...and also pay 30 million in damages.
8/17/2011 7:30:26 PM
why didn't they just pass the exam?what about white people who 'failed' or whatever? or Hispanics?
8/17/2011 7:32:02 PM
remember, d357r0y3r, the only way to fight the effects of discrimination is with more discrimination. DUUUUUUUUUH. who cares that some people can't pass the exam. Why even have an exam? It's the color of the skin that matters!
8/17/2011 7:34:24 PM
8/17/2011 7:34:29 PM
If you ever take an HR course you can hear about all types of similar dumb shit. What I really want to know is what were the percentages of the original pool? These types of stories always seem to leave out those details.
8/17/2011 7:35:31 PM
i think the issue was the score of 89there wasn't a justification. i think they just randomly picked it or something. so the problemo was that it was arbitrary. disparate impact. look that ish up.[Edited on August 17, 2011 at 7:37 PM. Reason : .]
8/17/2011 7:37:37 PM
they still picked a lower god damned score in order to get minorities in, though. think about that. they established a LOWER QUALIFICATION in order to get blacks in. it's exactly what anti-affirmative-action types bitch about, the lowering of qualifications in the name of "equality". there very much WAS a reason for the lowered number. it was to get more blacks "qualified". Should they have set it at 50 so that 50% of the people would be black then? Should they have set it low enough so that all black applicants would "pass"? there's something wrong with assuming that, since a lot of blacks didn't pass, the test discriminates against blacks intentionally. guilty until proven innocent, basically[Edited on August 17, 2011 at 7:42 PM. Reason : ]
8/17/2011 7:40:12 PM
They should have set an upper limit on the test score.I would rather have a big dumb mule busting into a building to pull me out of a fire than some super intelligent scrawny nerd.I bet there is more to this story than reactionary Destroyer and reactionary burro seem to think. I'd be nice if people thought rationally about stuff rather than emotionally...Good thing this is chit chat i guess?[Edited on August 17, 2011 at 7:44 PM. Reason : ]
8/17/2011 7:43:41 PM
8/17/2011 7:44:11 PM
they lowered qualifying scores to get into the naval academy too. sounds pretty equal to me
8/17/2011 7:44:32 PM
I think they could have avoided the disparate impact problem by having an objective reasoning behind the 89 cutoff. Like Khcadwal said, they fucked up by picking a random cutoff number.[Edited on August 17, 2011 at 7:48 PM. Reason : an, not a]
8/17/2011 7:48:16 PM
the people passed the test the 89 was the "well qualified score"so the people in between the failing score and the 89 were just fuckedand the court found that the score was arbitrary and that the score had no relation to the skills or intelligence to become a firefighter. all it did was discriminate against minorities. so its not like you were getting unqualified or dumb firefighters. so just CALM IT DOWN. read the entire facts and opinion, not a news article sillies. [Edited on August 17, 2011 at 7:50 PM. Reason : .]
8/17/2011 7:48:47 PM
8/17/2011 7:49:01 PM
and the court found that the score was arbitrary and that the score had no relation to the skills or intelligence to become a firefighter. all it did was discriminate against minorities. so its not like you were getting unqualified or dumb firefighters. so just CALM IT DOWN. read the entire facts and opinion, not a news article sillies. oh and you missed the other part. WHAT HAD HAPPENED WASpeople sat for the testsome people passed, some people failedthen they saw that black people scored lower on the exam (still passed, but scored lower)so then they were like, oh 89 sounds great, we'll say the "well qualified" people got an 89 and above and we'll only hire from themDO YOU GET THE PROBLEM NOW??[Edited on August 17, 2011 at 7:51 PM. Reason : .]
8/17/2011 7:50:35 PM
^^I don't have a cause to hurt in this case. It's just a fact that black males are statistically more likely to be charged and convicted of crimes. It's nothing inherent to their genetic make-up - there are a multitude of reasons for it. It has everything to do with upbringing and socioeconomic status and nothing to do with actual skin tone, except in cases where actual discrimination occurs and people bring their prejudice into play.The entrance exam should have ended any question of discrimination, because they were using actual metrics. Without the exam, someone could have made the case that the fire department was discriminating and they wouldn't have had much of a defense.^Unless there was a question "Are you black? Yes or No," and answering yes meant you scored lower, the test was not actually discriminatory. It was not just black people that scored lower than 89, and among the well qualified, only 78% were white.[Edited on August 17, 2011 at 7:55 PM. Reason : ]
8/17/2011 7:52:57 PM
omfg i give upread the fucking case[Edited on August 17, 2011 at 7:54 PM. Reason : .]
8/17/2011 7:53:38 PM
OK, i made the fatal asumption that 100 was "well-qualified" and that the score was not based on a 100-pt system. It looks like a 65 was "qualified".http://www.bet.com/news/national/2011/08/17/court-orders-chicago-fire-department-to-hire-111-black-men.html
8/17/2011 7:56:02 PM
^^Read the edit, I was responding to burro.
8/17/2011 7:56:10 PM
lolchicago
8/17/2011 7:57:51 PM
8/17/2011 7:59:36 PM
No one is saying that it's equal impact. It very clearly is not equal impact - a higher percentage of black applicants got denied when compared to white applicants. I'm arguing that we should aim for equality of opportunity, not equality of outcome.As far as test scores being arbitrary...yes, they are. Did you think grading scales were determined by some concrete metrics?Link the case briefing, if you could.[Edited on August 17, 2011 at 8:04 PM. Reason : ]
8/17/2011 8:03:05 PM
here: google lewis v. chicacgo you should be able to get a case briefing AND the full casesure, all grading is arbitrary. but this is basically the issue...if you scored under a 65 you failed. if you scored above you passed. if you passed you should get the opportunity to be CONSIDERED for hiring. well, that isn't what happened. HENCE the problem.[Edited on August 17, 2011 at 8:05 PM. Reason : .]
8/17/2011 8:04:30 PM
8/17/2011 8:06:11 PM
well they should have filed a Title VII suit then and they'd have to show that they met the criteria.and i get what y'all are saying. but its not like the court was like "oh it is discrimination so the black people win"the plaintiff's have to meet certain requirements to even bring a suit and to qualify under title vii and THEN there is this whole balancing testi don't know, a lot of that is lost in little news articles. even if you don't agree you still get a better understanding by reading the entire case (and this one is short like < 20 pages i think) so it helps clarify the law and HOW they got to the decision even if you still don't agree with it (and if you still don't it proooobably means you just don't agree with the law the way it is written, which is an entire other issue )[Edited on August 17, 2011 at 8:11 PM. Reason : .]
8/17/2011 8:08:16 PM
I've read some of the case, but I'm not going to read all of it. My problem is with with Title VII, specifically, disparate impact. It's yet another part of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that I think should be repealed. Of course, that won't happen, because you get branded a racist if you question any section of that legislation. God Bless Fucking America.The doctrine of disparate impact essentially says that an employer can be held liable for unintentional discrimination. Think about that. No discriminatory intent has to be demonstrated or proven. The only benchmarks are 1) That whatever hiring practices were used, in effect, resulted in a lower percentage of (whatever group) being hired relative to their collective percentage of the applicant pool and 2) That the practices were not "job related and consistent with business necessity."Of course, #2 is subjective as fuck. I think a business/organization owner has a better understanding of what is "consistent with business necessity" than some judge.[Edited on August 17, 2011 at 8:45 PM. Reason : ]
8/17/2011 8:44:16 PM
when such a large number of people apply for a scarce position, wouldn't they hire the people best suited for the job? isn't that what the test was for? I hate discrimination shit like this... being forced to hire lesser qualified people because of skin color. (and i don't care what color that skin is.)
8/17/2011 8:57:01 PM
Did anyone else read the thread, then look at the user name, and then check to see if you are in Chit Chat?Seriously, move these tards to TSB.
8/17/2011 9:03:09 PM
Listen to the great Merbig.
8/17/2011 9:04:49 PM
remember: only blacks were affected by the arbitrary cutoff. no whites were affected. equal protection under the law my ass
8/17/2011 9:05:23 PM
Perhaps the black people should study harder next time.
8/17/2011 9:17:53 PM
I won't pretend to understand all the legal or HR matters but I do have a question.If all applicants that scored above the fail rate were considered instead of the 89 score cutoff, and they hired the same pool of above-89 applicants, would the problem still be contested?
8/17/2011 9:19:24 PM
of course. the blacks suing didnt get any whiter
8/17/2011 9:28:15 PM
^^ i honestly don't know. i think if it was just Pass/Fail and they still hired the same people from the above the 89% cutoff then they might be ok. because then there would have been an equal opportunity for everyone that passed? i don't know. i'm sure it would be easier to argue that there WASN'T a violation, at least.
8/17/2011 9:32:31 PM
This is now a Spiderman thread.
8/17/2011 9:33:49 PM
khcadawal: 1d357r0y3r: 0
8/17/2011 11:26:19 PM
Coming from you, that makes me feel validated.
8/18/2011 3:13:12 PM
Wait. So how is arbitrarily setting a passing score racist? I mean, if it's arbitrary, then it's not based on anything of fact, including test taker's race... so how does setting this score equate to racism?
8/18/2011 3:42:20 PM
It's not racist - it's unintentionally discriminatory. The plaintiff was not able to prove that the bar was intentionally raised to exclude black people, but it didn't have to. According to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, all you have to prove is that a higher percentage of black people were adversely affected by the decision than white people. Apparently, that's social justice.
8/18/2011 3:54:00 PM
In other words, it's bullshit.
8/18/2011 3:57:34 PM
^ Ding Ding!!
8/18/2011 4:02:45 PM
^^Racist
8/18/2011 4:07:43 PM
This isn't something I really wanna get outraged by either way.But it is funny to think about. If you were like one of the lower scorers, can you imagine getting $5,000 for not doing very good on a civil service exam fifteen years before?!? That's gotta be kinda awesome. I mean, the discrimination and whatnot sure must suck, but getting paid for barely passing an exam...SWEET!Oh, and this is screwed up if people thought the necessary score was 65 and only worked hard enough to achieve that score. They should have been told in advance that it was a competition.[Edited on August 18, 2011 at 4:19 PM. Reason : sss]
8/18/2011 4:15:14 PM
this is a bridget kinda threadnothing shed enjoy more than seeing more black guys totin big black hoseThe Bridget 111[Edited on August 18, 2011 at 4:18 PM. Reason : d]
8/18/2011 4:17:55 PM
Yes, but only good-looking ones!And I mean the men and their hoses.
8/18/2011 4:21:57 PM
Does this make the FE/PE racist? I mean, the passing score isn't really arbitrary, but it's a floating/unknown target, and I'm sure plenty of people with skin other than white don't pass it. Is all standardized testing racist then? Are all tests racist because they have a minimum score to pass? Is grading racist? is evaluating racist? is judging racist? is thinking racist? is living racist? is racist racist?
8/18/2011 4:22:40 PM
lol
8/18/2011 4:25:07 PM
little known fact-if youre a big Samoan fucker named "Tiny" youre in by default.
8/18/2011 4:27:57 PM
I was going to post a bunch of hot firefighter pictures, but there actually aren't that many available on Google. So either there really is a major deficit of black firefighters or black firefighters prefer not to appear in the yearly calendars. Either way, this disparity is an outrage![Edited on August 18, 2011 at 4:43 PM. Reason : sss]
8/18/2011 4:39:36 PM
you cant get by on being late to a fire
8/18/2011 4:49:50 PM
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8/18/2011 4:50:33 PM