LinkedIn users ditch polite networking for real talk on US race and inequity


FILE PHOTO A 3D printed logo of Microsoft is seen in front of a displayed LinkedIn logo in this illustration taken June 13 2016. REUTERSDado RuvicIllustrationFile Photo

As US companies grapple with addressing racism and inequality stoked by nationwide protests, workers sheltering in place during the coronavirus pandemic have staked out LinkedIn as the next battleground for unvarnished discussion in the virtual office. — Reuters

NEW YORK: “This is white supremacy. This is institutionalised racism,” Aaisha Joseph, an executive assistant in New York City, posted on Microsoft Corp’s LinkedIn in early June, calling out the Black leadership vacuum at tech giants.

In another post on LinkedIn, Ian Davis, a Black advertising executive, called out his former bosses at a global advertising agency, for telling him he had an “attitude problem” after speaking out.

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