A report by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics on weekly earnings in the third quarter has revealed that Asian women earned more on average during that period than those who supposedly enjoy the ultimate privilege: white men.
Released earlier this month, the report went viral on Friday, with social media posters pointing out the apparent tectonic shift in America’s racial narrative: Asian women in the US have been earning $1,224 per week on average, compared to white men’s $1,122.
The statistic in question sparked something of a debate on Twitter, however, with prominent California lawyer Harmeet Dhillon taking a negative tack. Dhillon claimed such data “will be used to marginalize Asian women” in their workplaces, costing them their current favored employment status as “under-represented minorities.”
This is not the good news you think it is, folks. This data will be used to marginalize Asian women at companies that increasingly reserve certain jobs/promotions for "URM"s, "under-represented minorities." This phenomenon already has downgraded the workplace status of Asian men. https://t.co/2z42MAcWOC
Twitter users swiftly labeled her point of view “absurd,” and called for equality in hiring practices.
This is such an unnecessary slippery slope the left is dragging America down. If we merely insisted on equality in hiring standards & practices, then individuals could find the jobs that fit their skills. It just seems lost in the conversation that only stupid firms discriminate.
Another group of commenters simply ridiculed Dhillon’s own position, accusing her of playing the victim, as a woman of Asian descent herself.
Underrepresented (URM), absurd. The world is not proportional, see SAT's, etc.
"It rests upon the "completely unrealistic" assumption that minorities will choose a particular trade in lockstep proportion to their representation in the population." Richmond v Croson 488 US @ 507.
— Captain Mel Toxic, Man of Action ♂ (@CaptainMelToxic) October 30, 2020
Twitter spats aside, many social media users simply expressed how delighted they were for Asian American women, with many declaring them “hard-working”. Some commenters lauded the development as a capitalist success story and even as feminist breakthrough.