understanding of technology is due to the lack of school funding for public schools, or the lack of computers at home. What your folks are doing is wonderful which is getting kids involved with technology but I think society needs to do more beyond the grass roots efforts.
 
My brother-in-law is black and he's in the tech industry. He's worked for a number of firms in the Silicon Valley and I've asked him if he's seen discrimination in hiring and he said what he's seen is a lack of minority candidates (discounting people from India and Asians).


:rofl2:

Yes, lets not count those other groups of minorities that are working in the tech industry. Guess if they are not black or brown they do not count.....
 
uh oh you opening up the flood gates with this topic.

If Jesse Jackson really cared why doesn't he get computer clubs organised for black kids? To succeed in IT you need to have a passion for it and that is nurtured at a young age. My youngest son started programming at the age of 10. Lack of computers isn't even an excuse these days, look at how cheap a Raspberry Pi is now.
 
What's your problem with this article Toppy? You don't like Jesse Jackson? You don't think minorities and tech are an issue? Something else?
 
I read this the other day about the lack of minority students taking the Advanced Placement test for Computer Science:

A new analysis of test-taking data finds that in Mississippi and Montana, no female, African American, or Hispanic students took the Advanced Placement exam in computer science.

In fact, no African-American students took the exam in a total of 11 states, and no Hispanic students took it in eight states, according to state comparisons of College Board data compiled by Barbara Ericson, the director of computing outreach and a senior research scientist at Georgia Tech.

The College Board, which oversees AP, notes on its website that in 2013 about 30,000 students total took the AP exam for computer science, a course in which students learn to design and create computer programs. Less than 20 percent of those students were female, about 3 percent were African American, and 8 percent were Hispanic (combined totals of Mexican American, Puerto Rican, and other Hispanic).

[snip]

One complicating factor, Ericson said, is that AP computer science courses "are more prevalent in suburban and private schools than in urban, poor schools." About 2,300 high schools are officially recognized by the College Board as offering AP computer science for 2013-14—a fraction of the 15,000 high schools that offer some type of AP course, she noted.




http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/curriculum/2014/01/girls_african_americans_and_hi.html
 
see what poverty does

maybe someday you will actually support our best and brightest.


Until then we will have to listen to the right spew hate on anyone whos not white
 
I read this the other day about the lack of minority students taking the Advanced Placement test for Computer Science:






http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/curriculum/2014/01/girls_african_americans_and_hi.html

Is it a chicken and the egg thing with AP computer science courses within poor urban schools? They aren't offered because kids don't want them or kids don't study it because the classes aren't offered?

Edit: I would like to see programs in urban (all) schools that emphasize the use of technology more.
 
Its throwing money at the problem remember?

Its the LIES the right tells to keep people of color down.

Poor people are NOT worth educating.
its throwing money away,


I have heard you fucks say it all my life
 
You fucks were talking about me too.

white poor just don't get you great results while targeting voters.

Its far more effective for republicans to target votes of color to be spot on to win elections.

Some poor idiot whites still vote republican
 
I can only speak from my limited experience, but Hispanics are huge in my program and field. All the other lab managers, and half our techs, are Hispanic. However, we don't have any blacks. They, for whatever reason, don't typically get degrees in STEM fields, save nursing (I'm fairly certain that's STEM).
 
this is about education and opportunity.

Its hard to get a tech background when you cant afford any tech at home and there is NONE in your school.

If you want this country to sail over the tops of others you have to educate your most talented no matter where they were born or what color their skin is.

You on the right say they are worthless if they are born in certain areas.

Giving them tech is "just throwing money at the problem" and is a waste according to the right
 
black people are just people.

Asian people are just people.

white people are just people.

latino people are just people.

Not to you
 
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