



Transportation giant Uber seems to have engaged in a woke anti-white women crackdown. It acted upon racism complaints by black and Hispanic workers, suspending its top diversity official who organized events to tackle the “Karen entitlement stereotype.”
As modern-day Marxism-Communism is increasingly gripping today’s America, the color-blind society this nation moved towards for several decades is all but gone.
Instead, it is rapidly being replaced by a setup in which woke leftists want revenge and retribution against the founding majority of the American Republic. As a result, instances of anti-white racism seem to be more and more frequent by the day.
A possible case in hand might be the development at Uber in which the corporate head of diversity, Bo Young Lee, an Asian-American woman, was slapped with a suspension.
This happened because she organized online events to discuss the experience that white females have with the so-called “Karen” stereotype – namely, that they are prone to public outbursts in alleged defense of their “entitlement.”
The Zoom sessions that Lee moderated as head of DEI (“diversity, equity, inclusion”) were entitled, “Don’t Call Me Karen,” The Guardian reports.
Apparently, being female is no longer good enough to qualify white women among the groups of humans who are deemed “oppressed,” “downtrodden,” “disenfranchised,” and so on by default.
Thus, disgruntled black and Hispanic Uber employees played the woke “I’m more oppressed” card and got their DEI chief suspended for attending too much to white people’s feelings.
A New York Times report, which first exposed the suspension, notes there was controversy over the “Karen” events at Uber, as soon as the first one was conducted in April. A second such online session for about 500 employees was held last week.
The events favoring white women were actually part of the woke corporation’s “Moving Forward” initiative on the experience of race and minority members.
Yet, that wasn’t met well by some Uber employees. They felt white women’s discomfort over the Karen stereotype was not a worthy woke cause, and, even worse – it was “insensitive” with respect to people of color.