By Catholic League president Bill Donohue
Silicon
Valley has more than banking problems: the high tech industry is culturally
corrupt. To be specific, all the talk about diversity and inclusion that the
left-wing elites speak about is nothing but claptrap. In fact, it is one of the
most bigoted places in America to work.
Lincoln
Network, a community of free-market tech professionals, conducted a survey in
late 2017 and early 2018 of tech professionals in Silicon Valley. The focus was
on ideology and workplace norms. The findings remove any doubt about the extent
of cultural corruption that exists. Here are six of the conclusions.
- A large majority consider their
workplace liberal or very liberal.
- Most feel their views are at
odds with the cultural norms in their workplace.
- Most do not feel comfortable
sharing their views on political or cultural issues….
- A significant number cannot do their
best work because their ideological views are at odds with their workplace
norms.
- A large majority cannot bring
their whole selves to work.
- Some know someone who did not
pursue or left a career in tech because of perceived conflicts in
viewpoints.
Tim Ferriss
is an investor and an author who describes himself as “very socially liberal.”
He moved from Silicon Valley to Austin, Texas because “Silicon Valley […] has
an insidious infection that is spreading—a peculiar form of McCarthyism […]
masquerading as liberal open-mindedness.” Sam Altman, a venture capitalist,
concurs, saying he “felt more comfortable discussing controversial ideas in
Beijing than in San Francisco.”
“I have been
retaliated against, bullied, verbally intimidated and subject to ridicule for
my own opinions that are not accepted by corporate majority rule.” Those are
the reflections of a middle-age tech libertarian woman whose experience in
Silicon Valley is commonplace.
A male Google employee said he moved from very liberal to conservative after undergoing a “reign of terror” by senior left-wing staff. One of his co-workers admitted that “I have lost multiple talented colleagues who resigned rather than continue in the face of increasingly extreme, narrowminded, and regressive environment here at Google.”
Roughly half (48 percent) of those who work in Silicon Valley are self-described atheists or agnostics. Many don’t like Christians.
Those who
are religious attribute the animus to a “postmodern secularist Silicon Valley
viewpoint.” Others note that the “quietest” employees are “conservative
Christians that don’t want to risk the perceived ire of an obviously
non-Christian non-conservative majority.” Another worker confessed, “I would
definitely be worried about professional repercussions if people knew my
political and religious views.”
Religious
employees are careful about wearing their religion on their sleeve. Here’s how
one worker put it. “People in my workplace certainly can’t know who I really
am.” He said, “a lot of people have this mindset that intellectually capable,
smart people are atheist and rational.”
Similarly, a
tech employee at LinkedIn opined, “When colleagues go off on jeremiads about
how terrible Christians are, I infer that if they knew I was a Christian, they
would not like it.” A software developer who is gay, Christian and a lifelong
Democrat said he avoids sharing his views because “any sort of disagreement
would make them wonder if I’m a secret Trump supporter.”
There is
plenty of evidence beyond the Lincoln Network survey that shows how things work
in Silicon Valley. In a piece posted on Vox, the reporter said, “Silicon Valley
is a young atheist’s world,” but quickly noted, “that’s becoming a problem.”
Specifically, it’s a problem for older employees who “belong to a traditional
religion.”
It’s wise
for such people to keep their mouth shut. As one woman put it, her colleagues
are shocked to learn she is religious. “What, really?” is a typical response.
That is why she avoids mentioning her religion. When she does, “she feels the
need to explain her faith to reassure previously skeptical parties that she is
‘rational.’”
HBO’s
“Silicon Valley” satirized the intolerant tech sector. In one episode, it
depicted a gay man who is religious. They were “shocked to learn that he goes
to church.” Another character admitted that Christianity “freaks people out in
the Valley.”
Peter Rex, a
CEO who worked there, said there is truth to the satire. He said, “I’ve
experienced a combination of hesitation and hostility toward my Catholic
faith.” He flatly says, “There is discrimination against Christians in Silicon
Valley.”
Is it any
surprise that Daniel Dennett is one of Silicon Valley’s most popular guest
speakers? He is one of America’s most influential atheist writers.
Why is it
that everywhere the left-wing elite exist—the university, the foundations,
Silicon Valley, the media, the entertainment industry—the last thing they prize
is diversity of thought? Are they that insecure of their own convictions that
they must trample on freedom of speech, freedom of association and freedom of
religion? Must be so.
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