Send us Fan MailDEI has become a political litmus test, but the real fight is over something more basic: what a fair workplace actually looks like when you strip away slogans. We sit down with voices who’ve been inside the machine a former Fortune 500 Chief Diversity Officer and a skeptic who once championed the work and now calls parts of it harmful to debate whether diversity, equity, and inclusion can strengthen meritocracy or whether it inevitably slides into quotas, identity politics, and distrust.We get specific about what “equity” should mean in practice: access to opportunity, access to information, and removing hidden barriers in hiring and promotion systems. We also talk through civil rights law and protected classes, the unintended damage caused by diversity targets tied to executive pay, and why the “diversity hire” label can undercut the very people DEI is supposed to support. From land acknowledgments to microaggressions to psychological safety, we draw a hard line between real anti-discrimination work and performative rituals that feel good but change nothing.Then we pivot from workplace culture to raw politics: Janet Mills exits the Maine Senate primary, Graham Plattner’s insurgent campaign gains steam, and we map how negative ads and culture war messaging are landing with Democrats, independents, and Republicans. We close with the Democratic Party’s decision to keep its 2024 after action review locked up, and why that secrecy only fuels suspicion about Gaza politics, consultant money, and institutional self-protection.If you found yourself nodding along or getting annoyed, share the episode, subscribe, and leave a review. What’s your definition of a fair system: equal rules, equal access, or something else entirely? Support the show