T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
981.1 | Ok.."You've taken note 979 the wrong way." | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Wed Dec 13 1989 14:24 | 1 |
|
|
981.2 | maybe not.... | WMOIS::FULTI | | Wed Dec 13 1989 14:33 | 4 |
| Maybe the author of 979.0 will expound on the statement, so that we can get
it straight.
- George
|
981.3 | | SUBWAY::BOWERS | Count Zero Interrupt | Wed Dec 13 1989 14:48 | 5 |
| I, for one, took it as referring to the program.
I hope I was right...
-dave
|
981.4 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed Dec 13 1989 15:04 | 6 |
| When I read it, I didn't notice anything other than the person didn't
like the Valuing Differences program although he didn't say why. After
re-reading it, I still don't see anything else in it. Since the Valuing
Differences program is far broader than race, I simply don't see how
anyone could read race (and only race) into that note. Maybe the poster
of .0 could tell us how he managed to read the note as racist?
|
981.5 | the rathole goes on... | SCCAT::BOUCHARD | | Wed Dec 13 1989 16:45 | 8 |
| Is "Valuing Differences" a real program? Is it costing us money
or is it just a statement of DEC policy? If it is indeed costing
money,then it's a waste.We don't need it! In my personal opinion,
this program or whatever,was only instituted in order to satisfy
the liberals among us.Again,if it's only a statement of policy,leave
it...if not,DUMP IT!
BTW: I saw nothing rascist either.
|
981.6 | Not an exclusive concern | KOAL::LAURENT | Hal Laurent, Loc: FOR, DTN: 378-6742 | Wed Dec 13 1989 16:49 | 8 |
| RE: .4
Actually, "racist" wasn't the only (possible) problem I "read" into
the note, it was just the one that worried me the most.
I, for one, would very much like to hear just what the author of
979.0 meant. I feel that my question is legitimate, although I
certainly hope that my worries are totally unfounded.
|
981.7 | A philosophy, a policy, a program | PENPAL::SLOANE | Reality begins with a dream | Wed Dec 13 1989 17:06 | 15 |
| I see Valuing Differences as 3 things: a policy, a philosophy, and a
program.
As a policy and philosophy, it has made money for the company. It has
done this because it enables people to realize their full potential and
make a maximum contribution to the company despite any differences in
race, sex, age, or whatever.
As a program it may or may not have been poorly administered, and the
money and time spent on training in this area may or may not have been
wisely spent. (In my group, training consisted of a 90-minute meeting
for all employees. It was not the most thrilling 90 minutes of my
life.)
Bruce
|
981.8 | Call him on the phone !! | MAIL::DUNCANG | Gerry Duncan @KCO | Wed Dec 13 1989 17:22 | 7 |
|
Hal, why don't you pick up the phone and call Dick Lennard and ask
him to expand on the statement(s) that trouble you ? His dtn is
381-2508. Direct, voice-to-voice or eye-to-eye communication is
the best way to put this to bed instead of "hoping" for a reply
or clarification.
|
981.9 | | MSCSSE::LENNARD | | Wed Dec 13 1989 18:49 | 7 |
| Better yet - here I am live and in color (at least on my VT340).
I questioned the direct and indirect cost associated with the program
in a time of fiscal tightness. I heard it's two days, and 600+ bucks.
Seems to me that's it's another personnel boon-doggle of doubtful
value, at least at this time.
|
981.10 | | CUPMK::PHILBROOK | CUP Customer Consulting | Wed Dec 13 1989 19:12 | 7 |
| > While I realize that the Reagan years sent the US the message that
> it's okay to be racist again, I thought that
Where did you get that idea? How about some "Valuing Differences" for
our past, great president?
Mike
|
981.11 | | DEC25::BRUNO | An Innocent Man | Wed Dec 13 1989 19:22 | 3 |
| This *IS* going to be the rathole the title promises, isn't it?
Greg
|
981.12 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Dec 13 1989 19:44 | 4 |
| A topic titled "The <foobar> Rathole" cannot be a rathole since it
*is* the topic.
Now that's a rathole!
|
981.13 | "doubtful value"???? | THEBAY::VASKAS | Mary Vaskas | Wed Dec 13 1989 20:03 | 23 |
| The sentence quoted in .0 bothered me, too, as a blanket implication
that the valuing difference philosophy and/or program is not worthwhile,
for reasons unstated. The clarification by the quote's author still
doesn't say why he believes the philosophy and/or program is
"of doubtful value".
The program is obviously an investment in employees, to increase productivity,
lower turn-over, etc. People who are harrassed and "devalued" are not
as able to focus their energies on being productive; people who feel like
they are working in a supportive environment, for a company that
values *all* its employees, will work harder. In these times of
fiscal tightness, the more productivity we have the better.
Direct costs are administration of the program and training. What
are indirect the indirect costs you (.9) refer to?
I haven't taken the training (so have not directly "cost" the company for
it), but have received the moral support of the company, of knowing
the the corporate philosophy is on my side, of feeling valued. I have
more loyalty to the company for that -- and both Digital and I benefit.
Neither loses.
MKV
|
981.14 | A rose is a rose is a rose ... | SICML::LEVIN | My kind of town, Chicago is | Wed Dec 13 1989 23:59 | 12 |
| << A topic titled "The <foobar> Rathole" cannot be a rathole since it
<< *is* the topic.
Kind of reminds me of the old paradox:
Every rule has an exception, including the rule that "Every rule
has an exception."
In other words, there are some rules which don't have exceptions --
and those rules are exceptions to the rule.
|
981.15 | | PRAVDA::JACKSON | King Cynic | Thu Dec 14 1989 10:59 | 30 |
| I'm only going to reply here once, after that, meet me in SOAPBOX
where this has been discussed before.
The "Valuing differences" program here at Digital is a sham, in my
opinion. I believe this for two reasons:
First, You may be able to convince me to tolerate the differences
in others. I'm sure that many people in this world are more than
tolerant of the differences of others, but they certainly don't
value them. This is purely human nature, and can't (in my mind) be
changed.
Second, only those differences which have been deemed acceptable
by the liberal establishment are "valued" in this program. The example
that I used in SOAPBOX a while back is that noone in this company
would value a person being a bigot, even though it is their right
to make a fool of themselves.
For further discussion on this, refer to the topic "Can we value the
differences of those who don't value differences" in SOAPBOX. It was
a fascinating topic.
-bill
|
981.16 | Pre-judging = Prejudice | MSCSSE::LENNARD | | Thu Dec 14 1989 13:11 | 21 |
| Thank you -1 for your comments. I think it's a liberal sham also.
I tolerate differences out of what I like to believe is a sense of
fairness. Also, I know that if I am openly intolerant, I'll
probably get canned. but to "Value" differences, that's Cambridge-
based, ultra liberal horse puckey at its worst. Does create a lot
of good jobs in personnel though.
I'd like to know what in the h--- is so bad about being prejudiced.
Its just the word itself that has a bad connotation. I'm like I
believe about 99.9% of all people are, i.e., I tend to pre-judge.
I like to think I do it mostly out of a combination of life experi-
ences and native intelligence. I think the person that implied I
might be a racist (another negative Word) would be hurt if I accused
him/her of possible prejudice. But, what else would you call it?
Am I a racist? Possibly. I have certain opinions (pre-judgements)
based on 56 years of wide exposure to every conceivable type of race.
Does this make me a bad person just because I don't believe that we
will probably all never be skipping through fields of flowers together?
I think not. I think it makes me a realist.
|
981.17 | Isn't it about clear thinking? | WORDY::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Thu Dec 14 1989 14:02 | 38 |
| I don't believe Ronald Reagan is racially prejudiced. I believe he is
a class snob. His administration didn't say it's OK to be racist; it
said it's OK to be wealthy.
I haven't taken the Valuing Differences course Mr. Lennard mentions.
However, ignorance has never stopped me from offering an opinion. 8^)
At the simple level at which I understand it, the Valuing Differences
program tries to get us to see the value of people we see as different
from ourselves. It suggests that we not make assumptions about other
people and their behavior based on stereotypes or differences.
Racial, cultural, gender, ethnic, and age differences come to
mind. Here are some examples I've heard. (Racial, cultural, and gender
stereotypes follow; no offense intended!)
o Italians are stereotyped as being physical in conversation; that
is, they touch you when they talk to you. Indian women are
stereotyped as avoiding physical contact with men not their
husbands. If an Italian manager touches an Indian woman in
conversation, the result might be a sexual harrassment charge.
But the difference in cultures should not mean either employee
is bad or of less value.
o Blacks are stereotyped as being uncomfortable with eye contact;
they don't look you in the eye. Whites are stereotyped as
interpreting this body language as untrustworthy or deceitful.
But the difference in cultures should not mean that blacks are
deceitful.
o Women have babies. Sometimes they take extended maternity leaves.
Men tend not to take paternal leaves. But the difference in
genders should not mean that women are a poor business investment
because "they'll just get pregnant and leave."
I think the idea of "valuing differences" is to try and break people
out of the mold of thinking, "All <group members> are <stereotype>,
therefore <any consequence>."
If I misinterpret the message, I hope someone will correct it.
|
981.18 | One data point; sorry you can't claim absolutes nor more | STAR::ROBERT | | Thu Dec 14 1989 14:53 | 25 |
| Oops, let me quickly register with the "other side" and then run. I'm
doubtful a notes conference will be very persuasive on such a topic, but,
then, you never really know.
Color me "learned to value a difference". Others can call me a liar,
but I'm probably more of an expert on me than they:
Someone I thought was dumb ... well, they came up with a pretty
good idea. Then I realized that *I* never would have had that
idea. Only someone *different* from me could have that idea. So
now I value that particular difference, at least to the extent
of that idea.
Frankly I find it easier to value differences than to tolerate
them. Now that's worth wondering about.
If you want a foolishly trivial example: I could certainly value
someone's superior height difference if it made more hoops in a
game. But I might still have a little envy problem with it ;;;;-)
The reality is that once I valued that first difference (btw, I
find the phrase itself awkward) I started seeing quite a few such
instances. Now how could I have been so blind?
- greg
|
981.19 | devaluing differences? | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Thu Dec 14 1989 15:06 | 14 |
| re Note 981.17 by WORDY::JONG:
> At the simple level at which I understand it, the Valuing Differences
> program tries to get us to see the value of people we see as different
> from ourselves. It suggests that we not make assumptions about other
> people and their behavior based on stereotypes or differences.
> Racial, cultural, gender, ethnic, and age differences come to
> mind.
My biggest problem with the Valuing Differences program is
the name: traditional stereotypes result in attaching too
much value (often negative) to the mere fact of a difference.
Bob
|
981.20 | (also writing from ignorance of VD specifics) | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Thu Dec 14 1989 15:21 | 25 |
| re Note 981.18 by STAR::ROBERT:
> Someone I thought was dumb ... well, they came up with a pretty
> good idea. Then I realized that *I* never would have had that
> idea. Only someone *different* from me could have that idea. So
> now I value that particular difference, at least to the extent
> of that idea.
Yes, that person is obviously *different* from you. But from
the context of the story, the only difference that can be
inferred is a difference of thought. I would heartily agree
that differences of thought, skill, and experience are to be
valued.
But are those the kinds of differences that the "Valuing
Differences" program is addressing? Or is there some subtle
(or not so subtle) implication that there is a correlation
between differences of race, sex, national origin, and
physical characteristics on the one hand and differences of
thought, skill, and experience on the other?
If so, then "Valuing Differences" might just be a new form of
stereotyping.
Bob
|
981.21 | Different .NE. Bad | RIPPLE::FARLEE_KE | Insufficient Virtual...um...er... | Thu Dec 14 1989 15:41 | 32 |
| First,
There is usually some small grain of truth in most stereotypes.
That grain is usually blown out of proportion and incredible,
unfounded conclusions are drawn from it.
The place where pre-judging injures the person doing the judging
as well as the one being judged, is when you come upon someone
who doesn't fit the stereotypes. If you automatically put the
person in a pidgeonhole without really looking at THEM, you
will never know the opportunities that you just lost.
Think about it: do YOU (whoever you are) fit ALL of the stereotypes
of someone in your group(s)? I doubt it. Why do you think that
everyone else should fit neatly into little categories? Most
likely because its easier than really considering each person, IMHO.
Second,
Sometimes the very difference makes another person much more valuable
to you than a clone of yourself could ever be. (For a non-sequiteur,
consider your mate...) If you have ever written code, you have probably
had the experience of staring at a piece of code which didn't work, for
a long time. You can't see ANYthing wrong with it. It SHOULD work!
Then someone else walks up behind you, looks at it for two seconds,
and calmly points out your error. They were able to do it precisely
because they hadn't followed your train of thought. This principle
applies in many, many situations. Someone with a different perspective
can see things which you would never, ever see, no matter how long you stare
at a problem. Differences can be problems. No question. They can also
be very valuable assets.
Which will they be to you? Depends on how you approach them. Do you disregard
the possibility that anyone different from yourself could have a valuable
idea, or do you keep an open mind and check it out?
Kevin
|
981.22 | | THEBAY::VASKAS | Mary Vaskas | Thu Dec 14 1989 15:49 | 17 |
|
> Or is there some subtle
> (or not so subtle) implication that there is a correlation
> between differences of race, sex, national origin, and
> physical characteristics on the one hand and differences of
> thought, skill, and experience on the other?
More likely there's a recognition that various cultural backgrounds,
different kinds of life experiences, and different perspectives on
society, can spawn different ways of looking at things.
Also an effort to not preclude valuing a perspective different
than one's own. Or one that might be expected to be different than
one's own.
MKV
|
981.23 | Opinion from the west | TILTS::CZARNECKI | Richard Czarnecki @VEO System Support | Thu Dec 14 1989 16:06 | 34 |
| It sounds like the VD program will make sure nobody approaches human
differences outside what the program considers acceptable bounds.
In other words, it will assure that nobody treats differences
differently.
All this time I thought Digital was a computer hardware/software
manufactuer and supplier. I never thought we would get into the
field of personality modification or thought control.
Re: Ronald Reagan, he doesn't belong to the ultra-liberal
establishment and therefore does not deserve the same consideration
as the insiders.
Re: VD boondogle, I have seen the advertising for it. It is a
2 day course. I don't know what the cost is but I am sure it is
excessive.
Re: Valuing differences, I live in a city where we multiple millions
of visitors each year. These people are from all parts of the world.
I have become a people watcher since being here. In my opinion,
the best approach to all of this difference nonsense is to first
be able to UNDERSTAND what basic differences in human beings are.
I don't value anyone's differences and don't expect anyone to value
any of my particular differences. All I ask is that a person
understand and accept that I am different than Joe Schmaltz who
is different than Jane Blevitz who is different than the milkman!
I don't agree that we should make any big thing about these differences
or try to make any big deal about them.
This issue will never be settled because it pits the ultra-liberal
(elite minority) against the average conservative (middle America
majority) camps. All it will do is allow all of us to understand
each others point of view. Or isn't this allowed anymore?
|
981.24 | ex | PH4VAX::SCHNAUFFER | Big BILL | Thu Dec 14 1989 17:12 | 8 |
|
I say... forget Valuing Differences
and let's just...
VALUE PEOPLE. (whether they are different or not!)
...but then who am I??
|
981.25 | It pays to be good | SUPER::MATTHEWS | | Thu Dec 14 1989 19:52 | 14 |
| There are a couple of pragmatic reasons for the philosophy of valuing
differences (implementation of that policy being a separate issue).
Digital gets a lot of good press from it. One reads every so often that
some organization has named us one of the n-best employers for (blacks,
women, etc.) Given our problems with name recognition, we can certainly
use any publicity that shows us in a positive light.
Digital is an Equal Opportunity Employer and has to comply with federal
law. If some manager engages in discriminatory hiring practices,
Digital can get sued. Educating employees about what constitutes
discrimination helps keep us out of court.
Val
|
981.26 | | STAR::ROBERT | | Fri Dec 15 1989 11:31 | 12 |
| re: .20
There are many examples in my personal experience. That is just one.
You can look for all sorts of faults with the program, or you can step
up to a higher understanding of the richness of human culture, heredity,
personality and existance of all kinds; the result is a wider appreciation
of all individuals.
To debate the details or look for a new way to find or defend stereotypes
is to completely miss the forest, at least for me. Your milage may vary.
- g
|
981.27 | You value my differences, sure..... | FROST::REMILLARD | | Fri Dec 15 1989 13:47 | 9 |
|
I've never been through the course, but how is Digital valuing
people's differences? This sounds like a take-off of the old PEP
program. Everybody has differences, what's the big deal?? The valuing
difference program exists just to showcase Digital as a corporation..
my .03
Jeff
|
981.28 | My Experience | GERBIL::BOHLIG | | Tue Dec 19 1989 12:57 | 30 |
|
I was ordered to "volunteer" to attend the two-day Valuing Differences
course along with about 30 people from my group.
Con's
- A lot of touchyfeely encounter group exercises, some that were silly
and quite useless.
- Two days seemed too long relative to the results acheived.
Pro's
- I learned to try to "walk in the other person's shoes" a little more.
The people in the group that were racial/ethnic minorities discussed
how they felt they had significant barriers to overcome to be
successful. As a male WASP-type I was suprised at the extent of the
resentment towards traditional male WASP-types. I was also somewhat
suprised that people felt they had experienced true racism and prejudice
within DEC.
- I got to know more about the non-work side of my colleagues: their
educational and socioeconomic backgrounds, hobbies, goals, etc.
- I was suprised that certain "differences" were not discussed - like
people that are obese, gay, handicapped or plain ugly. We should be
learning how to value these people as well. Only sex, race, and
religion stuff was addressed.
Overall I would rate the experience as moderately positive, but if
costs are really $600+, I would say there's questionable value in the
program.
Mike.
|
981.29 | A question of Cost? | STRIKE::KANNAN | | Wed Dec 20 1989 19:25 | 11 |
| I am really surprised at the "Cost" argument for not having a program
like "Valuing Differences". If the cost argument is applied for the
"Existing Implementation" of Valuing Differences, there may be
validity. Then we need to rethink the implementation.
However to me saying that any Valuing Differences program should be
scrapped since it is "expensive" is the same as saying that certain
sections of the population should not be allowed to vote since it is
very expensive to include them in the elections.
Nari
|
981.30 | | DEC25::BRUNO | An Innocent Man | Wed Dec 20 1989 20:37 | 8 |
| I think some here are failing to separate the Differences Courses
being offered (with their rumored $600 price tag) and the overall
Valuing Differences program which has made DEC such an object of envy
in the industry. Some may take the complaints to be against the
POLICY, in which case the motivations would be completely different
from those regarding the course.
Greg
|
981.31 | Name Change | COGITO::FRYE | | Thu Dec 21 1989 15:20 | 6 |
|
For those of you who have trouble with the concept of *valueing*
differences, I have seen it renamed as Understanding the Dynamics
of Difference.
Norma
|
981.32 | dy/dx | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | International House of Workstations | Thu Dec 21 1989 19:33 | 4 |
| For those of you who have trouble with the concepts of integration and
the calculation of differences, don't bother. The after you integrate
the differnces or differentiate the integral, you're back where you
started.
|
981.33 | Let's really get the rathole going | KYOA::MIANO | Mad Mike's Mythical Miracle | Thu Dec 21 1989 23:25 | 7 |
| RE: .32
If you integrate then differentiate then you have what you
started out with BUT if you differentiate then integrate then you
lose the zero order term (if any).
John
|
981.34 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Tue Dec 26 1989 17:20 | 2 |
| All this assumes you differentiate and then integrate (or vice versa)
with respect to the same variable.
|
981.35 | Where is SOAPBOX? | KISHOR::HEIMANN | | Wed Dec 27 1989 16:20 | 7 |
| Bill Jackson mentioned a notes file called SOAPBOX. I'd like to
look at this, but cannot find it in the EASYNOTES.LIS listing.
What is the complete identifier for SOAPBOX?
Thanks,
David
|
981.36 | | ULTRA::GONDA | DECelite: Pursuit of Knowledge, Wisdom, and Happiness. | Wed Dec 27 1989 16:23 | 3 |
| Discussions on Various Topics PEAR::SOAPBOX 1281
Check to see if your copy of easynotes.lis is an outdated one.
|
981.37 | | PRAVDA::JACKSON | King Cynic | Thu Dec 28 1989 11:43 | 14 |
| RE: .35
Keep in mind that Soapbox is not for the faint of heart. There are some
very opinionated people that participate in Soapbox, who readily "beat
up" on newcomers.
I would suggest being a read only participant for a while to get the
tone of the box and to understand the personalities of the major
contributors (yes, like any good notesfile, there are a small number of
people who write a large number of topics and replies)
-bill
|
981.38 | Don't worry ... it will self destruct ... | ABACUS::BEELER | In Gedanken vertieft.. | Fri Dec 29 1989 14:01 | 36 |
| The VDS (Valuing Differences Syndrome) has gone TOO far and is generally
regarded as a "joke". There is no question but that in it's formation
the goals were admirable but it has become a "catch all" for anything
that someone doesn't like. At this time I think that it is more of a
detriment than an asset - and - I met with a member of Zimmerle's staff
and stated this, in no uncertain terms.
I have taken the "seminar" and for the most part it was an
incomprehensible waste of time. The two full days was entirely too
long. I am (theoretically) a mature adult male and found some of the
"activities" to be of a definitive "childish" nature. I am not exactly
"underpaid" at DEC and think that this was indeed a waste of corporate
money.
.31> For those of you who have trouble with the concept of *valuing*
.31> differences, I have seen it renamed as Understanding the Dynamics
.31> of Difference.
This "name" is one of the most detrimental elements of the program.
During the "introduction" at the beginning of the seminar (I'm *not*
prone to pussy-foot around important issues) I made it crystal clear
that I thought that the name "Valuing Differences" was detrimental and
should be changed, that the course has a bad reputation, and, that I was
looking forward to forming my own opinion based on experience.
The seminar leaders agreed with my statement on the name and advised me
that the name had indeed been changed to "Understanding the Dynamics of
Difference". I kept a count ... during the first day the term "Valuing
Differences" was used 38 times ... during the *morning* of the second
day the term "Valuing Differences" was used 24(!) times ... after that
I stopped counting.
As a "statement" of DEC policy ... no problem ... but ... there's
gotta be some changes or it's going to self destruct.
Jerry
|
981.39 | build on it... | BOMBE::JEFFERY | | Tue Jan 02 1990 22:06 | 49 |
| I was disheartened to read most of the replies to this note, partly because
folks sound so hard-bitten. Yikes. But also because the replies indicate the
Valuing Differences program is not working so well. For the record,
I am in agreement with notes such as .17, .18, and .22, and I was especially
glad to read Mr. Robert's note .26 (well put).
As others have said, there are 2 parts to the question: the intent
of the program, and the implementation of the program.
I believe the intent is fine -- maybe even ingenious. To understand, to
value, and to stay mindful of the special things we have to offer one another
seem the best ways to get the best from one another and to promote a good
environment for growth. These things are critical to productivity, and
they are vital to the quality of life here at Digital. Besides, we are in the
age of teams, and acknowledging and taking advantage of those things that make
each of us special (our differences) simply seems like good team-building
to me. These are learned skills; they do not often happen automatically.
When I think about valuing differences I think about some of the differences
that are less famous than race, religion, and sexual preference. I think of
style, for example. I think of the woman whose idea doesn't get heard in a
meeting-room full of men because they found her 'indirect and without
conviction.' Or I think of the man whose idea is discounted in a meeting-room
full of women because they found him 'too aggressive... too controlling.'
There is a lot more standing in our way than overt prejudice.
So I don't worry about the phrase 'valuing differences'. It represents a
positive way to talk about our reaction to our differences, and it hits as
close to the mark as such phrases need to. In any case, to get hung up
debating the terminology is to avoid thinking about some of the more more
important issues, such as the curriculum.
I imagine the implementation of Digital's program (at least as far as the
'Understanding Dynamics of Difference' course goes) could be much better.
I haven't taken the course, but I've heard detailed reports and from
what I've heard it's a little long on 'touchy feely' and a little short on
practical information; it sounds obtuse and condescending in places. Maybe
the course developers are still struggling for ways to promote the ideal.
Perhaps it would be best if the course assumed that we 'get it' in a general
sense. Then it could cut out some of the vague, sensitizing exercises and add
more practical information about the kinds of differences that are important
to be aware of, why, how best to acknowledge them, appropriate ways to take
advantage of them (if any), and so on. I would like to see a program that is
more progressive than remedial.
Must be lots of good ideas out there.
-Scott
|
981.40 | be careful with integrals | RICARD::BLOMBERG | | Fri Jan 05 1990 10:05 | 9 |
|
Sorry for the deviation from the topic, but .32 and .33 on integration
are not correct. It is not generally true that if you "integrate and
then differentiate you get back with what you started with".
For Riemann integrals it is true for continous functions, and for
Lebesgue integrals it's only true almost everywhere (= outside a set
of measure zero).
|
981.41 | | KYOA::MIANO | Mad Mike's Mythical Miracle | Fri Jan 05 1990 15:09 | 6 |
| RE: <<< Note 981.40 by RICARD::BLOMBERG >>>
I think we also forgot to take into consideration quantum
and relativistic effects.
John
|
981.42 | Announcing: Valuing Sameness | PHAROS::DMCLURE | Your favorite Martian | Fri Jan 05 1990 16:47 | 18 |
| re: .37,
Milt, you should know that the Soapbox has been sanitized, rebooted,
and otherwise repressed so many times since its original incarnation
that it is now perhaps one of the most polite and politically correct
notesfiles on the net.
As to the general resentment of the Valuing Differences program,
you are all correct. From now on, a new program will be starting
which will be called "Valuing Sameness". In this $1000 course, the
values of dress codes, hetrosexual and/or asexual orientation, and
racial purity, along with many more traditional sorts of behaviors
and conformist ideals will be stressed.
just kidding (warming up for April fools day)...
-davo
|
981.43 | An outside view on valuing differences | LEAF::JONG | Steve Jong/NaC Pubs | Sun Feb 04 1990 16:12 | 32 |
| Near the end of _Barbarians to Bureacrats_, by Lawrence M. Miller,
there is a chapter on "The Synergist Prescription," which describes the
only style of organization that Miller thinks can survive for the long
term. He lists a number of axioms about how to do things, and Axiom #6
is "Unity and Diversity:"
Advancing cultures become diverse in character. Leaders must act
to unify diverse talents and traits.
Corollary 1. Leaders must actively resist the tendency
to attract and promote like personalities and skills.
Corollary 2. The highest-quality decisions are attained
through consensus. Consensus is most valuable when it
represents the collective wisdom of participants with
diverse views and experience.
As we have seen throughout, successful corporations understand they
need diverse personalities to succeed. The Synergist raises this
understanding to a new level. He not only tolerates diversity,
he genuinely appreciates it. He transcends his own management
style and encourages and supports capable people with very
different points of view.
The author goes on to discuss examples of valuing differences at
various companies.
(As an aside, this book suggests to me that someone in Digital is
trying awfully hard to make the company successful. In another note in
this conference, which I'll comment in when it resurfaces, people have
speculated that Digital is into the Bureaucratic stage as defined by
this book. I'd say we're nowhere near it yet. Whew!)
|
981.44 | Forking a process to continue generic VoD discussions from 1616) | TOOK::DMCLURE | Did Da Vinci move into management? | Wed Oct 23 1991 20:09 | 68 |
| Due to the increasing bottleneck of various unrelated VoD
discussions (i.e. ratholes) in note #1616, I suggest these general
VoD discussions be migrated to this general VoD discussion note.
I now resume a discussion from note #1616 already in progress...
re: 1616.609,
1616.609>> . . . you have repeatedly avoided answering the question of whether
1616.609>> or not you have expressed similar opinions elsewhere in regards to
1616.609>> other VoD events in other notes devoted to a particular VoD event
1616.609>> such as this . . .
1616.609> That is incorrect; in note .542 I answered it directly:
1616.609> In these topics [referred to in preceding text], I have
1616.609> objected to subjecting employees to these things [previous
1616.609> events, also described above].
The note topics you described (appropriateness of religious
activity at the office, the use of the cafeteria as a theater) to
which you claim you have entered notes would not appear to be
VoD events. Therefore, you never answered the question.
1616.609> That is an explicit affirmative answer to your question. Why did you
1616.609> say I had not given such an answer when I had?
Why? Because you did not answer the question - that's why!
However, since you seem to have answered in the affirmative here
instead (finally), then I will bypass my previous line of questioning
and instead ask whether you could provide pointers to these other notes
which you claim are devoted to a particular VoD event (such as note
#1616 in this notesfile) where you claim you "have expressed similar
opinions elsewhere in regards to other events"? I think it would be
interesting to see these other examples of how you choose to trash the
VoD program in a note devoted to the discussion of an event held by
a particular VoD group.
1616.609>As .542 stated, the topics referred to were in regard to the use of the
1616.609>cafeteria as a theater and the appropriateness of religious activity at
1616.609>the office.
1616.609>> If you were to answer yes to my question, then you would prove
1616.609>> my assertion that you do in fact practice the exploitation of the
1616.609>> fervor surrounding discussions of specific VoD events to garner
1616.609>> support for your own anti-VoD campaign, . . .
1616.609>> There was no fervor over the singing of Christmas
1616.609>> carols in the office area nor over the use of the cafeteria as a
1616.609>> theater while people were eating. These two examples prove I am not
1616.609>> "exploiting" any fervor, that it is merely coincidental to this issue
1616.609>> and that I choose to object to "Valuing Differences" events that I
1616.609>> believe should not be imposed on employees, not this imaginary motive
1616.609>> you have concocted.
Eric, you continue to prove my point by continuing to reply to
note #1616 with notes which address the overall VoD program and have
little or nothing to do with "G/L/B Awareness Day at MRO", much less
G/L/B Awareness Day, or even G/L/B in general (which is the primary
focus of that discussion).
Since you seem content to continue merrily along in your
exploitation of a particularly controversial VoD group (G/L/B)
even after repeated requests not to do so, I am forced to attempt
to channel the more generic portion of your VoD discussion to this
note (which is devoted to such VoD program ratholes). Thank you
for your cooperation.
-davo
|
981.45 | as the exploitation continues... | TOOK::DMCLURE | Did Da Vinci move into management? | Thu Oct 24 1991 20:24 | 61 |
| re: 1616.634,
> On what basis do you contend that the use of the ZKO cafeteria as a
> theater does not appear to be a "Valuing Difference" event? Did you
> even ask what it was used as a theater for? Are you aware that you are
> saying that shows about the civil rights movement do not appear to be
> "Valuing Difference" events?
Aside from a casual reference by someone in reply 242.1 of the
virtually unknown UCOUNT::ZKO_SUGGESTION_BOX notesfile to the "Eyes
on the Prize" video (which may or may not have anything to do with
VoD program - this point was never made clear in that discussion),
there is nothing to indicate any sort of discussion about a VoD event,
or to the VoD program in general. I might add that there are a whopping
five replies to the basenote which you referenced (two of them were
yours), and none of them agreed with your views on the subject. This
single example hardly qualifies as an example of how you have expressed
similar opinions against VoD programs in VoD-specific notes (which
is what you claimed to have done).
In any case, you seem to be missing the point of this entire
line of questioning. It doesn't matter how you answer this question
Eric, because either way you prove yourself to be in the wrong. If,
in fact, you have expressed similar opinions degrading the VoD program
in notes devoted to the discussion of specific VoD events for a given
minority (as you claim to have done), then you are guilty of exploiting
the underlying opposition to other minority groups as well. If, on the
other hand, you have not expressed similar opinions degrading the VoD
program in notes devoted to the discussion of specific VoD events for
a given minority, then your behavior in note #1616 is only a first
time offense (and might buy you some leniency from the judge ;^).
The fact is that regardless of your past actions, you continue
to revel in the exploitation of the controversy surrounding the
minority (G/L/B) VoD group event at MRO in note #1616 by blatantly
continuing to enter your anti-VoD replies to that note. The vast
majority of your notes in that string have absolutely nothing to do
with G/L/B Awareness Day at MRO, nor do they have anything to do with
G/L/B in general. You persist in that note string solely to further
your own anti-VoD agenda in a most cowardly fashion - safely hidden
within a homophobic mob which you see fit to incite to riot on the
network. All the while, you insidiously claim to be tolerant of G/L/B,
yet you continue to feed the fires of homophobia to suit your purposes.
Furthermore, you claim to support the freedom of speech while at the
same time attempting to apply censorship to fellow DEC employees in
the workplace against the corporate VoD policy. You are a master of
hypocrisy EDP, and I can only hope that you are not clever enough to
get away with it this time.
> By the way, this is in topic 1616 and not 981 because 981 does not
> discuss "Valuing Difference" events, particularly in regard to whether
> or not they are appropriate or whether they bother employees. This
> topic does. If you want to start a topic about general "Valuing
> Difference" events and their appropriateness, I might participate
> there.
No Eric, I don't think I need to create any new notes for you.
You continue to create a VoD rathole in note #1616, so the subject
of this note is by far the most appropriate for this dicsussion.
-davo
|
981.46 | Reporting a problem with RUSURE::DIFFERENCE | RDVAX::KALIKOW | I Survived ::DIGITAL Note 1616.*!! | Thu Oct 24 1991 21:39 | 125 |
981.47 | If it were so simple, we wouldn't be here discussing it | TOOK::DMCLURE | Did Da Vinci move into management? | Thu Oct 24 1991 23:23 | 29 |
| re: 1616.644:
> -< Another vote for EDP >-
> I also vote for EDP's viewpoints. I have found his statements to
> be consistent and accurate throughout this discussion. I also believe
> that the MAJORITY of readers also concur with his statements. I hope
> they will also cast a vote.
Civil rights issues such as those being addressed by the VoD
program are not nearly as simply decided as you might think. If
all that mattered were the counting of votes on a particular minority
issue, then the civil rights issues would have been decided a long
time ago and the current majority would have simply voted the minorities
out of existence. Instead, what we have here is a classic Federalist/
Anti-Federalist debate in which the majority would seek to impose it's
views on a given minority, but the minority is protected by a higher
authority (i.e. the Constitution and/or DEC Policies & Procedures).
Minorities in the U.S. are supposedly protected by the U.S.
(Federal) government, and here at DEC, minorities are supposedly
protected (or at least pacified) by the corporate VoD program.
Of course, history has proven that observance of civil rights at
the global levels have not equated to the automatic observance of
those same civil rights at the local levels. In all cases, such
civil rights efforts have also required an additional committment
on the part of those directly effected, as well as conscientious
supporters of the aformentioned.
-davo
|
981.48 | Try ignoring this one. | SBPUS4::LAURIE | ack, no, none, GAL | Fri Oct 25 1991 14:17 | 22 |
| .46
Talk about deja vu!!!!
Once upon a time there was a conference called SMURF::DIFFERENCES and
there was so much trouble with wholesale and wanton deletion of notes
that EDP was removed as a moderator by the rest of the team. Things
reached the stage that any note a certain group of people entered
was deleted immediately.
Soon afterwards a conference called HIGH_IQ was started up by EDP.
Myself and several other people suffered a similar fate in that one. It
suddenly went members only, and to this day, every mail I have sent to
EDP requesting membership of that conference has been ignored. I
thought that was against P&P?
So, EDP, I hereby formally apply for membership of HIGH_IQ. I also ask
that if you refuse me said membership, you tell me why. I'd also like
to know how my exclusion hitherto fits in with your statements
regarding free speech and fair play.
Laurie.
|
981.49 | | VCSESU::MOSHER::COOK | Uncongressional Mosh! | Fri Oct 25 1991 14:42 | 23 |
|
> Note 981.46 by RDVAX::KALIKOW
>> Note 13.3 by RDVAX::KALIKOW
>> it's because the reputation that Mr. Postpischil has painstakingly built up
>> over the years in other conferences has preceded him in any contacts he may
>> have made with moderators of valuing-differences conferences.
I can see why -edp would have taken offense to this.
>> Just in case anyone reading this is in any doubt of Mr. Postpischil's
>> views about Digital's Valuing Differences program, I will follow this
>> paragraph with two excerpts from his more recent postings in
>> HUMANE::DIGITAL 1616.
This is against DEC P&P. You must have permission from -edp to
cross post any part of his replies from DIGITAL to any other
conference. I assume you did not, and this is why it was deleted.
I would have also deleted it.
/prc
|
981.50 | Still hiding in note #1616 I see... | TOOK::DMCLURE | Did Da Vinci move into management? | Fri Oct 25 1991 14:50 | 79 |
| re: 1616.677,
> > . . . none of them agreed with your views on the subject. This
> > single example hardly qualifies as an example of how you have expressed
> > similar opinions . . .
> That does not make any sense.
No kidding!!! Perhaps if you tried extracting an entire statement
(or at least an entire sentence) of mine next time it might make a little
more sense. In desperately groping for a way out of your dilemma, you are
obviously stooping to taking small phrases out of other notes and twisting
them to serve your purposes.
> > If, in fact, you have expressed similar opinions degrading the VoD
> > program in notes devoted to the discussion of specific VoD events for a
> > given minority (as you claim to have done), then you are guilty of
> > exploiting the underlying opposition to other minority groups as well.
> The premise that opposing an offensive imposition is exploiting the
> "underlying opposition" is false. By this reasoning, it would be
> wrong for anybody ever to object to being imposed upon. This is a
> typical Politically Correct tactic, to accuse anybody criticizing
> Politically Correct actions as being opposed to the principles of
> equality or freedom. But it is false. You are trying to suppress the
> ability of people to speak, to accuse them of wrongdoing merely for not
> wanting to be imposed upon.
Oh, is that so? Well, if you are so sure that you are correct
in your argument, then why do you continue to rathole note #1616?
I suppose the fact that there is a large and easily exploitable
majority of homophobic sentiment to hide behind in that note string
has nothing to do with it now does it? Aside from the fact that you
may be one of the most stubborn people on earth, what other reason
do you have for continuing to barricade yourself and your anti-VoD
campaign safely within the mob which is opposed to a specific VoD
event? Could it be that you are simply afraid to bring your case
against the VoD program to this generic VoD note because you know
that your anti-VoD argument is not strong enough to stand on its own?
> > The vast majority of your notes in that string have absolutely
> > nothing to do with G/L/B Awareness Day at MRO . . .
> You only believe that because you have insisted upon believing your
> false interpretation of what I have said. You refuse to actually
> understand my objections.
I would estimate that of your current total of 65 replies (and
counting) to note #1616, that roughly 44 of them, or 67.7% of them
have no connection to the G/L/B Awareness Day at MRO event, but most
all of them deal solely with the overall Digital VoD program and/or
what you refer to as Political Correctness, while a few of them relate
to nothing other then notesfile debating etiquette, or life in general.
I base this 67.7% on the following selection of 44 of your replies
to note 1616 (.66, .147, .153, .163, .269, .270, .304, .305, .321,
.322, .378, .381, .386, .404, .418, .420, .418, .420, .421, .431, .432,
.433, .473, .515, .535, .529, .536, .541, .542, .561, .572, .573, .574,
.575, .577, .605, .606, .609, .610, .631, .632, .633, .634, .664, .677).
In this selection, I excluded any of your replies which dealt with the
subjects of G/L/B Awareness Day at MRO, G/L/B Awareness Days in general,
or homosexuality in general. As such, there were also a good deal of
your notes which I didn't include here to which the bulk of the note
was also an anti-VoD rathole as well. If I were to include these notes,
the percentage of your ratholes to 1616 would have been much higher.
> > . . . you continue to feed the fires of homophobia to suit your
> > purposes.
> I have never written anything to support opposition to homosexuality.
> Clearly, the concept of defending a person whom one does not agree with
> is dead in this country. The Politically Correct wish to deny free
> speech to those who do not share their beliefs.
Again, you are quoting snippets of my statements out of context.
Please try again addressing a complete statement of mine and I will
try and respond to your comments.
-davo
|
981.51 | What a STRAIGHT line! :-) | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Fri Oct 25 1991 15:29 | 5 |
| I can't resist. Maybe it's just me, but a members-only conference
on the subject of HIGH-IQ seems to be a bit of an oxymoron. ;-)
tim
|
981.52 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Fri Oct 25 1991 15:41 | 15 |
| Re: 981.49
>> Just in case anyone reading this is in any doubt of Mr. Postpischil's
>> views about Digital's Valuing Differences program, I will follow this
>> paragraph with two excerpts from his more recent postings in
>> HUMANE::DIGITAL 1616.
This is against DEC P&P. You must have permission from -edp to
cross post any part of his replies from DIGITAL to any other
conference. I assume you did not, and this is why it was deleted.
I would have also deleted it.
This is not true. Permission is needed to post from VAXmail or to
cross post from a restricted conference. Permission is not needed to
cross post from a non-restricted VAXNotes conference.
|
981.53 | | BEING::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Oct 25 1991 18:26 | 17 |
| The world according to Davo Mclure:
Anybody who does not say they are opposed to a Politically
Correct program is not opposed to it.
Anybody who does say they are opposed to a Politically Correct
program is exploiting bigotry.
By Dave Mclure's definitions, a Politically Correct program can never
be in error. By Dave Mclure's reasoning, criticism of Politically
Correct programs should be censored.
We see, by example, how the Politically Correct insist that they have
the One True Path and how others must not interfere.
-- edp
|
981.54 | Labeling & stereotyping Davo as 'PC' won't help a weak argument. | GORE::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Oct 25 1991 18:48 | 10 |
|
When did Dave McLure get labeled "Politically Correct" (and by
whom?)
Who has the right to confer this label onto others against their
wills?
Or is it merely expedient in the course of pursuing one's goals
in a debate (eg, "the end justifies the means.")
|
981.55 | Come on EDP, you can do better than that! | TOOK::DMCLURE | Did Da Vinci move into management? | Fri Oct 25 1991 20:50 | 87 |
| re: .53,
Get real Eric - your petty reply #.53 hardly deserves an answer.
Is fabrication of complete lies all you are capable of these days?
Is lumping me into your favorite "Politically Correct" pigeon hole
all you can muster up for this discussion? Where is the evidence?
To what do I even owe you the time of day for a reply such as this?
Out of sheer pity towards you and what I once thought I admired
in you, I suppose I will attempt to continue our discussion a bit
further...
You know Eric, aside from all of the mud slinging and generally
amusing antics you have provided readers over the past week or so,
I guess the one thing that really has me so baffled is that here we
have a seemingly intelligent, and extremely vocal DEC employee, who
for years has managed to wrap himself firmly in the U.S. Constitution,
claiming to be a proponent of free speech, civil rights, and all of
those noble principles to which great people aspire. Yet, despite
all of this, you appear ready to throw it all away in your campaign
to promote censorship of the expression of differing opinions in
open and non-binding forums of DEC facilities for VoD events.
From your own statements, it is clear that you would also wish
to limit such VoD events and/or discussions to the notesfiles alone
(as though the authors of the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights
intended to limit the freedom of speech to electronic notesfiles alone).
What follows are your own words from note #1616:
1616.95> Such statements should be given equal opportunity, in appropriate
1616.95> forums. An appropriate forum is a Notes conference where opinions are
1616.95> discussed and where the subject of the conference encompasses these
1616.95> issues. A display table at a cafeteria is an inappropriate forum.
1616.379> If the employees
1616.379> want to solicit others, let them use bulletin boards, Notes
1616.379> conferences, or other passive means of communication. But do NOT give
1616.379> a group corporate support as proper beliefs and do NOT let them
1616.379> campaign for their cause in the halls.
1616.610> All the proposals I have made about how things _should_ be call for
1616.610> equal access for everybody. No speech access to the cafeteria (or
1616.610> vicinity) is equal for everybody. Free speech access to Notes
1616.610> conferences is equal for everybody.
And if you had your way, the only forms of communication allowed
at Digital facilities would be those taking place in notesfiles, and
behind closed doors. You claim this is "equal for everybody", yet
you do not take into account the fact that not everyone is quite so
fond of the notesfiles as you are (you, who obviously excels in this
medium, yet who might or might not excel so well in person).
In fact, you seem to take it for granted that notesfiles provide
an adequate means for any and all forms of human communications, and
anything else should be hidden in the closet behind closed doors.
Can't you see how such an arbitrary choice of one form of communication
(notesfiles alone) over all others is not only disadvantageous to those
with poorer reading and writing skills (or non-English speaking people
who also work for this company), but it is also downright discriminatory
to those employees who may not even have access to computer accounts
from which to note from or closed doors from which to hide behind.
This is all in addition to the fact that the very phrase "freedom
of speech" implies "speech" above all - that which emits from the
vocal chords - and is in no way limited to written communications.
To attempt to limit the VoD program (or any DEC program for that matter)
to only those DEC employees who happen to utilize employee interest
notesfiles would be most unfortunate in that such a practice would not
only prevent a large percentage of employees from being able to listen to
the views of others, but would also prevent an even larger percentage of
DEC employees from exercising their own freedom of speech in the workplace.
On top of all this, it has since been alleged in the last few
replies to this note that you yourself are in the habit of deleting
notes you happen to disagree with in conferences you moderate. Is it
any wonder why you would wish to limit all discussions to notesfiles!
-davo
p.s. I find it interesting that having succeeded in ratholing note
#1616 deep into the ground by littering the note with your anti-
VoD / PC diatribes, that it now appears that you have adjusted your
aim on note #1636 for yet more anti-VoD / PC rhetorical blitzkriegs.
At least you finally managed to display a hint of compromise in
your unbending character enough to join us here for a hopefully
somewhat more rational discussion about the VoD program (of course,
the fact that note #1616 is now write-locked has nothing to do
with this change in your noting techniques I'm sure).
|
981.56 | | MU::PORTER | turpentine | Sun Oct 27 1991 15:11 | 24 |
| An interesting [to me, anyway] aside on the notion that discussions
of "difference" belong in notesfiles and not in the hallways:
There have been studies [and I can't name a single one, so the
let's-see-some-hard-evidence types amongst you can dismiss this
entire reply] which show that electronic discussions get much more
heated than other exchanges, whether face-to-face or by slower
written mechanisms.
The reasons for this might be combination of the facts that (a)
online notes/mail doesn't force you to confront the reality of
your opponent as another human being (b) the speed of the medium
encourages one to write first, think later.
This isn't to claim that all is sweetness and light out there
in the face-to-face world, of course -- merely that there
is some evidence that suggests that, if you have to choose
notesfiles -or- face-to-face events, notesfiles is probably
exactly the wrong choice.
I wouldn't suggest that it's an either/or choice, though.
Despite the fact that notesfiles breed flames, they do provide
vastly increased participation, which is all to the good.
|
981.57 | Still ignoring me? How adult! | SBPUS4::LAURIE | ack, no, none, GAL | Mon Oct 28 1991 06:22 | 30 |
981.58 | | BEING::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Mon Oct 28 1991 09:34 | 38 |
| Re .55:
Your arguments are unreasonable and undeserving of response. Here's
another example: First you criticized me because I was opposing a
"Valuing Differences" program in an environment of, by your
description, "fervor". Then when I satisfied your challenge to present
a counterexample, showing that I was not exploiting "fervor", you
criticized my opposition to a different program because it did NOT have
people agreeing with it.
So you have challenged opposition to "Valuing Differences" programs
that receives too much or too little agreement. Apparently, any critic
must judge in advance the response their opposition will receive and
speak their opposition only if it will receive just the right amount of
support -- not too hot, not too cold.
I guess that makes Davo McClure the Goldilocks of Political
Correctness. Except that I suspect that opposition that received some
support, but not a "fervor", would be criticized on other grounds.
> And if you had your way, the only forms of communication allowed at
> Digital facilities would be those taking place in notesfiles, and
> behind closed doors.
It seems that one of your greatest tendencies is to misrepresent your
opponent's argument. You have done this repeatedly, and now you
falsely say the only form of communication I would support for equal
speech would be in conferences and behind closed doors, in spite of the
fact that you just quoted a passage that referred explicitly to one
other form -- "bulletin boards" -- and implicitly to more forms --
"other passive means of communication".
Since your representation of my argument is incorrect, the reasoning
that follows from the misrepresentation is not relevant to my actual
argument.
-- edp
|
981.59 | very typical..... | JURAN::SILVA | Ahn eyu ahn | Mon Oct 28 1991 10:28 | 2 |
|
|
981.60 | Still awaiting EDP's opinon's on the VoD program... | TOOK::DMCLURE | Did Da Vinci move into management? | Mon Oct 28 1991 14:49 | 90 |
| re: .58,
> Your arguments are unreasonable and undeserving of response.
I contend that on the contrary, my arguments in note #981.55
are quite reasonable and they would only deserve a response if you
feel they are somehow unfounded - otherwise they stand as truths.
> Here's another example: First you criticized me because I was
> opposing a "Valuing Differences" program in an environment of, by your
> description, "fervor". Then when I satisfied your challenge to present
> a counterexample, showing that I was not exploiting "fervor", you
> criticized my opposition to a different program because it did NOT have
> people agreeing with it.
The reason I criticized your cafeteria note #242 in the ZKO
Suggestion Box conference was because it had no clear connection
to a specific "Valuing Differences" event and therefore, it did not
even qualify as an example of a notes discussion devoted to a specific
VoD event. The fact that nobody was agreeing with your petty complaints
in that note was only proof of how ridiculous your argument was to
begin with.
> So you have challenged opposition to "Valuing Differences" programs
> that receives too much or too little agreement. Apparently, any critic
> must judge in advance the response their opposition will receive and
> speak their opposition only if it will receive just the right amount of
> support -- not too hot, not too cold.
I have yet to see *any* sort of challenge to "Valuing Differences"
programs from you in this or any other note devoted to discussions on
the "Valuing Differences" program. Instead, all we see are piecemeal
anti-VoD arguments interspersed all over this conference in almost any
other topic imaginable. Maybe someday you might actually grace us by
formulating such an argument and entering it as a reply to this note
where it belongs.
> I guess that makes Davo McClure the Goldilocks of Political
> Correctness.
My, what a well-thought out argument! What a dynamic delivery!
What a debating technique! Such style! You are so brilliant EDP!
I am utterly humiliated and I concede to your superior intellect!
> Except that I suspect that opposition that received some
> support, but not a "fervor", would be criticized on other grounds.
You may be correct. It is sad but true that your arguments may
in fact be criticized on other grounds as well, and there is nothing,
no amount of mail sent to system managers and supervisors, not even
the Moderator "delete" priviledge will change this fact. You alone
are the only person who can ever change this trend.
> > And if you had your way, the only forms of communication allowed at
> > Digital facilities would be those taking place in notesfiles, and
> > behind closed doors.
> It seems that one of your greatest tendencies is to misrepresent your
> opponent's argument. You have done this repeatedly, and now you
> falsely say the only form of communication I would support for equal
> speech would be in conferences and behind closed doors, in spite of the
> fact that you just quoted a passage that referred explicitly to one
> other form -- "bulletin boards" -- and implicitly to more forms --
> "other passive means of communication".
Oh, so you decided to reply to my note after all. I admit that
buried in your twisted path of arguments and rhetoric from note #1616
that you did mention bulletin boards, however there are electronic
bulletin boards as well as the traditional cork variety, and it was
unclear what you meant by this. You'll also have to explain what you
meant by "passive means of communication". Without such clarification,
it would still appear that you would seek to limit all VoD program
events to written forms of communication alone and this is clearly
discriminatory to entire segments of the working population (not to
mention the fact that it would make a mockery of the freedom of
speech which you claim to hold so dear).
> Since your representation of my argument is incorrect, the reasoning
> that follows from the misrepresentation is not relevant to my actual
> argument.
As I said, you have yet to even present an argument in this note!
You are still too busy ducking for cover and running from the bad Karma
you created in your other notes. In my reply #.55, I tried to extract
what few rational statements of yours I could from note #1616 to see
if they hold any water, but you will have to take some initiative on
your own to present your arguments here as I am not about to reconstruct
them for you.
-davo
|
981.61 | Round and Round and Round and Round | DOBRA::MCGOVERN | | Mon Oct 28 1991 17:03 | 8 |
|
History in other notesfiles has established that, if you ignore him
he will go away.
Going away myself, I remain humbly yours,
MM
|
981.62 | Maybe it's possible | MKFSA::WENTWORTH | | Mon Oct 28 1991 18:48 | 3 |
| RE:.61
It's really not fair to offer false hope. I sense this will end up like
"Nightmare on Elm Street; part XXVIII".
|
981.63 | You need proof about the power of Notes? | TNPUBS::JONG | Steve Jong/T and N Publications | Tue Oct 29 1991 01:25 | 36 |
| Anent .56 (PORTER): I have also seen studies about electronic
conferences and their effect on interpersonal communication. It's
still an infant field of study, but this note (and 1616) demonstrate
the correctness of your assertion. When you don't see or hear the
other party, you don't receive any perceptual clues that the person may
be calm or agitated, serious or joking, clear or confused, young or
old, male or female. It's possible for someone to be "pulling your
leg" or "having on with you" without your recognizing it.
Add to that the fact that the Noter is physically detached. PORTER
could be in the Mill or in Singapore; JONG could be in Littleton or
Bombay. I can say anything to PORTER and probably never see the impact
or pay any penalty. We can't react to each other as people. If one
wants to flame, one can do so with some impunity.
The various editing programs allow nearly endless nitpicking exchanges
where individual sentences, lines, or words can be repeated and
analyzed at length, giving rise to the 100-line reply focussing on ten
lines in a previous note.
Finally, I think most people are not fluent in their use of language,
and tend to underestimate the power of their words. Words can make an
impact, drive home a point, even hurt. Sometimes people get lucky and
type a powerful phrase. More often, people enter something strong,
thinking it's weak. Also, sometimes phrases are entered imprecisely,
in haste. You Note in haste and then reply at leisure. (See my
previous comment about endless nitpicking.)
Just as a general comment, I think people should enter notes with the
expectation that their friends, coworkers, and managers will be reading
them now and in the future. Today's antagonist may be tomorrow's team
member or even manager. (Stranger things have happened!) Productive
and illuminating discussions are always welcome, but getting into flame
wars is like getting into urinating contests, except there's literally
a record on file that can be retrieved for years to come. I've gotten
sucked into flame wars and regretted doing so...
|
981.64 | :^) | SBPUS4::LAURIE | ack, no, none, GAL | Tue Oct 29 1991 09:20 | 6 |
| RE: a few back.
Actually, I don't think we'll have to ignore EDP for him to go away...
I suspect he's so embarrassed, he won't dare show his face for months.
Laurie.
|
981.65 | Free speech <> gospel. | PHLACT::QUINN | Saepe iniuria, numquam dubius! | Tue Oct 29 1991 11:07 | 16 |
| Isn't it all so neat and inspiring though? I get the feeling that this kind of
discourse was exactly what the founding fathers expected when they said all of
that stuff about free speech. If you'll dig a little you will find that there
were dozens of "leaflet" newspapers floating throughout Philadelphia during
the constitutional debates. Some of those opinions were downright nasty!
I remember running off those alcohol-and-blue-ink counter-whatever diatribes
many a time while in my misspent college years. What a wonderful place to live
where we can do stuff like that.
Free speech is very often obnoxious. Tough toots! That's why the make <NEXT
UNSEEN>.
thomas
"Who is the bigger fool, the fool, or the fool who follows the fool?"
|
981.66 | Rules of the Road... | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Tue Oct 29 1991 12:20 | 30 |
| re: .63 (Noting with an attitude?)
I've spent a lot of time working with electronic mail systems, and
playing with Notes - back to 1983 or earlier. I've always tried (and
sometimes failed) to keep in mind the implications of the media itself:
. Take care in chosing the right words - you don't get to see the
reaction of the reader, and you don't get to correct yourself until
much later, if at all. By then, the damage may be irreparable.
. Assume everyone on earth will see what you write. If you wouldn't
print it out and hang it on your office wall for all to see, then you
probably better reword it.
. People use mail and Notes in much the way they drive in traffic -
detached, aloof, and with a false sense of power. Note defensively,
it's better to err on the side of caution then to tick someone off by
mistake.
. When really irritated and angry and dying to just torch some clown
who desparately deserves it, write it, save it somewhere without
posting it, look at it again in the morning. Most times it gets
trashed, but don't let that deter going through the motions. Ya gotta
let it out SOMEhow!
Like I said, sometimes I don't remember my own rules, but most times I
manage to get through ok...
tim
|
981.67 | | DEMING::SILVA | Toi eyu ong | Tue Oct 29 1991 17:28 | 11 |
|
| I remember running off those alcohol-and-blue-ink counter-whatever diatribes
| many a time while in my misspent college years.
Was that the same blue stuff they used to make copies in grade school?
You know, the stuff everyone would sniff when it was freshly printed? ;-)
Glen
|
981.68 | Smelly blue stuff from grade school... | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Tue Oct 29 1991 18:29 | 4 |
| Mimeographs.
tim
|
981.69 | | DEMING::SILVA | Toi eyu ong | Tue Oct 29 1991 19:03 | 7 |
|
Thanks Tim!
|
981.70 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Oct 30 1991 11:33 | 4 |
| Wrong. Mimeographs are made by typically black ink that flows through a
stencil. The blue stuff with the alcohol was sold under the trademark
Ditto, and was known generically as spirit duplication. I imagine they're
both as common as slide rules these days.
|
981.71 | from someone who sees the school budgets | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Wed Oct 30 1991 11:41 | 8 |
| RE: .70 Actually both Ditto and mimeographs are both quite common
in schools today. Copy machines are expensive to buy and run.
Especially compared to a Ditto or mimeograph machine you already
own. And book publishers sell resources for use with Ditto and
mimeographs. They'd rather do that than sell copy machine input because
mimeograph and Ditto input wears out.
Alfred
|
981.72 | re .70 K+E Log-Log Deci-Trig ROOLZ... Value THAT!! :-) | RDVAX::KALIKOW | Partially Sage, and Rarely On Time | Wed Oct 30 1991 12:00 | 1 |
| Oops, is this ::DIGITAL, not ::SOAPBOX? <-:blush:->
|
981.73 | | TOOK::DMCLURE | Did Da Vinci move into management? | Fri Nov 01 1991 14:51 | 20 |
| re: 1650.86,
> Some responses have questioned how I could know that most people would
> readily operate the ovens if ordered to do so.
This is not what people are questioning. They are questioning
your assertion in note #1616.577 that the as opposed to people in
general (as was indicated by Milton's study) that in particular
"Valuing Differences supporters would readily operate the ovens when
ordered to do so, that being the mentality of such crusaders."
Your statement singles out supporters of the VoD program as
being somehow more likely to operate such ovens. There is absolutely
no basis for this statement. Were the Nazis who actually did operate
ovens big Valuing Differences supporters? On the contrary, they were
xenophobic extreemists who were attempting to end all differences
by killing people who were different. This is precisesly the opposite
of what the VoD program is all about.
-davo
|
981.74 | Yeah, out of bounds, man! | TNPUBS::JONG | Steve Jong/T and N Publications | Fri Nov 01 1991 15:41 | 1 |
| It was a rhetorical H-bomb of a comment, and I think not a germane one.
|
981.75 | I'm glad you asked that question Jerry... | TOOK::DMCLURE | Did Da Vinci move into management? | Sat Nov 02 1991 20:50 | 42 |
| re: 1649.87,
> OK, we get out of the morality business, and, VoD should be the first
> ones out the door?
This would be true if the VoD program did in fact provide
financial incentives to DEC employees for following one particular
morality over another, but unlike the benefits program, the VoD
program does not do this. My understanding of the VoD program
is that it is designed to foster understanding of diversity in the
workplace, and that it does so by providing open forums for the
sharing of cultural views and values. To my knowledge however,
the VoD program provides no particular advantage or incentive to
any one morality over another.
The benefits program however, does offer advantages and incentives
to certain moralities over others. Specifically, it offers financial
advantages to hetrosexuals who marry and have children in a specifically
Western-styled "nuclear" family arrangement. Furthermore, these benefits
are paid for by the profits of a widely diverse workforce - many of whom
do not happen to qualify for these benefits. By choosing to reward
certain life and family styles over others, DEC unwittingly finds itself
in the morality business.
If it were not for programs such as the VoD program (as well as
to the discussions such as this which relate to the VoD program), it
is quite possible that the inherent unfairness associated with the
existing benefits program, along with the frustrations of those who do
not currently benefit from the existing benefits program, might never
even be acknowledged. IMHO, it is precisely these sorts of underlying
inequities in the workplace that the VoD program is designed to
recognize and ultimately address.
To summarize, while it is accurate to say that the VoD program
deals with moral issues, it is not accurate to say that the VoD program
offers any sort of financial incentives to DEC employees for following
one moral code over another. Therefore, the Vod program does not involve
DEC in what I termed the "morality business", so it is quite consistent
to want DEC out of the morality business while also supporting the VoD
program (which exposes such inequities in the first place).
-davo
|
981.76 | | MU::PORTER | if it ain't broken, break it | Sat Nov 02 1991 21:06 | 23 |
| I think I've figured out the crux of at least one part of this
debate. Actually, it appeared in one of the several VoD rathole
topics in this file. I may be a little slow on the uptake, but
although I noticed this kernel before, it failed to fully register
that this may be the central point of argument.
The matter is something like "is it necessary for validity that VoD recognise
all differences as being of equal standing?" (this isn't supposed to
be a direct quotation, so no cries of misrepresentation, please).
There are those who seem to say that, without this being true,
VoD is inherently flawed, biased, and maybe even evil.
To state my viewpoint: I disagree. To attempt to address issues of,
say, eye colour as being of equal importance as issues of, say, skin colour
seems like foolishness in the extreme. Self-evidently, there are
some differences that are important enough to need urgent attention,
and some that aren't. You may justifiably want to debate about
whether difference X should or should not be on the VoD agenda;
that's fair enough.
Sheesh, I seem to be defending the VoD program. How'd I ever
get myself into that position?
|
981.78 | | JURAN::SILVA | Toi eyu ong | Mon Nov 04 1991 11:18 | 10 |
| | -< OH? They, perhaps *define* morality? >-
Define it? Nah. What I think they are doing is protecting a group under
the umbrella. I myself wouldn't have a problem if the Christians wanted to be
under the VoD umbrella, with Bibles in hand. There out there now and we're
surviving.....
Glen
|
981.79 | | NAC::SCHUCHARD | Al Bundy for Gov' | Mon Nov 04 1991 13:29 | 15 |
|
While the "oven" analogy does seem a bit strong, the point being
made I believe, is that VoD is used by some individuals as a club to
enforce their own notion of right/wrong. I would have to agree that
is regretfully true in many areas I have witnessed, and to argue with
that point can invite much trouble to be visited upon oneself.
It is not a valid reason to abandon such a program, merely an
invitation to try and improve it, provided you dare run the risk. It
is a challenge for VoD believers to listen carefull and not get so
swept up in the heat and retoric that envelope each side...you can
pick up a club and swing it without realizing you have done so.
bob
|
981.80 | Besides, I was referring to *financial* incentives | TOOK::DMCLURE | Did Da Vinci move into management? | Mon Nov 04 1991 14:50 | 42 |
| re: .77,
.77> *Please* help me to understand:
.75> ...the VoD program provides no particular advantage ...to any
.75> one morality over another.
.77> in view of:
1616.333> In fact, we were told (and I have it in writing) that we would
1616.333> not be allowed to use the Bible because after all it speaks clearly
1616.333> against homosexuality.
In order to answer this question, we need to look at the original
statement of purpose for the VoD program from Ken Olsen (posted in
note 1616.35). Particularly, the last sentence in the first paragraph:
1616.35> ...We will provide
1616.35> a work environment free from discrimination and harassment of any kind.
I think this might explain the reasoning behind the alleged
decision by the CXO VoD committee to disallow the use of the Bible
if, in fact, the Christian VoD group intended to use Biblical passages
in a way which were considered harrassing or discriminatory to Gay,
Lesbian or Bisexual DEC employees. Of course, it is extremely hard
to speculate on the exact reasoning behind the alleged VoD committee
decision in this case without more information. Since the author of
note #1616.333 claims to have the reasons in writing, then perhaps
they could obtain permission to share these written reasons with us
here to aid in the discussion.
Personally, I feel that if the Bible was in fact excluded entirely
from a Christian VoD committee presentation, then that would leave
extremely little for such a committee to present. If, however, the
jist of the recommendation by the CXO committee was to exclude the
use of certain Biblical passages to harrass fellow DEC employees, then
then this would seem to be an altogether different situation (after
all, the Bible was used to support slavery during and prior to the
U.S. Civil War as well, and I'm sure that the modern-day use of the
Bible for this purpose would similarly be disallowed at DEC).
-davo
|
981.81 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Mon Nov 04 1991 15:11 | 4 |
| RE: .80 Davo, you seem to be argueing that Digital is and should be
in the morality business. Or is harassment not a moral problem?
Alfred
|
981.83 | | ALIEN::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Nov 05 1991 11:03 | 19 |
| Re .73:
> This is not what people are questioning.
Sure, some of them were, as I stated. You may have another question,
but that does not void the question others asked.
> There is absolutely no basis for this statement.
Yes, there is. I have seen and heard how "Valuing Differences"
supporters act, and I know they have the same human foibles as
everybody else, that they discriminate, and they have not transcended
their culture.
As I said in 1650, I know that Digital's "Valuing Differences" program
would give its support to the killing of people.
-- edp
|
981.84 | ... About a 3 foot flame!!! | AIMHI::BROWN | | Tue Nov 05 1991 12:38 | 30 |
| Re: .83 edp
>>As I said in 1650, I know that Digital's "Valuing Differences"
program would give its support to the killing of people.
SET <FLAME ON>
HOW DARE YOU make such a baseless, unfounded, derogatory, and utterly
tasteless remark about a group of people/employees who's purpose in
this company is to try and integrate MANY different cultures, ideas,
and beliefs into Digital's work environment!!!
As a mostly "Read Only" noter I have seen many entries by you making
statements about a topic then back-pedaling on subsequent notes on
your views.
IMPO, YOU havn't taken a solid stand on *ANY* of your entries, and I
believe your sole purpose is to disrupt any meaningful discussions with
your drivel. This only clouds both the issues, and your views on the
topics, but also sidetracks discussions down the proverbial "rat Hole"!
SET <FLAME OFF>
I don't always agree with the practices of the "V.D." folks, but I do
respect what they are trying to do by making Digital a better place to
work for people of *ALL* denominations and beliefs...
Nuff said.
Tom
|
981.86 | | DUCK::WOODROWJ | The Purple People Eater | Tue Nov 05 1991 13:16 | 4 |
| Surely, by definition, a veteran is somebody who is no longer employed
killing people.
Joe
|
981.85 | So What? | TNPUBS::JONG | Steve Jong/T and N Publications | Tue Nov 05 1991 13:32 | 35 |
| [reposted to add two concluding paragraphs -- sfj]
You know, when I saw the mail yesterday that this month's VoD event in
marlboro would involve veterans, I wondered how long it would be before
it would be attacked. It didn't take long:
.83 (edp):
>> As I said in 1650, I know that Digital's "Valuing Differences" program
>> would give its support to the killing of people.
If I follow the thread of logic here, veterans participated in wars;
veterans killed people; VoD is sponsoring a veteran's event; therefore
VoD would give its support to the killing of people because it *is*
"supporting" this event. This is a gossamer thread of logic, but at
least one can see from its beginning to its end.
In Note 1650, edp quantified his statement as "100,000 foreigners."
One might infer from this that he's taking an estimate of Iraqi deaths
in the Gulf War.
All right, then. Damn bad show about those Iraqi deaths. Take it up
with Saddam Hussein, why don't you?
As the son, grandson, and brother of veterans, I could, again, take
this comment as a personal affront, but I'll let it slide. Instead,
I'd like to explore what lies behind the assertion.
So what's your point, edp? Do you have a specific objection to Digital
publicizing that veterans may have a different perspective on things?
Do you have a specific objection to Digital's taking note that it
employs veterans? Do you have a specific objection to Digital
employing veterans? (I remind you that Digital supports veterans as a
corporate policy, in accordance with U.S. law.) Is this a rhetorical
hand grenade, or do you have a point, an objection?
|
981.87 | Many groups, many individuals | TNPUBS::JONG | Steve Jong/T and N Publications | Tue Nov 05 1991 13:42 | 22 |
| Another argument advanced recently by edp is, if I understand it
correctly, that the VoD program values some differences and not others.
edp, why do you make that statement? Is it because some groups (such
as gay/lesbian/bisexual and also now veterans) have been "featured" via
Awareness Days, while others have not? You've also stated, I think,
that your personal differences are not valued by VoD.
Upon reflection, I think the first point is not fair. There are so
many groups and so few awareness days. Maybe they haven't gotten
around to all the groups on their agenda yet? You haven't mentioned
Portuguese Awareness Day, for example, but that was another event
sponsored by VoD. If they do Awareness Days for individual countries,
they'll be at it for years! Just because they haven't covered all the
groups yet doesn't mean they won't.
What group would you claim to belong to? Perhaps you'll get your day.
Or do you say that you are not a member of a group, but an individual.
I really urge you to sign up for the course "Understanding the
Dynamics of Difference." I think one of the fundamental points made
there is that you should look at an individual as an individual, not as
a member of a group, to gain a true understanding. You just might find
that you are in raging agreement with the VoD program and its goals!
|
981.89 | Most of us knew this already, of course... | LAVETA::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Tue Nov 05 1991 14:27 | 14 |
| The idea that VoD is sponsoring "Awareness" activities for Veterans
is an interesting point.
The people most often labeled "PC" were against the Gulf War - yet the
same so-called "PC" people are willing to support VoD for people involved
in an event (the Gulf War) that is "NON-PC."
By the way, I'm often labeled PC myself - and I most definitely support
VoD - but I was (and remain) a strong supporter of the Gulf War.
So - if VoD does a non-PC act like supporting Veterans (and if some
VoD supporters also support a non-PC action like the Gulf War) - then
"PC" is a pretty meaningless label (except to those who use it as a
weapon to lodge ad hominem attacks on others.)
|
981.90 | | STUDIO::HAMER | complexity=technical immaturity | Tue Nov 05 1991 15:11 | 14 |
| re: VoD and veterans
Whereas the U.S. forces in the war against Iraq were all volunteer and
Whereas we were were all sensitized by an earlier discussion to the
wrongheadedness of including under the VoD umbrella so-called
differences that were really choices, is it therefore safe to assume
the Heros of Desert Storm are excluded from mention by the VoD
veterans' event? If not, we should expect another 500+ string of
replies.
Us moral folk with our fingers in the social fabric's rupturing dike
certainly insist on consistency at all costs.
John H.
|
981.92 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Nov 05 1991 15:29 | 1 |
| What, no Dweeb Recognition Day? No wonder people are upset!
|
981.93 | re .92 THANKS Gerald for a **MUCH** needed 'Note of Levity!' | RDVAX::KALIKOW | Partially Sage, and Rarely On Time | Tue Nov 05 1991 15:35 | 2 |
| ... as has been said in other conferences MANY times... BWAH-HA-HAAA!!
:-)
|
981.94 | Danny 'The Dweeb' Quayle? | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Tue Nov 05 1991 15:54 | 9 |
| > <<< Note 981.92 by NOTIME::SACKS "Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085" >>>
>
>What, no Dweeb Recognition Day? No wonder people are upset!
Yup. They're gonna invite Vice President Quayle as guest speaker.
;-)
tim
|
981.95 | | SBPUS4::LAURIE | ack, no, none, GAL | Tue Nov 05 1991 16:00 | 8 |
981.96 | Foul! | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Tue Nov 05 1991 16:20 | 18 |
| > <<< Note 981.83 by ALIEN::EDP "Always mount a scratch monkey." >>>
>
> As I said in 1650, I know that Digital's "Valuing Differences" program
> would give its support to the killing of people.
>
>
> -- edp
That is the most assinine statement I have ever seen in a pubic forum.
It wouldn't surprise me if it also constitutes slander. I cannot
understand what realistic basis could exist for such an insulting,
degrading, and totally offensive remark.
How repulsive!
tim
|
981.97 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Illiterate? Write for free help. | Tue Nov 05 1991 16:30 | 9 |
| > <<< Note 981.83 by ALIEN::EDP "Always mount a scratch monkey." >>>
>
> As I said in 1650, I know that Digital's "Valuing Differences" program
> would give its support to the killing of people.
>
>
> -- edp
Were those the people who were going to man the ovens?
|
981.98 | VoD != Morality Business | TOOK::DMCLURE | Did Da Vinci move into management? | Tue Nov 05 1991 20:05 | 38 |
| re: .81,
> RE: .80 Davo, you seem to be argueing that Digital is and should be
> in the morality business. Or is harassment not a moral problem?
Harassment is most definitely a moral problem, but then so is
lust, diet, the direction one faces to pray, clothing styles, and
everything else under the sun (and moon). In short, a moral problem
can be arbitrarily defined to include most anything, and it is up
to the world's legal systems to determine which moral problems they
wish to solve with laws, and corespondingly, it is then up to a
given corporation's management/personnel/legal structures to attempt
to sufficiently govern employee behavior such that employees do not
involve the corporation in legal problems.
So, it is true that that DEC inforces a given morality by
imposing a doctrine of legally defined morals on its employees,
and the rules regarding harrassment are included in this morality,
but the enforcement of a legally defined moral code does *not*
in and of itself qualify DEC as being in the morality business.
Recall that I am the one who originally coined the phrase
"morality business", so as the inventor of this phrase, I reserve
the right to define what this phrase means. 8-) According to my
definition of the phrase, in order for a corporation to be in the
morality business, it must offer financial incentives or monetary
rewards to its employees for living their lives in accordance with
a particular morality.
According to the above definition, DEC is in the morality business
due to the benefits program which provides added financial benefits to
married hetrosexual employees with children. On the same token, since
the VoD program offers no particular financial incentives or monetary
rewards to DEC employees for living their lives in accordance with
one particular morality over another, then the VoD program does *not*
in and of itself qualify DEC as being in the morality business.
-davo
|
981.99 | | FSOA::DARCH | SOAPBOXers shoot from the lip | Tue Nov 05 1991 22:15 | 15 |
|
I usually don't do this, but...
Ditto on .84 Tom Brown, .91 Bubba (1st 2 paragraphs you wrote),
.95 Laurie and .96 Tim Grady--including all flames and exclamation
points, and including such terms as: derogatory, utterly tasteless,
odious, repulsive, sickening, asinine, insulting, degrading, offensive
and repulsive [again]. I'd also add: disgusting, hateful, repugnant
and despicable.
VoD is not part of my job any more, but I do support the concept of the
program. I've had questions about it, and after investigating it
rather thoroughly still have issues with some parts of it, but that
statement is without a doubt one of the most offensive I have ever
read in any notesfile.
|
981.100 | | SBPUS4::LAURIE | ack, no, none, GAL | Wed Nov 06 1991 05:53 | 28 |
981.101 | | BEING::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Nov 06 1991 10:01 | 16 |
| Re .84:
>> As I said in 1650, I know that Digital's "Valuing Differences"
>> program would give its support to the killing of people.
>
> SET <FLAME ON>
>
> HOW DARE YOU make such a baseless, unfounded, derogatory, and utterly
> tasteless remark about a group of people/employees who's purpose in
> this company is to try and integrate MANY different cultures, ideas,
> and beliefs into Digital's work environment!!!
I don't dare; it's not unfounded.
-- edp
|
981.102 | | BEING::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Nov 06 1991 10:04 | 20 |
| Re .85:
> If I follow the thread of logic here, veterans participated in wars;
> veterans killed people; VoD is sponsoring a veteran's event; therefore
> VoD would give its support to the killing of people because it *is*
> "supporting" this event.
Why do people do that? Why do people take something I said, pluck
something else out of the air, and try to put the two together? I
didn't present any such thread of logic; don't try to imply I did.
Is it really so hard to _ask_ me what my reasoning is instead of making
something up?
No, it's not through veterans that Digital's "Valuing Differences"
program got involved in the Iraq war. Digital's "Valuing Differences"
program actively supported active participants in the war.
-- edp
|
981.103 | | HLFS00::CHARLES | Sunny side up | Wed Nov 06 1991 10:04 | 5 |
| re.101
So you are *absolutely* sure non of the veterans served in the medical
corps?
Charles Mallo
|
981.104 | | BEING::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Nov 06 1991 10:10 | 16 |
981.105 | | BEING::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Nov 06 1991 10:12 | 17 |
| Re .96:
> I cannot understand what realistic basis could exist for such an
> insulting, degrading, and totally offensive remark.
You apparently have not tried to understand. You haven't even asked
what the basis is.
Really, it is quite illustrative how many people just deny a statement
without making any consideration at all for its basis. The statement
does not fit your preconceived notions; it is different, so just attack
it.
Go on, prove to me more that Digital does not "Value Differences".
-- edp
|
981.106 | | BEING::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Nov 06 1991 10:14 | 11 |
| Re .97:
They were people just like any others, and, just like the people of
Digital's "Valuing Differences" program, most of them too would operate
the ovens if called upon.
But they were people, and they were slaughtered, and Digital's "Valuing
Differences" program gave its support to the people slaughtering them.
-- edp
|
981.107 | | VSSCAD::MARCOTTE | | Wed Nov 06 1991 11:04 | 3 |
| re .106
Again.....prove it!
|
981.108 | Two alternate futures: Behavioristic or Cognitive 'Mind Control' | RDVAX::KALIKOW | Partially Sage, and Rarely On Time | Wed Nov 06 1991 11:19 | 65 |
| Scenario #1: The BM2TD program _literally_ captures someone suspected
of harassing a G/L/B person. They strap them into a chair and attach
their electrodes. They show the victim videos of others harassing
G/L/B people... For every incident, they administer electric shocks,
in an attempt to associate the aversive stimuli with the depictions of
harassment. [For an extra fillip of enjoyment, they take a leaf from
Stanley Milgram's experimental logbook and wear white lab coats and
ORDER heretofore-unwilling experimental subjects to administer the
shocks.]
For particularly egregious (and well-documented :-) offenders, videos
of their OWN behavior towards gays are shown and similarly negatively
reinforced. Thus the BM2TD (Behavior Modification to Tolerate
Differences) program attempts to train offenders to cease the offending
behavior. No attempt is made to deal with any higher mental processes
in the trainees. This is not mind control, except by accident; if the
offending person is not "cured" of a tendency to harass gays by pure
conditioning, s/he may be cured as a felicitous byproduct of the mental
association between visualizing the emission of that punished behavior,
and the subsequent punishment -- by remembering that those thoughts
that lead to harrassment, also have led to punishment. Problem solved.
(Yes, this reminds me too of "A Clockwork Orange." Yeecch!)
Scenario #2: The VoD planners -- realizing that it's futile and
(naturally!) totally illegal to implement (-: or even THINK of!:-) a
BM2TD program like Scenario #1, decide to take the tack of working
toward the goal, among others, of increased tolerance for different
(non-normal) folks through a program of "empathy enhancement." They
run activities that are directed to the purpose of helping "self-
perceived as normal" folks inderstand the viewpoints of, and to
identify with others of different racial background, sexual preference,
and/or physical ability (probably among other differences). They try
to get folks to "walk a mile in the moccasins" of these other groups.
Some folks balk at this idea, thinking (mistakenly, imo) that the goal
is for them to become exactly like the different, minority group, or
that the goal is for PREFERENCE to be given to the different group.
This is not the case, imo; I don't view this attempt to alter beliefs
as "mind control;" it seems much more to me to be "mind expansion."
The goal is tolerance inside, so that this new MENTAL state lowers the
probability of the emission of socially- and businessly-(sic)
undesirable intolerant behaviors.
And it's greatly to be preferred to REAL "mind control" procedures,
which as I say are incompatible with a free society in general, and
certainly with DEC in particular.
Seemztame that some social critics of the VoD program, "shockingly"
unaware of the choice that was made in its implementation, have
confused Scenario #1 for Scenario #2, which is (in my limited exposure
to VoD) probably far closer to the truth. If you don't mind my drastic
understatement, that is.
Perhaps the word "Valuing" in VoD is part of the problem, as others
have pointed out. Folks complain that they will NEVER actually "value"
a "lifestyle" they abhor. Primarily (imo, for some of them) from this
semantic mismatch, they proceed to devalue :-) the goals of the entire
program. I say, let's get past the naming problem and decide on
whether it's in DIGITAL's best interest that folks get along with one
another and give each other respect and an equal shake. Scenario #2
doesn't seem like an invasion of privacy to me. Again sorry for any
vast understatements here.
Dan Kalikow
|
981.109 | wrt regarding insults about VoD supporters as FACTS [SIC]... | GORE::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Nov 06 1991 11:27 | 12 |
| RE: 1650.140
>> Psychological experiments seldom PROVE anything (beyond the fact that
>> a certain experiment will yield similar results with different testers.)
> Yes, and airplanes have never been proven to fly, beyond the fact that
> a certain structure will yield similar results with different pilots.
Psychology is NOT physics, math NOR aerodynamics!
Neither are your opinions FACTS. They aren't now, nor will they ever
be.
|
981.110 | | SBPUS4::LAURIE | ack, no, none, GAL | Wed Nov 06 1991 11:44 | 5 |
| RE: last few.
I'd like to comment, but I've been gagged.
Laurie.
|
981.112 | Out with it | TNPUBS::JONG | Steve Jong/T and N Publications | Wed Nov 06 1991 12:09 | 15 |
| Anent .102 (edp): "People" did not try to put your statements
together; I did. I did it because I was trying to understand what you
are saying. From what you are now saying, I gather you're saying
something slightly different.
Actually, to answer your question, it *is* hard to ask you what your
reasoning is, because so many people line up to challenge you that you
answer only a select few.
To what are you referring when you stated, "Digital's 'Valuing
Differences' program actively supported active participants in the
war"?
I expect that you had something in mind, so assuming you have, let me
further ask you: What is your objection to this?
|
981.113 | | BEING::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Nov 06 1991 14:55 | 71 |
| Re .107, .112:
I received mail from a person saying they were a member of MRO's
"Valuing Differences" committee. This person touted some of the
"Valuing Differences" activities they had conducted, one of which was
creating a banner to send to the troops of Operation Desert Storm.
Now if somebody wants to support the troops, that's not necessarily a
bad thing. Certainly many people think nationalism is a good thing and
want to support their country. Certainly many people thought Kuwait
needed defending and doing that was a good thing. But even these
people must admit that killing people to accomplish a goal is at best
an ugly necessity.
It was not in the headlines, but it was news available to the public:
In the Iraq war, the United States killed one hundred thousand Iraqis,
maybe two hundred thousand. The United States was reveling in its
fancy weapons while human beings were dying.
As I said, supporting the troops is not necessarily a bad thing. Maybe
the United States was doing the right thing. But was it valuing
differences? No. Is supporting the troops a valuing differences
activity? Absolutely not. Supporting the troops is nationalism; it is
cultural, but it is not valuing differences. Supporting the troops is
not about recognizing the differences among people and treating the
friction that is caused. Supporting the troops was purely a part of
what is very much a cultural bias: holding one's own country above
others. It is completely antithetical to valuing differences.
But that is what MRO's "Valuing Differences" committee did. Human
beings truly concerned with the problems caused by differences would
have been saddened by the deaths of foreigners. Caring people would
have been saddened by the international frictions that cause these
conflicts. A valuing differences approach would have supported more
attempt at understanding foreigners; it would have pushed to give a
better chance to peaceful negotiations instead of war. In the event of
war, a valuing differences approach would express concern for all
people involved; it would not take sides.
During the war, I passed a place in a mall where a banner to be sent to
the troops had been set up for people to sign, and people were
clustering around it, waiting for their chance to sign. It was almost
a party-like atmosphere, and that was distasteful to me. The word
"carnival" is particularly appropriate. Oh, the weapons were
impressive, but how could human beings take joy in war? It can only be
because they were not aware of the human misery that existed even at
the moments their pens touched the cloth. They did not know -- they
were not aware of the differences. The difference in this case is the
most tragic of all; not only were the suffering people foreigners, but
the difference between our troops, with their video-game weapons, and
the foreigners was that the foreigners were dying in droves.
War is ugly. Under no circumstances is it "Valuing Differences". Yet
MRO's "Valuing Differences" committee joined in the support of the
United States. Once again, I am not saying this is necessarily bad,
but it absolutely, positively, is not valuing differences. The
"Valuing Differences" committee did not do this thing because it is
part of a valuing differences philosophy. They did it because it was a
part of their culture. They fell prey to the same motivations that
affected so much of this country, and they supported the killing of one
hundred thousand foreigners.
Digital's "Valuing Differences" program does not value differences. It
does not recognize differences beyond those currently accepted by the
culture it is a part of. It is not faithful to its alleged philosophy.
It hurts people with other differences. "Valuing Differences" sounds
nice, but the truth is that the people of this program will do what
their culture leads them to do, whether it is the right thing or not.
-- edp
|
981.114 | | THATS::FULTI | | Wed Nov 06 1991 15:04 | 8 |
| RE: .113
Eric,
I may not agree with everything you say and do in this conference but,
I have to say that you present a VERY good argument here. Well said...
- George
|
981.115 | Funny. | HOO78C::VISSERS | Dutch Comfort | Wed Nov 06 1991 15:11 | 21 |
| .113
Well, there is finally a viewpoint and situation discussed that could
provide ground for a discussion about 'what is part and what is not
part of Valuing Differences' - and I must admit I can agree with the
viewpoint that this is not a Valuing Differences but more a cultural
specific action, in which I don't see much 'difference valued'.
That leaves me with the question whether it's fair to conclude from
this case, which may be an isolated incident, and may not be a general
VoD guideline, that 'Digital's VoD program is filth', or that 'it's
supporters would gladly man the ovens'. Even worse, if this is a
debatable issue in the VoD discussion, I fail to see why it took so
long to be entered this way, while other discussions have been ratholed
so much (to wit, note 1616.*). Surely instances as this could have
provoked a sensible discussion in their own topic.
Whether there still is any spirit left to discuss the VoD program based
on examples like this, remains to be seen. I think that's a shame.
Ad
|
981.116 | | LAVETA::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Nov 06 1991 16:01 | 12 |
| Well, at least we can dispose of ONE of the labels that has been
unfairly attached to VoD: "PC"!
Supporting the Gulf War is *definitely* not "PC," no matter what else
one can say about it.
So much for the claim that "PC-ness" is the motivation for choosing
which groups to highlight in VoD activities.
Isn't it a drag when one is so busy attaching labels (with the neat
potential of distorting the truth and condemning people en masse) that
the labels start contradicting each other?
|
981.117 | Baloney! | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Wed Nov 06 1991 16:18 | 46 |
| > <<< Note 981.105 by BEING::EDP "Always mount a scratch monkey." >>>
>
> Re .96:
>
> > I cannot understand what realistic basis could exist for such an
> > insulting, degrading, and totally offensive remark.
>
> You apparently have not tried to understand. You haven't even asked
> what the basis is.
I don't care (anymore) what the basis is.
Indeed, I have tried to understand, but I am still unable to understand
the logic that leads you to leap from the incident that you document in
.113, to the manipulative statements about VoD supporters manning ovens
and supporting the killing of people. Manipulative, in my opinion,
because they are exagerations, and even outright fabrications of
unrelated scenarios, for the apparently sole purpose of getting
attention. In other words, a cheap trick, sophomoric drivel, again in
my opinion. I get the distinct impression that your ONLY purpose was
to manipulate your audience, and I resent it.
Even though I too oppose the Gulf War, and I do not agree with VoD
involvement in support of it, these issues are no excuse for your abuse
of this media to hurl such offensive epithets. I value a constructive
discussion, ne' even argument over topical issues, and the opportunity
to explore our language further in the process. But I maintain that
such adolescent tactics destroy any hope that you have of retaining
even the slightest shred of credibility.
It's just plain insulting.
In other words, I believe you might have even made your point. You
clearly have command of a great many big words to use, but you take
them out of bounds to win. I don't believe you. You can't make your
point and retain a civil tongue (or keyboard, such as it is ;-).
I don't think you're sincere. I don't think you even mean it.
I think it's all just for show. Have a good time.
> Go on, prove to me more that Digital does not "Value Differences".
Go on, prove to me that you're not just a big phoney.
tim
|
981.118 | Are Desert Storm troops too politically incorrect to value? | TOOK::DMCLURE | Did Da Vinci move into management? | Wed Nov 06 1991 16:25 | 21 |
| re: .113,
I see nothing inconsistent with the VoD program creating a
banner to send to the troops of Operation Desert Storm. Like
every other VoD program activity and group, each represents a
given subgrouping of the Digital workforce. Likewise, it would
not be inconsistent to hear of yet another VoD program activity
which set about to create a banner to send to the Iraqui soldiers,
victims, and families of the Iraq war as well.
Of course, like every other VoD group or activity, this would
mean that someone would need to take the initiative to form such
a VoD group, and they would also need to take the initiative to
create such a banner. Seeing as how it is apparently much easier
(or at least apparently far more enjoyable) to simply sit back and
criticize the VoD program than it is to take such an initiative,
then I don't see such a banner or a VoD group being formed any
time soon. The same goes for any of the other causes to which
people claim there is currently no VoD representation.
-davo
|
981.119 | Value is also a verb | AKOCOA::BBARRY | | Wed Nov 06 1991 16:54 | 5 |
| Many companies sent banners/cards/care-pkgs/etc. to show their support
for their employees who were in the Nat'l Guard and participated in the
war; These soldiers were *different* from civilian employees and were
valued as such.
|
981.120 | | BUZON::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Wed Nov 06 1991 17:06 | 31 |
| re .113
I understand the logic that requires that an organization be faithful
to its charter and agree that the MRO VoD group failed in this. I
think this is inevitable when a charter is described in such imprecise
terms that everyone feels empowered to rewrite it or to do "what they
think is right" in the name of the "group". Clearly, to keep a local,
voluntary organization close to its charter is very difficult.
On the other hand, lack of control by any central VoD organization,
failure to discipline its "franchisees" is not equivalent to supporting
any particular local action. It is just another manifestation of the
inability of some idealistic folks to recognize that it takes more than
good will to do good. So, I reject your portrayal of VoD as malicious,
just ineffectual.
re .118
Apparently you don't believe that the words used as the title of an
organization should be descriptive of their activities. I disagree.
Until we can accept the discipline of calling things by names
appropriate to their charters, we will encourage the kind of rhetoric
we have seen too much of already.
If the name of an organization within Digital is Valuing Differences,
then let it be about that, not about anything that the members think is
"nice". Banners for the troops are not about differences.
imho,
Dick
|
981.121 | | DOBRA::MCGOVERN | | Wed Nov 06 1991 17:22 | 4 |
|
So how come edp gets away with a certain barnyard expletive in .104?
MM
|
981.122 | What's your point? | TNPUBS::JONG | Steve Jong/T and N Publications | Wed Nov 06 1991 17:27 | 10 |
| Anent .104 (edp): Please do not use vulgar language in this
conference.
You sound as if you are offended by reply .92. Are you offended? If
you have an objection, make it known to the moderators and perhaps they
will delete it.
In any event, I don't see how you can label the existence of such a
note as a failure of the VoD program. I don't see the connection at
all.
|
981.123 | How does one 'VALUE' something? | AKOCOA::BBARRY | | Wed Nov 06 1991 17:49 | 18 |
981.124 | a rose is a daisy is an orchid ... | CORREO::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Thu Nov 07 1991 09:21 | 16 |
| re .123
VoD is chartered to educate us about how to value _our_ differences as
persons within Digital, not the differences between what someone
(who may not even be an employee) is _doing_ temporarily. Digital is a
multinational company and none of its programs should be straying into
nationalistic activities.
On the other hand, I admit that the name is so ridiculously vague that
other interpretations are likely. If I were charged with naming such
an organization, I would like to think I could come up with something
less ambiguous.
fwiw,
Dick
|
981.125 | Its all in the words | AKOCOA::BBARRY | | Thu Nov 07 1991 10:53 | 16 |
981.126 | | TRODON::SIMPSON | PCI with altitude! | Thu Nov 07 1991 11:01 | 12 |
| re .124
> multinational company and none of its programs should be straying into
> nationalistic activities.
Yes, this is an interesting point. On the one hand Digital as a
corporation is obliged to work within the laws of the country. In this
country they have to support people in the Reserves by law, and I'm sure
it's the same in the US and elsewhere. At the same time, what happens if
(say) the US gets into an argument with a country in which Digital has a
significant presence? Support both sides? I suppose that's what country
management is for...
|
981.127 | | MU::PORTER | if it ain't broken, break it | Thu Nov 07 1991 12:42 | 6 |
|
> At the same time, what happens if
>(say) the US gets into an argument with a country in which Digital has a
>significant presence?
Then we can have even more nasty shoot-outs in DIGITAL.NOTE
|
981.128 | Operation Desert Storm was *not* purely nationalistic | TOOK::DMCLURE | Did Da Vinci move into management? | Thu Nov 07 1991 14:46 | 14 |
| re .124, .125,
> multinational company and none of its programs should be straying into
> nationalistic activities.
Keep in mind that despite the moral justifications (or lack
thereof) for waging war in general, that Operation Desert Storm
was a multinational military operation supported by the United
Nations against a nationalistic aggressor. While Operation Desert
Storm was headed by a U.S. commander, it would be an insult to the
other countries which participated in the operation to claim that
it was a purely nationalistic activity.
-davo
|
981.129 | | MU::PORTER | if it ain't broken, break it | Thu Nov 07 1991 14:52 | 6 |
| re .-1
Yeah, but in how many countries did they sell "Operation Desert
Storm" T-shirts?
(No, I don't claim to know the answer)
|
981.130 | | TRODON::SIMPSON | PCI with altitude! | Thu Nov 07 1991 15:12 | 6 |
| re .129
>Yeah, but in how many countries did they sell "Operation Desert
>Storm" T-shirts?
Well, I can scratch one country from any potential list right now...
|
981.131 | THE BUSINESS CONNECTION | MCIS1::DHURLEY | Children Learn What They Live | Thu Nov 07 1991 15:44 | 30 |
| Moderators, please move this to the appropriate topic if needed....
The Greater Marlboro Are Valuing Diversity Committee is please to
sponsor:
VALUING DIVERSITY-----THE BUSINESS CONNECTION AND PROFITABILITY
NOVEMBER 26, 1991
12:00PM TO 1:00PM
MRO4 AMPHITHEATRE
Speakers will be Barbara Latimer - External Relations and Valuing
Diversity Manager
Ken Allt - Corporate Demand/Supply
Digital's Valuing Diversity Definition Statement
Diversity is the work of enhancing Digital's profitability by
continuing to build a diverse workforce and by creating an environment
which maximizes the contribution of the company's employees around the
world. Digital recognizes diversity as a critical dimension of our
business success...
Registration is requird because of seating limitations...please send
mail to Denise Hurley@MRO or MCIS1::Dhurley or call 297-2561...
|
981.132 | Digital Does Not Value Vegetarians | BEING::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Mon Nov 18 1991 09:53 | 47 |
| It is approaching that time of year when Digital demonstrates in
another way that it does not value differences.
Each year, Digital procures turkeys as gifts for its employees in the
New England area. Around the time of this event two years ago or more,
a person pointed out in a Notes conference that they were vegetarian
and would prefer that Digital not procure a turkey on their behalf.
Digital does allow employees to choose not to receive a turkey, and
Digital will donate the turkey to charity if the employee places their
gift card in a box, but the turkey has still been obtained, and some
employees would prefer that an animal not be killed on their behalf.
I did not agree with this person's beliefs about the ethics of using
animals as food (in fact I had been arguing against them in Notes), but
even so, I recognized that their beliefs ought to be respected as
applied to themself. So I wrote to a corporate-level "Valuing
Differences" representative, described the situation, and suggested
that Digital make an alternative available, such as another gift to the
employee, another gift to charity, or simply that Digital not procure
an animal for employees who wished that no animal be killed on their
behalf.
I received an acknowledgement, but Digital has not shown any sign of
valuing the differences of vegetarians. Admittedly, making another
selection available might be difficult, particularly since many
non-vegetarians might choose it as well, thus complicating
administration. But certainly the least Digital could do would be to
count the people who did not want a turkey killed and then reducing
turkey procurement by that number, eventually reducing the market for
dead animals. I cannot believe the cost of counting these people and
matching them with their gift cards would approach the cost of the
turkey itself, so this program would cost Digital nothing -- perhaps it
would even save the company money. Here is a way Digital could value
differences, a way the company could show that it cares about its
employees while saving the company money.
But Digital has not lifted a finger to recognize or value this
difference. That is no surprise, since vegetarians are not a
politically or legally protected group, so Digital does not give a damn
about them. "Valuing Differences" is a farce.
-- edp
P.S. References to "vegetarians" above are not meant to imply that all
vegetarians believe it is unethical to use animals for food.
|
981.133 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Mon Nov 18 1991 10:23 | 18 |
981.134 | | DEMING::SILVA | Toi eyu ong | Mon Nov 18 1991 10:32 | 17 |
|
I heard somewhere that DEC has their own turkey farm? Is that true? I
also heard they don't, so which one is true? I think Heather's idea would work
well so that those who didn't wish a turkey to be killed or who don't like
turkey can get something they would like instead.
Eric, with just one person responding to them about the turkey issue
might not get them to change their minds. Instead of complaining how DEC
doesn't value vegitarians, why not organize something where others can send
their responses as well? If enough people respond, then maybe they will do
something about it (I'm sure not this year though...). Who is the contact
person?
Glen
|
981.135 | All the turkeys are in U.S. :-) | PULPO::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Mon Nov 18 1991 10:33 | 4 |
| re .133
Vouchers for $15 are also used in lieu of turkey here in Puerto Rico.
|
981.136 | Though I understand & value the point of .132, ... | RDVAX::KALIKOW | Trng.Mgr.,M.T.P.Program,D.R.D.Dept. | Mon Nov 18 1991 11:03 | 16 |
| ... and though I certainly wish I hadn't thought of the analogy,
... and though even though I'm of Jewish descent I hesitate to express
it...
... and though I, too, wouldn't mind if an alternative to Thanksgiving
Turkeys were to be offered to those choosing it...
... I still will be counted among those who will
"willingly man the ovens"
come next Thanksgiving Day!!
Approaching Holiday Cheers, and to vegetarians too,
Dan
|
981.137 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Mon Nov 18 1991 11:22 | 5 |
| >I heard somewhere that DEC has their own turkey farm?
I think that I work there.
Jamie.
|
981.138 | Turkeys in the Mill | PULPO::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Mon Nov 18 1991 12:02 | 5 |
| Fourteen years ago, someone in Personnel posted signs all over ML1-4 that
read "The turkeys are coming!". Some wag posted a handwritten postscript
that read "They are already here!".
Dick
|
981.139 | | SBPUS4::LAURIE | ack, no, none, GAL | Mon Nov 18 1991 12:15 | 11 |
| Surely, if vegetarians felt they were "hard done by" within Digital,
they would band together and form a lobby or pressure group. I would
expect however, that they're quite happy with the consideration they
get through the food available in the canteen, and expect no more of an
employer. I admire your stance, but why appoint yourself as Champion
for the Vegetarians, and stick your neck out?
I agree that to label the VoD programme "a farce" because they still
get a turkey given on their behalf, is a bit much.
Laurie.
|
981.140 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Mon Nov 18 1991 12:36 | 16 |
| Actually it wouldn't save any turkeys. Down on the farm the process
goes like this. About a year a head of time you estimate how many
turkeys you can sell at the end of next season. In the USA this is
Thanks giving in the UK it is Christmas.
Come the end of the season you slaughter the lot, none are spared.
Those that you do not sell immediately are put into a deep freeze and
sold later in the year.
So by declining your turkey you would not save its life.
However I think that vegetarians should be given a gift of equal value
that they would not find offensive.
Jamie.
|
981.141 | Tofu turkeys? | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Nov 18 1991 13:12 | 8 |
981.142 | | IMTDEV::BRUNO | Father Gregory | Mon Nov 18 1991 13:57 | 11 |
| RE: <<< Note 981.132 by BEING::EDP "Always mount a scratch monkey." >>>
>But Digital has not lifted a finger to recognize or value this
>difference. That is no surprise, since vegetarians are not a
>politically or legally protected group, so Digital does not give a damn
>about them. "Valuing Differences" is a farce.
You do your own anti-VoD agenda some harm by going over the edge
like this. I'm sure you could locate some real issues if you tried.
Greg
|
981.143 | Digital apparently doesn't value "the field" either | DYPSS1::DYSERT | Barry - Custom Software Development | Mon Nov 18 1991 14:13 | 4 |
981.144 | There is a future effect | TLE::REINIG | This too shall change | Mon Nov 18 1991 14:23 | 11 |
| re .140
You are correct, declining a turkey this year wouldn't save a turkey
immediately. However, by declining a turkey you are reducing the
demand. There will be more turkeys left over. Next year, when the
grower determines how many to raise, they will cut back because thay
raised too many the previous year. So, declining a turkey today will
save a turkey tomorrow. (Or course, if only one person did this,
nothing would happen. But if many did, this is what would happen.)
August G. Reinig
|
981.145 | | PCOJCT::REIS | God is my refuge | Mon Nov 18 1991 15:47 | 4 |
|
We don't get anything in NJ either!!
Trudy
|
981.146 | Lame turkey! | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Mon Nov 18 1991 15:49 | 17 |
| Well, I'm not particularly fond of turkey anyway, and 'out here in the
field' we get the $15 certificate every year. Barry, what happened to
Ohio? Youse guys are gettin' short sheeted, sounds like...
I personally think the certificate is the way to go, although I have to
guess it's cheaper to back a truck up to the curb at MRO (which is
exactly what they used to do when I worked there) and unload the boxed
birds right there.
And although I agree with certificates vs. turkeys, I also agree it's a
pretty lame excuse to dump on the heads of the Valuing Differences
program.
Edp, get a life. ;-)
tim
|
981.147 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Mon Nov 18 1991 15:59 | 2 |
| If DEC chooses not to give out turkey tickets, perhaps it will give out
chicken chits instead.
|
981.148 | | MU::PORTER | bah, humbug | Mon Nov 18 1991 16:06 | 22 |
| It seems to me to be pretty petty to use DEC turkeys as an example
of the unfairness of the VoD program.
I'm a vegetarian, and consequently won't take the DEC turkey (I sign
it over to charity - an easy option). Do I feel hard done by?
Not a bit. I think that handing out turkeys is a pleasant thought
and one which is appropriate to what seems to be the majority
custom here. It just happens to be something which I'm not
interested in.
Sure, I'd take an alternative if there was one I liked, but I don't
really care enough about it for it to worry me.
I think it is faulty reasoning to claim that each and every thing
which DEC does should, in and of itself, be equally fair to every
possible belief. The turkey is offered as a gift by DEC, to
celebrate Thanksgiving or Christmas (I forget which, sorry). I
decline to accept the gift since I can't make use of it. That's
all there is to it. I don't see why I should feel offended or
undervalued by this.
There are more important inequalities to worry about first.
|
981.149 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Mon Nov 18 1991 16:28 | 10 |
| >The turkey is offered as a gift by DEC, to
>celebrate Thanksgiving or Christmas (I forget which, sorry).
The box comes decorated in colors usually associated with Christmas.
The box says "Happy Holidays for Digital". I have always assumed
that it doesn't say "Merry Christmas" to avoid offending people who
do not celebrate Christmas. Perhaps though it is just intended as
a generic end of year gift?
Alfred
|
981.150 | Warning: NJ joke | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Nov 18 1991 16:48 | 7 |
| re .143:
Yeah, but you get to live in Ohio.
re .145:
I sympathize. On top of all that, you have to live in New Jersey.
|
981.151 | Valuing Thermal Mass | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Mon Nov 18 1991 18:12 | 9 |
| Vegetarians miss the whole point of the DEC turkeys. You're not
supposed to *eat* them - you're supposed to stuff 'em in your
freezer, taking up all the free space left. Then, when the power
goes out this winter (as it always does), there's a large, cold
thermal mass in the freezer helping keep everything else cold.
(Our last years' turkey thawed a bit too much during the aftermath
of Bob to be trusted ... but it's still in there, helping keep
everything else cold.)
|
981.152 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Nov 18 1991 18:17 | 4 |
| re .151:
In that case, I'm going to submit a DELTA suggestion that the turkeys be
replaced with blocks of ice. Don't worry, I'll split the bonus with you.
|
981.153 | | SNOBRD::CONLIFFE | out-of-the-closet Thespian | Mon Nov 18 1991 18:49 | 8 |
| re:.152
Don't spend the bonus yet, Mr Sacks.
Have you ever tried to stuff a block of ice?
Nigel
|
981.154 | EDP is right! The VoD program supports the killing of worms! | TOOK::DMCLURE | Did Da Vinci move into management? | Mon Nov 18 1991 19:33 | 20 |
| re: .132,
> It is approaching that time of year when Digital demonstrates in
> another way that it does not value differences.
Yes, not to mention each time in rains Digital also demonstrates
it does not value differences when it allows poor defenseless worms
(who are flooded from their underground homes) to be trampled on the
sidewalks. There were countless times this rainy season when I was
witness to innocent worm deaths as they were trampled under the feet
of DEC employees on Digital sidewalks, and I attribute the pain caused
by the trampling of these flooded worms directly to Digital's Valuing
of Differences program since they do not value the differences of worm
lovers who are offended by these brutal sidewalk worm killings.
-davo
p.s. The VoD program also does not value the differences of entemologists
since DEC vehicles kill thousands of bugs on their windshields each
day they are driven on highways in the warmer weather...
|
981.155 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | Isis,Astarte,Diana,Hecate,Demeter,Kali,Inanna | Mon Nov 18 1991 20:13 | 15 |
| EDP misses a point in that not all vegatarians are animal rights
activists. Some just do it cause it's healthy. It is also a pretty poor
excuse to dump on VoD. Does VoD run the Turkey giveaway? I don't think
it does in my building. The managers do it. Although I unload the
truck. I take the turkey and give it to my sister for her Christmas
gift. It's always appreciated and I get invited to the Easter turkey
dinner. Yea, I know Lamb on Easter. You argue with my sister. I will
admit that this time, EDP came across as rational and calm and I
actually enjoyed reading his arguments and was willing to listen all
the way through. Something I can't always do with his notes. They are
generally to long for me to read anyway, let alone reply to. Good going
EDP. I enjoyed that one. Diidn't agree with it, but was willing to
listen.
Phil
|
981.156 | | FSOA::DARCH | walking on sunshine | Mon Nov 18 1991 21:38 | 9 |
| re .154
Well Davo, everyone can now blame you for our increased insurance
costs, since I fell off my chair in a fit of hysterics reading your
note and will most undoubtedly have to file a workperson's comp claim.
I hope you're pleased with yourself.
;^)
|
981.157 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Tue Nov 19 1991 03:39 | 18 |
| Scene: The Digital Turkey Farm. Huddled in the corner stands a little
band of survivors shaking with fear as they hear the Turkey Farmer's
footsteps approaching. Deep in their little Turkey minds they know that
they are next.
Farmer: Well my little ones you are lucky. You were selected by an
animal loving vegetarian who doesn't want you killed. So now you
may leave the farm and get on with life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness.
The Farmer opens the gate and the lucky Turkeys waddle off into the
sunset as the stirring music reaches a crescendo.
Voice over: Only in America....
Audience begins to choke back tears.
The End
|
981.158 | And to get me another cup of coffee? | HLFS00::CHARLES | Sunny side up | Tue Nov 19 1991 05:56 | 7 |
| Jamie,
Would you mind coming down one floor to clean my keyboard.
Thank you.
Charles
|
981.159 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Tue Nov 19 1991 06:12 | 3 |
| Rumour hath it that the Terminals Branch has a contract out on me.
Jamie.
|
981.160 | | HLFS00::CHARLES | Sunny side up | Tue Nov 19 1991 07:06 | 3 |
| Rumour has it that this contract was long overdue.
Charles
|
981.161 | | BEING::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Nov 19 1991 09:26 | 24 |
| Re .148:
> It seems to me to be pretty petty to use DEC turkeys as an example of
> the unfairness of the VoD program.
Unfairness? This is not necessarily an example of unfairness, just an
example of how the "Valuing Differences" program does NOT value
differences. Digital's goal with the program is not to recognize and
value people who are different from the mainstream -- the goal of the
program is only to recognize trendy groups.
> I'm a vegetarian, and consequently won't take the DEC turkey (I sign
> it over to charity - an easy option). Do I feel hard done by? Not a
> bit.
So that means YOU are not one of the people who objects to an animal
being killed on their behalf. But there are people who DO object, whom
it does bother that killing is being performed for their sake. If
Digital were truly interested in "Valuing Differences", it would take a
moment -- at little or no cost to the company -- to do something for
those people.
-- edp
|
981.162 | | BEING::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Nov 19 1991 09:30 | 13 |
| Re .155:
> EDP misses a point in that not all vegatarians are animal rights
> activists.
Read the postscript in note .132:
P.S. References to "vegetarians" above are not meant to
imply that all vegetarians believe it is unethical to use
animals for food.
-- edp
|
981.163 | | BEING::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Nov 19 1991 09:37 | 32 |
| Re .154:
Very good, in one note you have managed to compare vegetarians to
worms, and the killing of thousands of human beings to the killing of
worms.
That's the Digital "Valuing Differences" spirit. Groups that are not
trendy are worms, not even human, not worth valuing. People in Iraq
are not human beings; they are just worms. Ha, ha, ha, killing them is
funny.
Apparently there's some standard a group is supposed to pass before it
is taken seriously, before the "Valuing Differences" program will
recognize and value it. As far as Digital is concerned, it is not the
"Valuing Differences" program but the "Valuing Mainstream Groups"
program or "Valuing Groups That Have Banded Together for Clout"
program.
The fact that people are human and want to live their own lives in
their own ways without bothering anybody else is not enough for Digital
to value them -- but it is enough for me. I did not agree with that
person's belief about the ethics of using animals for food, but I still
supported them. I accepted them sincerely as a human being with
beliefs worthy of respect -- Digital has not.
It is long past time when all people are accepted as human beings and
their differences not ridiculed because they are in a minority or out
of the mainstream. Digital's "Valuing Differences" program does not
support that goal.
-- edp
|
981.164 | | KOBAL::MTW001::RYAN | Think spring! | Tue Nov 19 1991 10:07 | 32 |
| Digital gives out turkeys to Greater Maynard Area employees.
This can be seen as not valuing the difference of vegetarian
employees who don't eat meat because they believe it morally
wrong. Therefore, the VoD program (which is not involved
with turkey distribution) "is a farce".
That's really, really, stretching things, Eric.
For what it's worth, although I'm happily a meat-eater, I
do agree that Digital can show more sensitivity to those
who aren't by at least giving them an option which doesn't
involve killing a turkey (or better yet, give everyone more
flexibility by distributing certificates instead). But
the VoD program is not responsible for the distribution.
Should they step in and try to pressure whoever runs the
distribution to make other arrangements? A case could be
made that they should, but the fact is, there are more than
enough examples of discrimination which are tied directly
to the workplace, which can directly impact the performance
of employees, for the VoD people to go looking for things
like this. If any vegetarians feel strongly enough about
this, they're free to ask the VoD program to take action.
If they're told "Take a hike, we don't care", then, Eric,
you'll have a point. If they're told "We'd like to help,
but we barely have enough resources to deal with these
sexual harassment problems, and this group that's being
torn apart by racial misunderstanding right now", that's
a reasonable response, and they have their priorities
straight. And who knows, maybe they will take the desired
action. We won't know unless someone tries...
Mike
|
981.165 | our corporate conscience at work again | VSSCAD::MARCOTTE | | Tue Nov 19 1991 10:23 | 5 |
| Wow...I never knew that I worked for such a "bad" company.
Imagine...giving out turkeys is considered "bad"...thank GOD, our
conscince is ever vigilante. That vigilance again proves that he is
in the right place..."the rathole"!
|
981.166 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Tue Nov 19 1991 10:26 | 8 |
| Let us face it edp you are really scraping the bottom of the barrel if
this is all you can come up with. Even if you suggestions were
implemented the only way you would be extending the life of the turkeys
would be by extending their shelf life.
If you have any real gripes about the VoD then let's hear them.
Jamie.
|
981.167 | no turkeys or $15 cert. | CSOA1::FOSTER | Frank, Discrete Mfg DCC, 432-7730 | Tue Nov 19 1991 10:40 | 21 |
| re <<< Note 981.146 by SCAM::GRADY "tim grady" >>>
-< Lame turkey! >-
> Well, I'm not particularly fond of turkey anyway, and 'out here in the
> field' we get the $15 certificate every year. Barry, what happened to
> Ohio? Youse guys are gettin' short sheeted, sounds like...
As another Ohioan, I must say I did not receive this $15 certificate
last year. I am approaching my 9th Holiday Season with Digital. The first
three were in Maryland, where we were always told that Digital subsidized
our annual Holiday party, in lieu of a turkey. Then, I spent four years
in New England, receiving a turkey each year. Last year, my first as an Ohio
DECcie, we received nothing from the company. (Our holiday party is paid
entirely from fundraisers sponsored by the Employee Activity Committee during
the year.)
I don't really mind not getting the turkey, and besides, with the
lower cost of living here, I can buy zillions of turkeys!! :-) I DO, however,
miss taking my kids to Canobie Lake (but that's already been discussed).
Frank
|
981.168 | | GORE::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Tue Nov 19 1991 10:51 | 19 |
| Davo's note about concern for the trampling of innocent worms on Digital's
sidewalks during the rain brings up an important point:
In a literal sense, can Digital only claim to "Value Differences" if it
accepts the challenge to value every single difference on the planet
(among ~5 billion human inhabitants on Earth?) or AT LEAST every single
difference that detractors can find the time to list?
If this is accepted, then anyone looking to trash Digital and/or the
VoD program simply has to find ONE (or a dozen) so-called "differences"
that aren't listed in the VoD program to "prove" that the definition of
"Valuing Differences" isn't being met.
As far as I've heard, VoD has *never* stated that people should ONLY value
the differences they mention. VoD has *never* instructed employees to
turn to VoD as an authority for who should be valued (and who shouldn't.)
Of course, none of this matters much if the goal is to trash VoD (except
to those of us watching such attempts in disgust.)
|
981.169 | Party funding in MD | DCVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Tue Nov 19 1991 10:55 | 9 |
| Our district, in Maryland, is having a holiday party which is
subsidized by Digital (just as Frank recalled in .167 when he was in
this geography).
To the best of my recollection, this has been the status quo here for
the past four years, with the exception of last year. Our holiday
party funding was cancelled by edict from one of the northern VPs.
-- Russ
|
981.170 | time out from ding dong school | NAC::SCHUCHARD | void char * | Tue Nov 19 1991 11:16 | 25 |
|
VoD exists because it makes good business sense, That is the need
to expand the talent pool to remain a competitive, growing company. As
far as i can tell, that means the program can have any arbiratry
constraint on what groups, fads, individuals it chooses - i.e. it
does not at all need to value the difference of a totally disruptive
person, if it negatively impacts what is perceived as the greater good.
You can use any other warm, fuzzy, moral mission to try and
rationalize the merits or demerits of the program, but folks, the
main mission is profits - we are fortunate enough to work for a company
that perceives it benefits by providing its employees with an
environment that is sometimes down right tolerant.
Personally, i would prefer a "Valuing Individuals" program, but
that is not where it is perceived the greatest good will come from. I
will tolerate all sorts of childish behavior if that is the price of
getting quality product from an individual, but many (i guess most),
will not. (It's like parenting - you need to constantly remind
yourself as to who is the parent, and who is the child! Sounds easy
but it doesn't always work...)
bob
|
981.172 | | SBPUS4::MARK | I wanna be a slug...... | Tue Nov 19 1991 11:18 | 26 |
| I think the point is being missed. Either that, or I'm missing it.
Surely EDP's point was not that killing turkeys and eating them is bad. Wasn't
his point that some people (potentially one person) does feel that it is bad and
does not want to be a party to it, but that despite speeches to the contrary,
Digital does nothing for this person.
Humour me, assume that this is so for a moment.
I personally have no particular feeling for turkeys and am not over bothered how
many of them are killed for eating at Christmas; assuming they are all eaten.
But does Digital really cater for Homosexuals or whatever because it believes
that this is the "correct" thing to do, or because it is a politically sound
thing to do ? I believe it is the latter. Digital is here to make money. If they
feel that making space for gay, pregnant whales is going to allow them to make
more money, them I'm sure they'd do so. However, if it would not make Digital's
life either more profitable or easier, then I am not so sure that they still
would.
Digital values those differences that it has to, or that it is profitable to, or
that it is easier to. It does not value them because they are differences.
M.
|
981.173 | I think someone raised this issue awhile back... | RDVAX::KALIKOW | E-Maily Post | Tue Nov 19 1991 11:27 | 12 |
| ... and I don't think it's actually been definitively resolved... Are
not the folks who handle the GMA Holiday Turkey distribution in a
different part of the "DIGITAL Empire" than the VoD folks?
If so -- and I'm not saying it is so, yet -- isn't it a bit of a
stretch to assume that it's the "same old VoDons" who are doing the
dirty deed?
Now even if two distinct groups are involved, I can hear the point
being made that they are still part & parcel of Greater DEC. But if
the preceding point was that VoDons Are Evil, perhaps this distinction
between groups, if it indeed exists, might be relevant.
|
981.174 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Nov 19 1991 12:00 | 12 |
|
Somewhere back there someone mentioned deep freeze, and were a little
uncertain of the date these were distributed.
Does this mean the turkeys are NOT distributed on Christmas eve, and
that they are frozen?
What about people who can't afford either the space or cost of a deep
freeze?
Heather
|
981.175 | 8^| | SBPUS4::LAURIE | ack, no, none, GAL | Tue Nov 19 1991 12:06 | 11 |
| I think the point EDP will eventually get around to admitting, is that
*he* doesn't think *his* difference is valued. It has taken several
years of "EDP-watching" to realise this, and will probably take several
years before I actually see it.
All the other examples he's used have upset someone, so he's dredged the
bottom of the barrel and come up with vegetarians, believing it to be a
different, safer smoke-screen behind which he'll carry on his personal
campaign to be "loved".
Laurie.
|
981.176 | | CALLME::MR_TOPAZ | | Tue Nov 19 1991 12:22 | 4 |
| If the purpose of .132 was to elicit a series of contrary
responses, draw attention to the author of .132, and generally
create a tempest in a teapot, then the goals of that particular
note would have been achieved.
|
981.177 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Nov 19 1991 12:23 | 5 |
| re .174:
They're distributed in early December. I'd guess that most U.S. DEC
employees have refrigerators whose freezers are large enough to hold
a turkey.
|
981.178 | You can't pull a worm's leg | TNPUBS::JONG | Steve Jong/T and N Publications | Tue Nov 19 1991 12:25 | 20 |
| VoD has too much on its plate already without getting into the turkey
giveaway. In fact, I think the annual display of turkey envy and greed
is a more pressing area of concern than the sensibilities of some
employees who have not as yet even spoken up for themselves. (Do they
even exist?)
It's also important to note that the annelidicidal Dave McClure has no
connection with the VoD program. I can attest that he's just another
software engineer struggling to keep his head above water (he splashes
within earshot of me). I too have no formal connection with the
program, though I've taken the UDD seminar and recommend it, especially
to those who would like to observe directly what the program is about
instead of making introspective assumptions.
I agree with edp's point. There seems to be no reason why Digital
could not modify its annual gift to accomodate vegetarians and
animal-rights activists in a second way (in addition to letting
employees sign the turkeys over to charity). However, I think it's too
much of a reach to label this a failure of VoD, just as it's silly to
take davo's attempt to wriggle out of this rathole as a VoD statement.
|
981.179 | ex | VSSCAD::MARCOTTE | | Tue Nov 19 1991 12:28 | 22 |
| re: .175
Well put Laurie. I have often felt that these attacks on the VoD program
were a result of:
1. some one not being asked to join the program thus insulting
one's humongus(sp) ego.
2. the VoD refused to accept one particular person, thus injuring
that hunongus(sp) ego.
3. that humongus(sp) ego just doesn't like or respesct anybody
elses opinoins or dis/likes except his own.
4. or that person just doesn't like digital at all because it
doesn't do things his way so therefore it does not value
anything or anybody as far as he is concerned.
pem
|
981.180 | | VSSCAD::MARCOTTE | | Tue Nov 19 1991 12:31 | 3 |
| re: .176
Gee...I guess your right. We are catering again to someones HUMONGUS ego!
|
981.181 | | CUPMK::SLOANE | Communication is the key | Tue Nov 19 1991 12:33 | 13 |
| People in our group who wanted kosher turkeys were allowed to order one at
company expense at the store of their choice. People in our group who were
vegetarians and who did not want to donate their turkey were allowed to choose
something else. (I think they were all given $15 credit.)
Valuing differences may be the current trendy buzzword. But when all the hoopla
is stripped from it, it simply means that people are hired, given assignments,
fired, demoted, and promoted based on how well they do their job. Period.
This is good for the company, good for business, and good for the individual.
This is definitely a win-win situation.
Bruce
|
981.182 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Tue Nov 19 1991 12:39 | 4 |
| I think that the VoD people refused to take edp seriously and he is
unhappy about it.
Jamie.
|
981.183 | $15? | BSS::D_BANKS | | Tue Nov 19 1991 13:15 | 13 |
981.184 | | MU::PORTER | bah, humbug | Tue Nov 19 1991 13:37 | 32 |
| Well, since I leapt into this discussion, I suppose I should carry on
(by the way, I'm waiting for MOP to be rebuilt before I can continue
debugging, so I'm not really wasting work time :-).
Caveat: I'm going to address what appears to be the intent of "Valuing
of Differences", rather than any narrow interpretation of the (poorly-
chosen) words which name the program.
The annual Greater Maynard Area Turkey Giveaway does not cater to
vegetarians. This much is true.
However, I have encountered no evidence which suggests that, in DEC:
- Vegetarianism is an operative factor in awarding pay increases
or promotion
- Vegetarians are made to feel that they have to keep their
vice (i.e., not eating meat) a secret for fear of what
their workmates might say or do
- Vegetarians are harrassed, for example by the telling of
offensive "vegetarian jokes" (anyone know any?)
- Vegetarians are culturally disadvantaged, for instance because
they're less assertive than blood-crazed carnivores in
meetings and similar situations
Therefore, I conclude that DEC is more-or-less neutral on the subject
of vegetarianism. One specific example -- the turkey handout -- is
not in my opinion sufficient cause to say that vegetarians are
not valued.
|
981.185 | | NETCUR::REID | Over One Billion MAIL Messages Sent | Tue Nov 19 1991 13:46 | 14 |
|
re: vegetarian jokes (anyone know any?)
yeah.
Q: Why did the chicken cross the road?
A: To escape from the carnivores on the other side.
what a silly thread of discussion...
Marc
|
981.186 | Vod don't do turkeys...(?) | PCOJCT::GRAY | | Tue Nov 19 1991 14:13 | 10 |
| Gee, a thought just occured to me....
Perhaps, someone is miffed because they were rebuked by folks in VoD.
Imagine someone taking this issue to VoD, only to be told......
"Get outta here! We don't want nuttin to do with TURKEYS !!
Could sorta rub some folks the wrong way, doncha know. Maybe took it
personal ?
|
981.187 | EDP does not value the differences of worm lovers | TOOK::DMCLURE | Did Da Vinci move into management? | Tue Nov 19 1991 14:15 | 35 |
| re: .163,
> Very good, in one note you have managed to compare vegetarians to
> worms, and the killing of thousands of human beings to the killing of
> worms.
Wrong! I compared the valuing of differences for people who are
upset by the killing of turkeys to the valuing of differences for people
who are upset by the killing of worms. Nowhere in my note did I mention
anything about the killing of thousands of human beings. Your statement
is false! Why do you lie edp?
> I did not agree with that
> person's belief about the ethics of using animals for food, but I still
> supported them. I accepted them sincerely as a human being with
> beliefs worthy of respect -- Digital has not.
First you claim to support people who question the ethics
of using animals for food, and you claim to accept them as human
beings with beliefs worthy of respect...
> ...they are just worms. Ha, ha, ha, killing them is funny.
...but then you proceed to make fun of people who are shocked
by innocent worm deaths on Digital sidewalks. How can you claim to
value the differences of the turkey lovers while at the same time
ridiculing the differences of worm lovers? I suppose worms are not
politcally correct or trendy enough to be worthy of being valued?
You do not value the differences of worm lovers who get upset
by innocent worm killings on Digital sidewalks! You do not value
the beliefs of those different from the mainstream as you claim to.
You lie again edp. Why do lie?
-davo
|
981.188 | I know a place | RMDSRV::EIDSON | luv ya Colorado | Tue Nov 19 1991 15:11 | 12 |
| Re: .174
I volunteer my freezer every year to keep those turks frizzed.
So here we go again.....
Anyone in Colorado Springs that don't have room to keep your turkey
until the Holidays are over let me know...
Unclaimed merchandise will be confiscated 2 Jan 1992 :^)....
-Harold-
|
981.189 | What a load!!!! | SANCHO::MCAFOOS | You plug it in, I'll watch from here.... | Tue Nov 19 1991 15:50 | 36 |
| Some people believe that the VoD Program is supposed to recognise each and
every difference for each and every individual in the world. What a load of
crap!!!
When I was in the military in the early '70's, racial problems were a major
concern and a program was developed to address this. The program was initially
called _Race_Relations_ and was intended to make people in the armed forces
aware that the armed forces was made up of people from many races. The
different cultures, as well as prejudices, caused people to react to those
of different cultures in different ways. Sometimes, those reactions were
not pleasant.
This program evolved, and the military realized it was doing busines in many
different parts of the world. The program changed to _Human_Relations_, but
the major focus of the program remained the same. Individual geographies
received more specialized training on their specific areas, but the purpose
was always the same. "These people have a different culture, and things that
are normally considered inoffensive to you may be considered offensive to
them."
Digital has taken this type of program (notice I didn't say "This program")
and brought it into our workplace. It is not intended as a cure-all for
each and every "difference" that will be encountered by employees, but
as an awareness tool. Digital is a world-wide company, and employees should
aware of the cultural differences that we are (potentially) exposed to. This
is all done in the context that teamwork makes for better working relations,
which makes for (hopefully) better profits.
Bringing vegetarianism into this and faulting the VoD Program is the most
ludicrious thing I've ever heard of. Some people really must have too much
free time on their hands.
But, if your attitude is to make sure that something fails, then why give it
a chance to suceed????
Bob.
|
981.190 | Perhaps ignore-ance is the answer... | NECVAX::LPARMENTER | Lee, 264-0278, pl MK02-2D11 | Tue Nov 19 1991 18:42 | 20 |
| As a casual reader of this conference, I am constantly amazed
at how one person can enter a reply (sometimes outrageous,
sometimes not), and then how whole bunches of folks spend
gobs of time dealing with whatever issues (?) the replier
has raised, while the person who entered the reply has gone
on his or her merry way.
IMHO, the most effective way to deal with that kind of person
is silence. No replies, no acknowledgement(s) of entry - nothing.
Sort of reminds me of an off-beat joke I heard years ago:
Two people, one a masochist, the other a sadist,
get standed together on a desert island. The masochist
says to the sadist, "Beat me!". And the sadist replies,
"No.".
Similarly, silence and non-reponse can be very effective. And
I can't imagine how unhappy those among us who crave attention
would be if they were simply ignored.
|
981.191 | Watch this space. | IMTDEV::BRUNO | Father Gregory | Tue Nov 19 1991 19:25 | 5 |
| Stay tuned to this channel for the next non-issue edp chooses to
ignite. See the DECies be outraged and irritated. See logic get
violated in each sentence!
Same edp-time. Same edp channel.
|
981.192 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | NOW what!?!?! | Tue Nov 19 1991 20:39 | 34 |
| I have a hard time accepting alot of the personal attacks being
waged against edp. True, he chooses to fight his battles on
controversial and questionable grounds. True, he has a particular
style that most people here (myself included) seem to find grating
and abrasive.
But does that mean that each time he enters something here it
must summarily be rejected simply because of the NODE::ACCOUNT
name? I know that I have a bias and an expectation that I will
not agree with a new BEING::EDP entry, but at least I give it
a chance.
Such PERSONAL attacks as have been entered here since .132 (and
before it too although I'm not addressing those) would have been
deleted from the conference I co-moderate based on conference
policy of prohibiting personal attacks.
Having said that:
Eric has made a valid point, but it also contains a flaw. Eric
is equating *DIGITAL's* failure to value vegetarian/animal-rights
differences with a perceived failure with VoD. VoD is an
organization that can be a focal point for differences, but
ultimately it is DIGITAL's responsibility to value differences.
Eric is correct that DEC is not doing so, even when presented
with a low-cost (costless?) alternative. Who was the alternative
presented to? How can we be sure that it hit the ears that can
make a difference in DEC policy? How can we be sure that DEC
really has chosen to ignore this difference? Still, if DEC
as an entity has already heard about the "difference", it has
failed to act upon it or indicate that it plans to act upon it,
which is the basis of Eric's argument.
Joe Oppelt
|
981.193 | Muckraking | CSC32::J_OPPELT | NOW what!?!?! | Tue Nov 19 1991 20:47 | 22 |
| RE the price of the turkeys:
I can't believe they are worth $15. You get a 10 lb turkey,
so it would have to cost $1.50/lb to make it worth $15.00.
Even the top-quality, name brand, fresh turkeys don't run that
expensive. Sure, we get a really high quality turkey from DEC,
but buying in bulk I'd bet they don't spend more than $.50/lb.
I hear they do 80,000 turkeys each year. (Maybe it was 50,000.)
re .146
> Ohio? Youse guys are gettin' short sheeted, sounds like...
Maybe your managers are keeping your $15 certificates? :^)
.167> As another Ohioan, I must say I did not receive this $15 certificate
.167> last year.
You too. :^)
Joe Oppelt
|
981.194 | | ALIEN::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Nov 20 1991 10:23 | 38 |
| Re .178:
> VoD has too much on its plate already without getting into the turkey
> giveaway.
Oh, yes, supporting Operation Desert Storm was MUCH more important than
actually valuing the differences of employees. In two years or more,
the "Valuing Differences" program has never had time to contact whoever
runs the turkey give-away and say "Hey, please count the people who do
not want animals killed on their behalf and reduce your procurement by
that number.".
No, Digital's "Valuing Differences" program is not busy with more
important things -- it is busy with more Politically Correct things.
It is busy pursuing its own goals, not valuing differences.
Yes, the program is a farce. Not because vegetarians are important,
but because the program does not value differences. The program simply
does not do what its name alleges, so it is a farce.
Re .184:
That's a common theme in these responses: We don't need to value
vegetarians, because their pay is not at stake. We don't need to value
vegetarians, because they are not harassed. We don't need to value
vegetarians, because they aren't a special group.
Fine. That's the way it is. But that's not "Valuing Differences".
That's "Valuing the Special Groups" or "Valuing People with Clout" or
"Valuing the Politically Correct Things to Value". Those would be
accurate names; the name "Valuing Differences" is not -- it is a lie.
The basic question is: Does Digital value differences, does it value
people just because they are people? The answer is no.
-- edp
|
981.195 | ? 981.173 ? | RDVAX::KALIKOW | E-Maily Post | Wed Nov 20 1991 10:29 | 1 |
|
|
981.196 | | MU::PORTER | bah, humbug | Wed Nov 20 1991 10:48 | 3 |
| Fine. The VoD program does not value every pissy little difference
one can imagine. In my opinion, this detracts not one whit from
its overall validity.
|
981.197 | | EVTSG8::QUICK | Lille. French for 'traffic jam'. | Wed Nov 20 1991 10:50 | 2 |
|
I wonder what the "d" in "edp" stands for???
|
981.198 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Wed Nov 20 1991 11:10 | 6 |
| I notice that edp failed to address the point that the reducing the
procurement would not save the lives of the turkeys. It would only salve
the conscience of the vegetarians. Is it the job of VoD to be in the
conscience salving business?
Jamie.
|
981.199 | Talkin' turkey | TNPUBS::JONG | Steve Jong/T and N Publications | Wed Nov 20 1991 11:29 | 38 |
| Anent .194 (edp): Pardon me, but you are wrong on all counts. Despite
your sarcasm, "supporting Operation Storm WAS much more important"
(emphasis mine, not yours) than supporting the differences of
vegetarian employees. In Operation Desert Storm, many people's lives
were at risk, and, as you pointed out yourself, many people lost their
lives. Assuming there was a direct linkage, employees and their
families are more important to Digital than turkeys.
Of course, linking the two is nonsensical. I can't believe anyone ever
had to choose between supporting Operation Desert Storm and reducing
the turkey distribution.
Besides, you are already aware that Digital *does* make allowances for
vegetarians or other who don't want a turkey, but you seem to have
chosen to ignore that reply, which lies between .178 (on which you
commented) and your reply .194 this morning.
Finally, it is well established that the VoD program does not oversee
all company activities. In fact, I used to know someone who was in
charge of the distribution. She worked in Corporate Employee
Activities.
I agreed with your original point, but since then I've realized that
the company does indeed go out of its way to accomodate those who do
not wish to see a turkey killed on their behalf. The options may not
be available to everyone who would otherwise receive a turkey, and that
adjustment could be made *if it hasn't been already*.
You continue to try rhetorically to hang turkeys around the necks of
the VoD people, but the analogy, like the turkeys, just won't fly. I
will agree with your theme that Digital has a long way to go, but I
am satisfied with the priorities assigned to injustices identified so far.
Considering that many employees have identified problems with racism
and sexism in this conference (and everywhere else), while no one has
actually said, even in this topic, that they are offended by the
killing of turkeys, I think the present emphasis on racism and sexism
over turkeys is reasonable.
|
981.200 | | CIS1::FULTI | | Wed Nov 20 1991 11:37 | 27 |
| come on people, lighten up. I agree with J_Oppelt a couple back.
I'm beginning to understand exactly why Eric may take to implementing
harrassment charges. You people seem to take delight in taunting him....
You may not agree with him but, does that mean you need to jump all over
his every word?
I think he has made a valid point in that DEC, by it's setting up a VoD
program states that it is doing so in order to value differences. Yet it
does not seem to value this specific difference.
RE: <<< Note 981.198 by HOO78C::ANDERSON "Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum." >>>
> I notice that edp failed to address the point that the reducing the
> procurement would not save the lives of the turkeys. It would only salve
> the conscience of the vegetarians. Is it the job of VoD to be in the
> conscience salving business?
Funny, Jamie, thats one thing that the recent day at MRO was to accomplish,
that is to help g/l/b employees feel better about themselves (conscience
salving?). So I guess the answer to your question is, Yes!
Except that it appears that the VoD program picks and chooses the consciences
that are to be salved. Please before you tell me to gp off and organize a
"vegitarian day", my point is still if DEC REALLY wanted to value all
differences THEY would take the inititive. Now I also believe that its an
impossible task so, what to do? Maybe renaming the VoD program to a more
realistic and appropriate name would be a start.
- George
|
981.201 | | ARRODS::WHITEHEADJ | An invisible personal name | Wed Nov 20 1991 11:42 | 6 |
| I may have missed it in a previous note (there are so many) but could
someone tell me how old the VoD program is, ie how long it has been
in place?
Thanks,
Jane.
|
981.202 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Nov 20 1991 11:45 | 1 |
| And while you're at it, where did the "o" come from?
|
981.203 | | SMOOT::ROTH | The 13th Floor Elevators | Wed Nov 20 1991 11:51 | 6 |
| "Valuing of Difference", I believe.
Abbreviation 'VoD' is used instead of 'VD', which could be confused with
somthing else.
Lee
|
981.204 | Free speech forever! | OSL09::MAURITZ | DTN(at last!)872-0238; @NWO | Wed Nov 20 1991 12:07 | 22 |
| I hereby echo .192 & .200
Sure, lots of times I think edp (Eric?) comes up with some pretty weird
opinions. Once in a while (only rarely, however) do I get irritated.
Most of the time I disagree with the opinions, or find them trivial or
irrelevant...
...However...Now and then, I find that his unconventional way of
approaching any given issue will reveal that issue in a new light, and
that can be quite "productive" (assuming that you consider new nuggets
of thought through notes to be productive).
I say "keep it up, Eric!" I mostly disagree, but I tend to read all
your SHORT notes anyway (the ones without lengthy quotes from other
entries).
(However, do not let this entry imply that good counter-arguments
should not be made---on the other hand, how about a little more
courtesy & respect all around??)
Mauritz
|
981.205 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Wed Nov 20 1991 13:01 | 18 |
| Re .200
>Funny, Jamie, thats one thing that the recent day at MRO was to
>accomplish, that is to help g/l/b employees feel better about
>themselves (conscience salving?). So I guess the answer to your
>question is, Yes!
I don't actually see that as conscience salving. I think that the object
of the exercise was to educate the rest. I have absolutely no need for
my conscience to be salved just because I'm a homosexual. So that's a
complete rathole.
My point was this; the turkeys are already dead. They will mostly get
eaten by humans. Saying "I don't want to be responsible for the death
of a turkey so don't give me one or give one to charity" will not save
the turkey or bring it back to life.
Jamie.
|
981.206 | supply and demand | WUMBCK::FOX | | Wed Nov 20 1991 13:08 | 15 |
| re .205
> My point was this; the turkeys are already dead. They will mostly get
> eaten by humans. Saying "I don't want to be responsible for the death
> of a turkey so don't give me one or give one to charity" will not save
> the turkey or bring it back to life.
Perhaps this year, but if a growing number of people decided to
refuse a turkey and decline to give it to charity, the demand
on the turkey farmers would decrease and they would reduce their
future harvests, thus reducing the number of turkeys killed.
It's simple economics, and it's happening with cattle today.
People are eating more chicken and fish and the market has
altered to the point where less cattle are killed.
John
|
981.207 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Nov 20 1991 13:49 | 10 |
| re the "o" in VoD:
If VD is eschewed because of other connotations, why does Personnel use STD
for short-term disability and POS for point-of-service (generic term for
HealthNet aka HMO Elect)?
re turkeys and economics:
The number of non-turkey-eating DEC employees will always be below the
noise level for the U.S. turkey industry.
|
981.208 | | CIS1::FULTI | | Wed Nov 20 1991 14:01 | 13 |
| re : <<< Note 981.205 by HOO78C::ANDERSON "Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum." >>>
> I don't actually see that as conscience salving. I think that the object
> of the exercise was to educate the rest. I have absolutely no need for
> my conscience to be salved just because I'm a homosexual. So that's a
> complete rathole.
I didn't say that YOU did, all I was pointing out was that it was a stated
objective for that forum. So, somebody must have felt a need.
- George
P.S. I agree, its a rathole so lets let it drop...
|
981.209 | They won't live happily ever after... | GORE::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Nov 20 1991 14:07 | 12 |
| RE: .206 John
> Perhaps this year, but if a growing number of people decided to
> refuse a turkey and decline to give it to charity, the demand
> on the turkey farmers would decrease and they would reduce their
> future harvests, thus reducing the number of turkeys killed.
Actually, it would reduce the number of turkeys BORN (thus reducing
the number of turkeys killed.) Turkeys are bred as food, after all.
I mean, it's not like these turkeys will be set up in turkey retirement
homes if the demand for turkeys-as-food goes down.
|
981.210 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Nov 20 1991 15:03 | 4 |
| > I mean, it's not like these turkeys will be set up in turkey retirement
> homes if the demand for turkeys-as-food goes down.
These days they won't even get hired by DEC.
|
981.211 | | JURAN::SILVA | Toi eyu ong | Wed Nov 20 1991 15:03 | 18 |
|
Eric, the more I read this, the more you're losing what I thought you
origionally were trying to do. I had thought you might have wanted to see if
the vegitarians would still be able to receive a gift if they went to a voucher
system or something similar. This here was really a good thing.
But, what you have done is to take it as another way to try and prove
that VOD is a farce. To begin with Eric, VOD has NOTHING to do with the
distribution of turkeys. Why is it your whole life seems to be revolving on how
the VOD program is a farce? I really wonder if you really care about the
vegitarians or if you just want another lever (in a line of many) to help pry
open that VOD vault door so you can throw them out? I really wonder about that!
Glen
|
981.212 | a very basic concept | WUMBCK::FOX | | Wed Nov 20 1991 15:09 | 14 |
| re .209
> Actually, it would reduce the number of turkeys BORN (thus reducing
> the number of turkeys killed.) Turkeys are bred as food, after all.
Why should that make a difference? If the goal is to reduce the number
of turkeys killed, it shouldn't matter that the number of turkeys
born will decrease as well.
> I mean, it's not like these turkeys will be set up in turkey retirement
> homes if the demand for turkeys-as-food goes down.
Obviously the current supply is going to get consumed. As future
demand decreases, less are bred and killed. That's the point,
understand?
John
|
981.213 | | GORE::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Nov 20 1991 15:45 | 14 |
| RE: .212 John
Yes, I do see your point.
My point was that the "please don't kill a turkey on my behalf" is a
misleading statement (since the turkeys for this Digital-give-a-turkey
event are, after all, dead already and since the BEST CASE scenerio
for those concerned about turkey casualties is that less turkeys might
be bred in the future.)
"Don't kill a turkey for me" has an emotional ring to it that *sounds*
like a turkey life might be saved (which I find a bit manipulative.)
Oh well - never mind.
|
981.214 | | BSS::D_BANKS | | Wed Nov 20 1991 17:01 | 9 |
| Re: <<< Note 981.212 by WUMBCK::FOX >>>
> Why should that make a difference? If the goal is to reduce the number
> of turkeys killed, it shouldn't matter that the number of turkeys
> born will decrease as well.
I hope this doesn't take us down a turkey birth control rathole... :-)
- David
|
981.215 | And don't tell me they can come work for DEC | STUDIO::HAMER | complexity=technical immaturity | Wed Nov 20 1991 18:57 | 9 |
| >>I hope this doesn't take us down a turkey birth control rathole... :-)
What about the non-trivial rathole defined by the turkey farmers and
their families left destitute by the declining demand? They certainly
should figure somewhere in this cosmic moral equation. Vegetarians
and/or sworn enemies of VoD certainly can't wish life for a turkey or
two at the expense of increased human suffering, can they?
John H.
|
981.216 | People make choices; choices have consequences | TLE::REINIG | This too shall change | Wed Nov 20 1991 19:05 | 9 |
| Yes they can. Just as environmentalist decide the spotted owls are
more important than logger's jobs. Just as people who buy Japanese cars
decide that quality cars are more important than jobs for American auto
makers. Every decision to buy something instead of something else
increases the human suffering of those who work making the thing you
didn't buy. But it decreases the human suffering of those who work
making the thing you do buy.
August G. Reinig
|
981.217 | Kill a Tree for Christ | SALSA::MOELLER | I am two with Nature | Wed Nov 20 1991 19:10 | 4 |
| Personally I get offended at the Christmas Holiday fetish of killing
and decorating a tree corpse.
karl
|
981.218 | | MU::PORTER | bah, humbug | Wed Nov 20 1991 21:27 | 3 |
| I'm pretty depressed about all of the rocks that got crushed
in order to make the magnetic coating which is holding this
notesfile...
|
981.219 | it's been taken care of. | TFH::DONNELLY | Take my advice- Don't listen to me | Thu Nov 21 1991 01:51 | 2 |
| dec has secretly calculated that the number of conscientiously objecting
vegetarians equals the number of dec employees in ohio. -ced
|
981.220 | | BEING::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Nov 21 1991 09:54 | 38 |
| Re .198:
> I notice that edp failed to address the point that the reducing the
> procurement would not save the lives of the turkeys.
First, it was addressed in my initial note, where I wrote "eventually
reducing the market for dead animals". Second, August Reinig expanded
upon this in .144, so I did not feel it was necessary for me to do so.
Re .199:
> Despite your sarcasm, "supporting Operation Storm WAS much more
> important" (emphasis mine, not yours) than supporting the differences
> of vegetarian employees.
Supporting Operation Desert Storm was not a valuing differences
activity and therefore should have had no importance to the "Valuing
Differences" committee.
> I can't believe anyone ever had to choose between supporting
> Operation Desert Storm and reducing the turkey distribution.
Somebody put forth a conjecture that the "Valuing Differences" people
did not have time to deal with vegetarians. By showing that they _did_
have time to do something that was _not_ valuing differences, I showed
that they neglected their duty.
> . . . I think the present emphasis on racism and sexism over turkeys
> is reasonable.
I have already said that is fine. I just want to see some honesty
about it: Call it "Valuing the Things Digital Chooses to Value", not
"Valuing Differences", because the former is honest, and the latter is
dishonest.
-- edp
|
981.221 | Last Meal | SAURUS::AICHER | | Thu Nov 21 1991 10:27 | 8 |
| RE: Turkeys
BTO will be giving out 75-100 turkeys on December 3 with
pink-slip stuffing...no rumor.
Mark
|
981.222 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Thu Nov 21 1991 10:39 | 15 |
| Even if everyone in Digital declined their turkey it would make no
difference. The number of turkeys killed in the USA is so high that the
number Digital buys is insignificant. You may try to extrapolate this
into significant numbers in the distant future but you would be wrong
the number would still be insignificant. Fluctuations in the weather
make more movement in the number of turkeys consumed.
So we are left with the real reason edp, you just want to have a go at
the VoD. Pathetic as your case is, you want to bash them over the head
with it, because they had the audacity to disagree with you.
Would you kindly explain to us just why you are always correct and the
rest of the world is always wrong.
Jamie.
|
981.223 | Gift to suit.....??? | CGVAX2::LEVY_J | | Thu Nov 21 1991 13:04 | 30 |
|
re. .222
I think you're missing the point - it's not so much that turkeydom
could be saved if DEC offered an alternative, it's that some people
would feel much better if they could choose according to their
beliefs.
There is no "right" or "wrong" here. It's mostly that a gift
is so much more appreciately when it is appropriate for the
recipient. Digital would gain in the eyes of everyone if only
with a little special effort EVERYONE was CONSIDERED.
After all, you don't give socks to everyone for Christmas - Aunt
Minnie probably does not wear sneakers! :-)
The "wrong" is when the company mistakenly thinks(?) or says(?)
it is CONSIDERING everyone's differences, when it does not.
........from someone who loves turkey dinners, but has never
felt comfortable with the paternalistic gifts offered in any
fashion.....
....always say "thank you" graciously, though......
FWIW, I'd probably pick something other than turkey if it were offered.
|
981.224 | | DEMING::SILVA | Toi eyu ong | Thu Nov 21 1991 13:35 | 10 |
|
| Would you kindly explain to us just why you are always correct and the
| rest of the world is always wrong.
Jamie, great question. I wonder if it will be answered? I mean, just in
this notesfile alone it would seem that way. Hmmmm......
Glen
|
981.225 | On a first name basis????? | CGVAX2::LEVY_J | | Thu Nov 21 1991 14:21 | 12 |
| re .224
Why don't you guys stick to the topic?
I don't think you're really interested in discussing this.
I would hope that we could agree.
I think it would be advantageous to include everyone don't you?
Why leave any one person wishing the company had offered choices?
|
981.226 | | CGVAX2::LEVY_J | | Thu Nov 21 1991 14:23 | 9 |
| re. .224
If you would like to carry on a private conversation, I suggest
you try e-mail.
Are you talking to the rest of us? or not?
|
981.227 | Save the whales. Distribute tofu turkeys. | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Thu Nov 21 1991 16:58 | 7 |
| If we didn't all need freezers to keep these turkeys in for 10-11
months there would be less freon released into the atmosphere to cause
global warming and melting of polar ice caps which raises the level of
the oceans and puts coastal properties at higher risk to damage from
hurricanes with potential spillage of home heating oil and other toxic
substances harmful to whales.
|
981.228 | My answer | OSL09::MAURITZ | DTN(at last!)872-0238; @NWO | Fri Nov 22 1991 05:52 | 14 |
| re .224
While you are explaining "why you are always right & the rest of the
world wrong", why don't you also tell everyone when you stopped beating
your wife?
Actually, if Eric thinks he is right & the rest of the world is wrong,
he is in total conformance with the overwhelming majority of the world,
including most DEC noters. How many people do you know who do NOT think
they are right at any given time?
Mauritz
|
981.229 | FYI, here's a description of the beast | TNPUBS::JONG | Steve Jong/T and N Publications | Fri Nov 22 1991 11:30 | 65 |
| Here is an announcement of a session of the UDD Seminar that was
distributed throughout our group.
==============================================
NETWORKS AND COMMUNICATIONS TECHNICAL TRAINING
==============================================
UNDERSTANDING THE DYNAMICS OF DIFFERENCE
[Registration information deleted--sfj]
CLASS SIZE: 16
AUDIENCE:
U.D.D. is open to all employees in Telecommunication and Networks.
Enrollment will be managed to maximize diversity in the course.
DRESS: Casual
CANCELLATION POLICY:
Must cancel 15 working days prior to course, or find a substitute;
otherwise your cost center will be charged.
COURSE GOALS:
Understanding the Dynamics of Difference provides a foundation for
realizing the corporate Valuing Difference philosophy. It will
help participants to:
o recognize differences
o examine assumptions
o explore stereotypes held about groups of people,
organizations, functions, geographic areas, etc.
o seek out diversity and value differences as assets
o understand the significance of a value for difference
as a major variable in Digital's continued profitability
and productivity
COURSE DESCRIPTION:
Understanding the Dynamics of Difference (UDD) is a two-day workshop
which provides an overview of the approach individuals use to develop
perceptions and assumptions. It gives participants a process by
which to analyze the impact and/or results of these perceptions and
assumptions and provides the opportunity to slow down the Digital
pace for reflective self-awareness. Participants are guided to
examine their individual style and increase ease of interaction with
differences.
UDD is a course about valuing ourselves, as well as others who are
different from us. Participants are encouraged to consider how their
interactions with others may demonstrate the acceptance and valuing
of others through individual and group exercises, videotapes and
role plays.
Understanding the Dynamics of Difference helps participants to begin
or continue this process in a supportive environment. For some
individuals, UDD provides a context in which to examine their current
level of commitment; for others it facilitates and expands their work
in valuing differences. UDD helps participants to see that differences
are assets, both personally in their own career and to the corporation.
|
981.230 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Nov 22 1991 12:41 | 4 |
| Are people who take UDD called UDDers?
"I agree with you when you're right. Why can't you agree with me when
I'm right?"
|
981.231 | I want ocean front property... | SANCHO::MCAFOOS | You plug it in, I'll watch from here.... | Fri Nov 22 1991 13:15 | 8 |
| Re; .227
This is exactly why I support the turkey give-away that DEC does every year.
I figure in a couple thousand years, the level of the Pacific Ocean will
have risen enough to make my property in Az ocean front......;-)
Bob.
|
981.232 | The U.D.D. class sounds really good. | LAVETA::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Nov 22 1991 15:07 | 15 |
| RE: .229 Steve Jong
Thanks for posting the description of the "Understanding the Dynamics
of Difference" course.
It's hard to believe that this is same corporate philosophy/program
that's been so severely (and unfairly) trashed by a noter here as if
it were the most evil, vicious, mean and nasty thing to happen since
the Death Camps of WWII.
Oh, the dangers of binary thinking. If the program doesn't live up
to the narrowest possible definition of 'good' to one individual,
then it must necessarily be 'evil incarnate.'
Thanks again for the posting.
|
981.233 | | DEMING::SILVA | Toi eyu ong | Fri Nov 22 1991 15:21 | 21 |
|
RE: .229 Steve Jong
I took that course. Actually, our whole group took that course. They
did a lot of different things. They tested how you trust someone. You were
blindfolded and led around by someone else outdoors. It was a lot of fun.
Another thing they did was to put people into different groups. One was married
and unmarried. Singles went in one, married in the other. Then you wrote
everything you have ever heard about the "other" group. It was really funny at
some of the answers. It showed what kind of stereotypes there are for any given
catagory. There were many different groups they broke down into. After each
exercise they would talk about what went on. The why's of it all. They never
forced anything on anyone, you drew your own conclusions from what was said,
written and so on and from the discussions about the exercises you have
performed. All in all I would have to say that it is a course well worth
taking. There were no monsters and the only ovens manned were the ones in the
kitchen which were used to cook cookies, not humans.
Glen
|
981.234 | | DEMING::SILVA | Toi eyu ong | Fri Nov 22 1991 15:22 | 8 |
|
Hmmm.... I just reread that. The last line is not intended for Steve.
Glen
|
981.235 | MHO re: "FUN" in the workplace | CGVAX2::LEVY_J | | Fri Nov 22 1991 15:34 | 5 |
| Sounds like psychology and manipulative baloney to me.
At least someone had "a lot of fun". Not a total waste as long
as it entertained, I guess.
|
981.236 | | FSOA::RCOHEN | | Fri Nov 22 1991 18:35 | 7 |
|
Re: .229, .233
What a waste of time and money.
Value *my* diversity.
|
981.237 | | GIAMEM::ROSE | | Sat Nov 23 1991 08:37 | 17 |
| re: .132 - .236
Note 4 of the SAFRON::VEGETARIANISM conference also addresses
the topic of Turkeys for Vegetarians; some of the questions
raised here are answered there.
re: .233
I appreciate your comments about the appropriateness of gifts.
So does "Aunt Minnie," who wants you to know that although she
doesn't wear sneakers, - she's been sold on New Balances for
about 20 years now - that she'd be more than happy to receive an
additional pair of socks. :-)
Virginia
|
981.238 | | JURAN::SILVA | Toi eyu ong | Sat Nov 23 1991 16:31 | 21 |
|
| Sounds like psychology and manipulative baloney to me.
It would only be manipulative if they put ideas into your head. With
us, we discussed things between ourselves. It was done in a relaxing open
manner so people would feel free to say what they want. A lot of things were
said that were both good and bad. The whole point was to get everything out on
the table. To say what's on your mind. Isn't that what we do in here?
| At least someone had "a lot of fun". Not a total waste as long
| as it entertained, I guess.
Gee, you never had fun at work doing a project? I think both can be
achieved in most everything we do to some extent (and before anyone goes off on
how DEC is doing bad because people are having fun instead of working crap, if
you never laughed in a meeting, if you never laughed at anything that may have
happened during a project, then speak now, otherwise I think you get the jist
of what I'm saying)
Glen
|
981.239 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Mon Nov 25 1991 07:49 | 3 |
| I'm with Glen. It is possible to learn and have fun at the same time.
Jamie.
|
981.240 | you can't imagine the cost of not doing it | NAC::SCHUCHARD | void char * | Mon Nov 25 1991 13:35 | 65 |
|
geez, i never ever thought i'd be defending this program even once,
instead of twice...
I'm somewhat notorious for having an aggressive style. I come from
a large family with boisterous competition in all things. I tend to
get very wound up in things i'm doing, and my voice rises, my gestures
become more animated on a pace equal with the level of my intensity.
Some folks enjoy the show, other people get VERY intimiated.
I'm very threatened by quiet, passive people. I'm never sure what
they are thinking and it makes me uneasy. I tend to blurt out what
ever is on my mind. I never know i have offended a more passive person
until some manager comes laying into me.
It's a clear case of people from different backgrounds and
different interaction styles clashing. I get very angry sometimes
because I feel my "differences" are not being valued. I feel that
there have been cases where the "evil Vodons" have abused the program
in order to abuse me - one of those nasty, aggressive white males.
I however feel the program is even more important in light of all this.
I work even harder to try and understand and not prejudge
individuals based on behavior. I put enormous effort into containing
my intensity levels on the job - in one way it has hurt my job
performance (i.e. the skill and pace of doing the job), but in other
areas, especially dealing with others, i think it has much improved.
Hopefully, I am attaining the right mix of attributes so that I become
more useful and effective to the corporation.
My hope is that the same process is occuring from those who've
had major problems with my previous style. I always thought that I
was a good VoD citizen because I will tolerate all sorts of behavior
if it is coming from someone who is making an obvious contribution to
the task at hand. I was wrong - i was never tolerant of those who were
the opposite in nature. I have deeply distrusted those who do not
exhibit what they are thinking and feeling. I've learned thru all of
this that much of my difficulties with passive types is due to a
learning disability that constrains my ability to pick-up subtle clues
- especially diminished when i have my output turned all the way to "11"
(for you Spinal Tap folks). I've learned that even at 40, I can make
big changes in my life ( even after being convinced i died at 30 :-))
Having fun on the job is, i think, a pre-requisite for producing
outstanding product. I was blind to the fact that while I may have
been having a fabulous time running on full, those around me were not.
This blindness cost me in that I no longer worked on the stuff I was
best at. It cost Digital millions in the expertise I had developed
but could not share due to a grating personal style of interacting.
So much of what we do in this company is team oriented, it becomes
critically important that we all make the effort to understand each
other better, and whenever possible enjoy each others company. There
are so many business and process issues that introduce more than enough
conflict in our work lives, that we don't really need the baggage
associated with stereotypes and other uninformed assumptions we all
make.
As the need to broaden the talent pool expands, the differences
we encounter span not only personalities, but culture's. We all
can stand a good look in the mirror. The future of the company and
our jobs depend on it.
bob
|
981.241 | | POWDML::JULIUS | | Tue Nov 26 1991 17:31 | 16 |
| I appreciate your efforts EDP, in this unpopular issue, it left
you wide open to the personal attacks that ensued. I love
animals and I don't eat them and it causes me great anguish to
know that a beautiful bird is killed each year because I am
part of the headcount. Yes I agree this is a Valuing
Differences issue but apparently they just don't want to deal
with it. My letters over the years to Vice Presidents have
been redirected to individuals who have responded with "be
grateful." Apparently, my request is as insignificant as the
life I'm trying to save. I don't want to be a troublemaker or
proselytize my beliefs, I just wish I didn't have to
compromise my ethics by being a Digital employee in Maynard.
Thank you
Bernice
|
981.242 | my values, my head,... out of your reach! | SHALOT::WELTON | She's not dead, she's recycled | Tue Nov 26 1991 17:43 | 14 |
981.243 | Ich bin leider anderer Meinung !! | MORO::BEELER_JE | Nobody's perfetc | Sun Dec 01 1991 14:48 | 44 |
| Well, Glen, I took the course ... we started out on the WRONG foot.
.233> They did a lot of different things. They tested how you trust
.233> someone. You were blindfolded and led around by someone else outdoors.
.233> It was a lot of fun.
Fun. Indeed. I told the moderator/leader/teacher in no uncertain terms
that I had no desire to be blindfolded and led around by someone else. Why?
Easy. When we were captured by the VC, we were blindfolded before being
taken to be interrogated. I told the moderator that I was NOT going to be
blindfolded and lead around by ANYONE at ANY TIME for ANY REASON. The
feelings were simply TOO strong.
"That was a long time ago" ... "just try it" ... "it's fun" ... he resolutely
PERSISTED! Personally, I couldn't believe what I was hearing - it simply
boggled my mind! I damned near walked away - right there ... but ... I
decided to simply put the damned blindfold at eyebrow level, where I could
see clearly ... and play the game ....
Fun? Trust? Yeah. I really got a bang out of it. Made my day complete.
.233> Another thing they did was....
Another thing they did with us is tell us that we really shouldn't explicitly
discuss the activities so that no "expectation level" would be set with
respect to the seminar and people could come with an open mind ....
.233> They never forced anything on anyone....
I'm not sure that *I* can totally agree with that.
I'm sure that each course has different moderators/leaders/teachers,
and I'm sure that a lot of people have fun and get a great deal out of
it, and, I'm sure that it's money well spent and I'm sure that it is a
valuable and necessary part of doing business ... but ... my personal
experiences were slightly different.
One of these days, if I ever get the time, I plan to take it again -
just for grins - this time I *will* walk away on the blindfold game,
you can bet on it.
Your mileage may vary.
Bubba
|
981.244 | | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | Let Go for the Moment | Sun Dec 01 1991 15:09 | 16 |
| re. -1
I'm really sorry that happened to you. You are right, that's not
valuing differences.
I took this course earlier this year and it was very beneficial for me.
It helped me to see just how judgemental I can be and how much I do
stereotype others. It has been beneficial to me in that now I stop and
think for a second instead of a nanosecond. :-} And I also try and
reviewthe happenings of the day and try to see what I did positively
and what area I might be able to improve in. The overall content of
the course is pretty good and I learned alot.
And Bubba, FWIW, I wasn't too happy about being blindfolded either, for
completely different reasons than yours.
Karen
|
981.245 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | NOW what!?!?! | Tue Dec 03 1991 21:55 | 3 |
| re .241
Domestic turkeys are UGLY!
|
981.246 | She may be ugly to you ... :-) | COMICS::BELL | The haunted, hunted kind | Wed Dec 04 1991 06:46 | 6 |
|
Hey Joe, that's blatant beauty-ism ! Value Differences will you ?
They've got just as much right to end up on a table as the good-looking
ones ! It's not how they look but how they do the job that's important !
Frank
|
981.247 | | DEMING::SILVA | Eat Papa, EAT! | Wed Dec 04 1991 10:46 | 41 |
| | -< Ich bin leider anderer Meinung !! >-
Which means......
| Well, Glen, I took the course ... we started out on the WRONG foot.
Bubba! You know you should start out with your left foot first! :-)
| Fun. Indeed. I told the moderator/leader/teacher in no uncertain terms
| that I had no desire to be blindfolded and led around by someone else. Why?
| Easy. When we were captured by the VC, we were blindfolded before being
| taken to be interrogated. I told the moderator that I was NOT going to be
| blindfolded and lead around by ANYONE at ANY TIME for ANY REASON. The
| feelings were simply TOO strong.
Did you tell the moderator why you didn't want to be led around in that
fashion? I can see why you wouldn't want to though.
| Another thing they did with us is tell us that we really shouldn't explicitly
| discuss the activities so that no "expectation level" would be set with
| respect to the seminar and people could come with an open mind ....
Really? They never told us that. Has anyone else heard that one?
| .233> They never forced anything on anyone....
| I'm not sure that *I* can totally agree with that.
| I'm sure that each course has different moderators/leaders/teachers,
| and I'm sure that a lot of people have fun and get a great deal out of
| it, and, I'm sure that it's money well spent and I'm sure that it is a
| valuable and necessary part of doing business ... but ... my personal
| experiences were slightly different.
Besides the blindfold incident, did you get anything out of the rest of
it? Were there other areas that you had a problem with? How did you view the
rest of the program?
Glen
|
981.249 | Reduction in noise level? :-) | BSS::D_BANKS | | Wed Dec 04 1991 16:49 | 8 |
| Re: <<< Note 981.220 by BEING::EDP "Always mount a scratch monkey." >>>
(Entered on 21-NOV-1991)
Is it my imagination or has this conference become much more quiet in the past
couple of weeks? :-)
- David
|
981.250 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed Dec 04 1991 17:46 | 4 |
| He's probably writing up a thousand notes to post them in conferences
all over DEC, and thus saturate other noters' ability to respond.
:-)
|
981.251 | I'm glad another turkey Auschwitz day has passed | KARHU::TURNER | | Wed Dec 04 1991 19:05 | 6 |
| re .241 and .245
If you want a beautiful turkey bake it for 15 minutes at 500 degrees,
then coat it with brown shoe polish and polyurethane varnish.
johN
|
981.252 | Off-line please ... | MORO::BEELER_JE | Nobody's perfetc | Wed Dec 04 1991 20:54 | 27 |
| .247> Did you tell the moderator why you didn't want to be led around in that
.247> fashion? I can see why you wouldn't want to though.
With all due respect ... I told him, in no uncertain words, and, in language
that was crystal clear, precisely why I objected to the 'exercise' ... it
seemed (to me) that the most important thing was my participation, and, not
why I didn't want to. Quite frankly, it was really depressing.
| Another thing they did with us is tell us that we really shouldn't explicitly
| discuss the activities so that no "expectation level" would be set with
| respect to the seminar and people could come with an open mind ....
.247> Really? They never told us that. Has anyone else heard that one?
Yes, Glen ... really. Perhaps after two years they've dropped this
admonition.
.247> Besides the blindfold incident, did you get anything out of the rest of
.247> it? Were there other areas that you had a problem with? How did you view
.247> the rest of the program?
I think that under the current circumstances it would be best to not
continue discussions of this in VAX Notes ... I'll discuss it in mail
but not in notes (I had second thoughts about entering the original
note).
Bubba
|
981.253 | I know *I* am | POBOX::RILEY | I *am* the D.J. | Thu Dec 05 1991 13:49 | 8 |
| >>He's probably writing up a thousand notes to post them in conferences
>>all over DEC, and thus saturate other noters' ability to respond.
Shhhhh!
Enjoy it now!
"jackin' the house", Bob
|
981.254 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Fri Dec 06 1991 12:13 | 7 |
| Well I would like to belatedly announce that Linsey's tea shop, in the
basement of the Amsterdam American Discount Bookshop, served a first
class Thanksgiving Turkey dinner. It was followed by a most excellent
pumpkin pie. I am now waiting on their Christmas dinner which promises
to be just as good.
Jamie.
|
981.255 | a Ratholes Rathole | RMDSRV::EIDSON | luv ya Colorado | Fri Dec 06 1991 13:37 | 13 |
| re .245
> Domestic turkeys are UGLY!
Fowl! Fowl!
My goodness I can't believe I wrote that......
However I ask, who ever sipped "DOMESTIC TURKEY?"
Nuff Said
-H-
|
981.256 | That's DOMESTICATED TURKEY :-) | PULPO::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Fri Dec 06 1991 13:45 | 0 |
981.257 | Gottcha!! | MORO::BEELER_JE | Nobody's perfetc | Fri Dec 06 1991 17:16 | 16 |
| .256> That's DOMESTICATED TURKEY
Buzzzzzzt. Wrong. Politically incorrect. $10 fine.
It's "Feathered-American".
Do not try to stereotype by putting this feathered American into a
subgroup(s) of domestic or non-domestic, or, "turkey" versus "grouse",
"pheasant" or other feathered subgroups.
Send your fine to me, in cash.
Thanks you for your attention to this very important matter of protocol.
Yours truly,
Friends of Feathered Americans
|
981.258 | ? | JUMBLY::DAY | No Good Deed Goes Unpunished | Sat Dec 07 1991 19:17 | 2 |
| Re .257 . Lines 1 & 2. Is this a reference to D Quayle ?
|
981.259 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Tue Dec 10 1991 06:11 | 3 |
| Are these domesticated Turkeys house broken?
Jamie.
|
981.260 | | POWDML::JULIUS | | Fri Dec 27 1991 14:36 | 50 |
| cross-posted here with the author's permission. \Bernice
<<< SAFRON::S$1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]VEGETARIANISM.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Digital Vegetarian Interest Group >-
================================================================================
Note 4.54 Pro-Choice??? 54 of 56
DRAGON::GITA 41 lines 23-DEC-1991 11:07
-< Things are looking up for next year! >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I have some potentially good news for those of us who have been trying
to get an alternative to the turkey over the years.
Last year I was very lucky to have the support of my personnel
representative. He pursued the issue of why can't DEC provide an
alternative for vegetarians. In the end, we received a letter, rather
nasty, from our point of view stating that this was a "gift" and we
should take it or leave it.
Well - I figured then that this was a dead issue, no puns intended. I
did not make a stand this year other than to tear up my turkey card,
but my personnel rep called me and asked if I'd done anything. He
still felt that DEC was not "doing the right thing" so he pushed the
issue up the chain of command.
Guess what???? The very person who had written us the letter last year
is now singing a new tune. I guess there's a fairly active Vegetarian
contingent in Hudson, MA and they've been talking with members of the
Valuing Diversity group. A new awareness is developing that maybe we
aren't just some weirdo group of cultists!
There's talk now of letting us order something from a catalog.
So - I'm writing to ask everyone to send a note, letter, whatever to
Sheila Fantozzi, @MSO, ICS::FANTOZZI and tell her why you'd prefer not
to receive a turkey. You could also suggest mail-order catalogs that
carry items that would be appropriate. I think that if she starts
receiving lots of mail that this will reenforce the fact that there are
a lot of Vegetarians working for DEC.
I guess that there were about 30 requests for kosher turkeys and
somehow personnel thinks that's about how many requests they'd get from
us. My personnel rep told her she's grossly underestimating. He
immediately called me and when I said I'd put a note in the notes file
he thought that was great.
So - maybe next year we'll have a choice.
Gita Devi
|
981.261 | cost DEC $$$$$ | KOLFAX::WHITMAN | Acid Rain Burns my Bass | Fri Dec 27 1991 14:54 | 28 |
| < There's talk now of letting us order something from a catalog.
<
< So - I'm writing to ask everyone to send a note, letter, whatever to
< Sheila Fantozzi, @MSO, ICS::FANTOZZI and tell her why you'd prefer not
< to receive a turkey. You could also suggest mail-order catalogs that
< carry items that would be appropriate. I think that if she starts
< receiving lots of mail that this will reenforce the fact that there are
< a lot of Vegetarians working for DEC.
What a precedent that would set!!!
That would mean that those of us who do not work in the MA/NH area would be
able to get "something" in place of the turkey we don't get now.
OR
Would it mean that we don't get to order something from a catalog to
replace the turkey we don't get now?
OR
Would a program like this only apply to employee's who are currently offered
a turkey, but (for whatever reason) don't want it?
Al
|
981.262 | What turkey? | CLO::FORNER | Check out clo::sys$Public:muckman.ps | Mon Dec 30 1991 16:39 | 5 |
| re: .-1
Interesting concept (I assume you are in the field like me?)
/p
|
981.263 | | RAVEN1::LEABEATER | | Mon Dec 30 1991 23:38 | 38 |
| Re: Note 981.108 by RDVAX::KALIKOW
> -< Two alternate futures: Behavioristic or Cognitive 'Mind Control' >-
> Perhaps the word "Valuing" in VoD is part of the problem, as others
> have pointed out. Folks complain that they will NEVER actually "value"
> a "lifestyle" they abhor. Primarily (imo, for some of them) from this
> semantic mismatch, they proceed to devalue :-) the goals of the entire
> program.
True, it is a very poor semantic choice, as is "affirmative" for
activity that (imo) devalues superior performance for the sake of
sexual, racial, - and whatever else - parity.
> I say, let's get past the naming problem and decide on
> whether it's in DIGITAL's best interest that folks get along with one
> another and give each other respect and an equal shake.
Precisely what those who are opposed to AA and EEO are saying. Respect
ought to be merited via commensurate performace. And "equal" is only of
value when it is equal. No lowering of criteria for hiring and
promotion simply to fill the slot with the right sex, race, et al.
> Scenario #2
> doesn't seem like an invasion of privacy to me. Again sorry for any
> vast understatements here.
"Invade" is not that far off. "Conquer" may have easily been added
without doing violence to the imagery. I would like to provide more
graphic evidence (aside from my own experience) but fear compels others
who have experienced the pain of EEO and AA to keep their views to
themselves.
Dan, I like the verbal pyrotechnics! It makes you so much more
interesting to read - though not necessarily more understandable :-)
John
|
981.264 | I know,it's the thought that counts! | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Tue Dec 31 1991 03:04 | 7 |
| Does anybody in here know what those frozen turkeys cost DEC? I mean,we
*do* buy them in rather large quantities. There are around 1500
employees in this building alone so maybe it's costing around $3-4 per
bird. What do you think you can order from a catalog for that amount? an
apple maybe? Take the turkey and donate it if you like!
Ken
|
981.265 | Leftovers | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Dec 31 1991 10:45 | 1 |
| Not to mention they get them the week *after* Thanksgiving.
|
981.266 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Happily excited, bright, attractive | Tue Dec 31 1991 11:00 | 3 |
| Just in time for Christmas.
Jamie.
|
981.267 | DEC "use" to be fun! | YNGSTR::BUSCEMI | Hi Lorna...how ya doin'? | Tue Dec 31 1991 13:21 | 34 |
|
The turkeys cost about $20 a piece due to shipping, boxing them,
frozen storage and also sorting them to be between 12-14 lbs
because people use to complain that some people got bigger turkeys
than other people (boy do people find reasons to complain!).
I don't understand what all the fuss is with people looking
for alternatives to the turkeys. As stated before, if you don't
eat or want a turkey just donate it....people who really "need" it
will appreciate your generosity.
I really miss the old days in DEC when things like getting the
turkey or donating it, going to Canobie Lake, having a "Christmas"
party were fun and looked forward to. Now everything is a problem
because someone feels they are personally left out, ignored or
discriminated against. People are getting sick and tired (I know I am)
of listening to people try to find something wrong with everything.
Ever think how much extra time Personnel is spending dealing with all
these issues, forming vegetarian turkey committees, etc. It's getting
damn depressing!
I usually don't write in this note file but I just had about all I
could take about all the complaining I see in here. People should
be grateful not only that they have a job but work in a company
that "does" care about you enough to do these extra things for you.
Let's try to lighten up, have some fun and get DEC to be the place
that was enjoyable to work at again. It's a new year starting
tomorrow, let's take this opportunity to turn this all around and get
back to the ways things were. I think we'll all benefit from it.
Happy New Year!
Steve
|
981.268 | Merry Christmas? | MORO::BEELER_JE | HIGASHI NO KAZEAME! | Tue Dec 31 1991 13:27 | 9 |
| Well ... sorry you have so much trouble with your turkeys up yonder in
the HomeLand of MotherDEC.
After 15 years with MotherDEC, this is the F-I-R-S-T year that we, in
the field (at least in this district), received nada, zero, zilch,
nothing ... at Christmas time. Send your turkeys to Beelersfield.
Thank you,
Bubba
|
981.269 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Dec 31 1991 14:35 | 2 |
| $20?! They could give a turkey gift certificate for a local supermarket for
a lot less than that!
|
981.270 | | ODIXIE::GEORGE | Do as I say do, not as I do do. | Tue Dec 31 1991 14:52 | 8 |
| In Atlanta, at least, we received a $10 gift certificate to Kroger. I
could have bought a turkey, or broccoli, or Cheetos with it. I could
have dropped it in the box in the lobby for charity. Instead, I gave
it to a friend whose husband was laid off the week before Christmas.
It was all very simple....
Steve
|
981.271 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Jan 01 1992 12:47 | 13 |
| You folks just aren't listening.
There's a whole 'nother note on the turkey topic.
The radical vegetarians don't want to donate the turkey, and they didn't
previously want any alternate Christmas gift.
What they wanted was for NO TURKEY TO DIE IN THEIR NAME just because they
happen to work for DEC.
Maybe irrational, but aren't we supposed to value even irrational differences?
/john
|
981.272 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed Jan 01 1992 19:10 | 6 |
| Maybe we need another item on the "personnel information" form: do you
want a turkey for Christmas? Given all the other stuff now collected,
like next of kin, educational degree, health plan, HCRA deduction, and
insurance multiple, collecting the turkey information should be easy.
Then Digital would know how many turkeys to order, whom to send the
turkey tickets to, and no turkey need die in a vegetarian's name.
|
981.273 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Jan 02 1992 11:46 | 12 |
| Open enrollment for turkeys!
The Digital Turkey Plan 1 gives you 80% of a turkey (no giblets), but you
probably can't afford it.
DTP 2 gives you a whole turkey, but you *really* can't afford it.
TMOs (Turkey Menu Organizations) give you leftovers.
TMO/Elect lets you choose your leftovers (white or dark meat).
Vegetarians can opt out.
|
981.274 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu Jan 02 1992 18:40 | 8 |
| Re: .-1
Yes! That's it! Thank you for the additional explication.
But we still have to decide how many times per year one can change the
option on the Digital Turkey Plan. Once just after Christmas?
Changing it during the normal open-enrollment period seems to close to
the holidays to save any turkeys.
|
981.275 | free all turkeys! | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Fri Jan 03 1992 01:18 | 11 |
| I just had a brilliant idea. Since there are 1500 employees in this
bldg. DEC could just buy 1500 live birds and let 'em go on the grounds.
Those that wanted a turkey would simply go out and shoot it. Those that
don't want a turkey to die in their name would simply not. Some of
those "liberated" birds would probably find their way downtown where
they would roost on the statues (displacing the politically
out-of-style pigeons) and maybe poop on some people's garments. Some of
those people might even be the ones who refused to shoot 'em. Now would
that be poetic justice,or what?
Ken
|
981.276 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Fri Jan 03 1992 03:50 | 1 |
| The only good turkey is a dead turkey. On my dinner plate.
|
981.277 | .272 = Death of turkey distribution | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Mon Jan 06 1992 18:41 | 21 |
| re: .272
> Maybe we need another item on the "personnel information" form: do you
> want a turkey for Christmas? Given all the other stuff now collected,
> like next of kin, educational degree, health plan, HCRA deduction, and
> insurance multiple, collecting the turkey information should be easy.
You know what will happen, of course.
Some lucky stiff in the field will receive the corporate-version
personnel form and begin receiving turkeys. Other coworkers will see
the opportunity and find other personnel people with the wrong form.
Before long, someone will get ticked that THEY aren't receiving a
turkey and blow the whistle. Then "Corporate" will issue an edict
stating that turkey distribution will cease due to abuse.
Instead, everyone will receive a generic "Season's Greetings" card with
KO's pseudo-signature printed on the inside. Uggh...
-- Russ (who doesn't expect to see a DEC turkey ever -- unless the
"turkey" is also wearing a DEC badge 8^)
|
981.278 | dead bird on my plate? | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Mon Jan 06 1992 19:57 | 4 |
| Hey Tom! Yeccch!! I'll take mine as I always have,cleaned and cooked!
Ken
|
981.279 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Tue Jan 07 1992 04:46 | 4 |
| Absolutely amazing. Several people have actually responded to my
turkey proposal in the same vein I intended it, and I haven't gotten
any flaming VAXmail. Do you suppose people made New Year's
resolutions? And kept them?
|
981.280 | Hmmm . . . | LJOHUB::BOYLAN | | Tue Jan 07 1992 14:51 | 12 |
| Re: .279
> Absolutely amazing. Several people have actually responded to my
> turkey proposal in the same vein I intended it, and I haven't gotten
> any flaming VAXmail. Do you suppose people made New Year's
> resolutions? And kept them?
Nah . . . I think people are just still tired from all that celebratin'!
:-)
- - Steve
|
981.281 | Meat eater hostility? | FSDEV::CABARBANELL | CAROL | Wed Jan 08 1992 11:05 | 16 |
| I am a strict vegetarian, and I must admit, even I (with little
or no sense of humor on my decision not to eat meat) had a few
chuckles at some of the replies here.
And some of them were rather crude. To enlighten those of you
who like your turkeys dead and on your plate, there are those
of us who prefer animals alive and free -- just try for a moment
to imagine that!
Anyway, when I was in Seattle in the field, we too got a gift
certificate to a grocery store. That seemed to work out well
for all -- we bought what we wanted, donated it, or whatever,
and Digital did not incur any additional overhead in making
the issue more complex than it needed to be.
Carol
|
981.282 | That's OMNIVORE, not CARNIVORE, buddy! | IMTDEV::BRUNO | Father Gregory | Wed Jan 08 1992 11:18 | 11 |
| RE: <<< Note 981.281 by FSDEV::CABARBANELL "CAROL" >>>
> -< Meat eater hostility? >-
>To enlighten those of you who like your turkeys dead and on your
>plate, there are those of us who prefer animals alive and free --
>just try for a moment to imagine that!
You're showing a bit too much "Plant Murderer" smugness, Carol.
Value some diversity, will ya.
GB
|
981.283 | I suspect MULTIVORE rather than OMNIVORE :-) | SNOC01::NICHOLLS | It said WET PAINT, so I did | Wed Jan 08 1992 19:28 | 1 |
| There are some things most of us won't eat
|
981.284 | | ASICS::LESLIE | It's kind of fun to be extinct | Thu Jan 09 1992 17:59 | 1 |
| The "omni" in omnivore refers to meat and vegetable matter.
|
981.285 | I guess it really doesn't matter | CSC32::MORTON | ALIENS! A new kind of Breakfast | Thu Jan 09 1992 19:42 | 10 |
| > <<< Note 981.284 by ASICS::LESLIE "It's kind of fun to be extinct" >>>
>
>The "omni" in omnivore refers to meat and vegetable matter.
I think you will find that the word OMNI Really means ALL. OMNIVORE is
traditionally correct, but MULTIVORE IMO would be more correct, since
most people DON'T eat ALL plants nor do we eat ALL animals.
Jim Morton
|
981.286 | Oh, boy! Another language lesson!
| LJOHUB::BOYLAN | | Thu Jan 09 1992 20:11 | 24 |
| Let us refer to the "American Heritage Dictionary":
omnivorous - adj. 1. Zoological - eating both animal and
vegetable substances. 2. Taking in everything available:
an omnivorous reader.
(I feel so crippled without access to the OED!)
Analyzing the root of the word, "omni-" does indeed mean "all". The
word, as constructed, means literally "eating everything".
From a linguistics point of view, on the other hand, the meaning of a
word is derived from usage. In this case, common usage of the word
means "eating both animal and vegetable substances."
So, linguistically, the author of .284 is quite correct in insisting
that "The "omni" in omnivore refers to meat and vegetable matter."
On the other hand, the author of .283 is quite correct in the
construction of the pun.
Leaving the technical goobledygook aside, I, being one always in favor
of having fun with the language, appreciate the joke!
- - Steve
|
981.287 | | MU::PORTER | another year... | Thu Jan 09 1992 23:22 | 2 |
| I'm a vegetarian and a multivore, so there - I eat more
than one thing!
|
981.288 | Latin | DCC::HAGARTY | Essen, Trinken und Shaggen... | Fri Jan 10 1992 07:35 | 4 |
981.289 | | ASICS::LESLIE | Not a silent lamb | Fri Jan 10 1992 09:42 | 4 |
| OMNI is a modifier in the word omnivore, so you first see what you're
modifying.
OMNI does mean all, but in context, ya know.
|
981.290 | | DCC::HAGARTY | Essen, Trinken und Shaggen... | Fri Jan 10 1992 12:08 | 3 |
981.291 | If it was good enough for Julius ... | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Fri Jan 10 1992 21:59 | 5 |
| Close enough, it does:
Omnia Gallia in tres partes divisa est.
All Gaul into three parts divided is.
|
981.292 | Hope you don't have an exam coming up! | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Fri Jan 17 1992 16:07 | 12 |
| .288:
OMNIA is neuter plural; OMNES is m/f plural.
OMNA doesn't exist; OMNI translates to "to/for everyone [or
everything]". There are also a number of uses for the dative, such as
dative of agency and dative of direction; you should check a good
Latin grammar for more information about these.
I suspect, by the by, that they are irrelevant here.
Dick
|