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The Death of Merit: How America’s Best Companies Lost Their Way


Over the last four years, a quiet revolution has swept through corporate America, dismantling the meritocratic ideals that once ensured the nation’s best and brightest could rise to the top. With diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) mandates dictating hiring practices, the numbers tell a stunning tale: 94% of new hires at leading public companies were so-called “people of color,” with Black women taking the lion’s share of these roles. This figure, derived from corporate diversity reports, reflects an overwhelming prioritization of identity in hiring practices. Given that Black women constitute only a small fraction of the population and that just 38% hold college degrees, this disproportionate focus raises questions about the impact on fairness and the sidelining of more qualified candidates. The implications are stark: many highly skilled individuals have been systematically overlooked in favor of fulfilling demographic quotas, challenging the meritocratic foundations of corporate success. Yet this demographic represents only 2.28% of the U.S. population—a statistical manipulation that sacrifices fairness and merit. The real victims of this social engineering are white men, systematically excluded from opportunities they would have earned on their qualifications, and the companies themselves, which have sidelined talent and innovation in favor of identity politics. The consequences are already manifesting in plummeting stock returns and organizational inefficiencies, a harbinger of long-term damage to American competitiveness.

Imagine, for a moment, the absurdity of a policy that freezes out 60% of Americans based solely on their skin color or gender. This is no dystopian fantasy—it is the new corporate normal. As James Fishback, founder of the investment firm Azoria, notes, “Exceptional companies are run by exceptional people.” Yet, under the tyranny of DEI hiring quotas, talent and merit have become secondary considerations. Firms like Best Buy have gone so far as to codify these practices, committing to filling “one in three corporate salaried positions” with BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color) candidates. Similarly, Wells Fargo recently faced scrutiny for limiting interviews for jobs paying over $100,000, where white men could represent only 25% of those interviewed. Although this practice was revised after public backlash, it exemplifies the widespread adoption of such policies among America’s biggest companies. These initiatives not only perpetuate divisive assumptions about minority capabilities but also systematically exclude highly qualified candidates, eroding the principles of meritocracy and innovation.

The numbers bear this out. Of the new hires filling these identity-based quotas, only 38% of Black women—the demographic disproportionately targeted by these policies—hold college degrees. By contrast, highly qualified candidates from other racial groups, particularly white men, are systematically excluded. When 94% of jobs are allocated to 2.28% of the population, it becomes mathematically impossible for these positions to consistently go to the most qualified individuals.

The fallout from these practices is hitting where it hurts most: the bottom line. Fishback’s Azoria has launched a Meritocracy ETF, boldly excluding companies like Best Buy, which prioritize identity politics over ability. As Fishback puts it, “Companies that hire on skill and ability will outperform those that hire on race and gender.” And the early results are staggering. Over the past year, a portfolio of S&P 500 companies employing racial and gender hiring targets has returned just 12%, compared to the broader index’s 30% gain. Over two years, the gap widens to a dismal 17% versus 60%.

These results are not anomalies. Firms that abandon meritocracy in favor of identity quotas are less innovative, less productive and ultimately less profitable. Exceptional employees—regardless of race or gender—build exceptional companies. But the ripple effects of these practices are just beginning. Over the next decade, the pressure to promote individuals hired under identity-based quotas will mount, regardless of their qualifications or performance. Companies, bowing to the same DEI mandates that drove these hiring decisions, will promote these individuals, further compounding the inefficiencies. The pain will inevitably be felt in declining profits, slower growth and diminished stock prices. The free market is already taking notice, with investors abandoning underperforming firms in favor of businesses that prioritize skill and merit over identity.

History offers no shortage of warnings against abandoning meritocratic principles. Cicero’s admonition that “salvation is found in the counsel of the capable” resonates here. America’s meteoric rise—its innovation, wealth, and power—is the direct result of fostering the talents of its most capable individuals. From Carnegie’s steel mills to Ford’s assembly lines, the country’s great leaps forward were driven not by identity but by ingenuity, grit, and hard work. These industries prioritized the brightest minds and the most skilled hands, irrespective of race or background. By focusing on competence and excellence, America outpaced its global competitors in nearly every domain, from manufacturing to technology.

Contrast this with societies that have rejected meritocracy. The decline of Rome, plagued by nepotism and identity-driven appointments, serves as a cautionary tale. As Rome shifted its priorities from competence to loyalty, its military leadership was increasingly filled with unqualified individuals chosen for their connections rather than their strategic acumen. Civil administrators, likewise, were selected based on familial ties or political favoritism, leading to widespread corruption and inefficiency. Over time, these practices eroded trust in institutions, weakened Rome’s ability to respond to external threats and drained its economic vitality. The empire’s inability to innovate or adapt stemmed directly from this abandonment of merit, leaving it vulnerable to collapse under the weight of its own dysfunction. Today’s corporate leaders should heed this lesson: hiring based on identity quotas weakens the very foundations upon which success and resilience are built.

Beyond financial ramifications, these policies tread on perilous legal ground. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) mandates that hiring decisions cannot discriminate based on race, gender, or ethnicity. By openly advertising racial and gender quotas, companies are inviting lawsuits and undermining public trust. This issue was brought into sharp focus by the recent decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. In a 9-8 ruling on December 11, 2024, the court invalidated Nasdaq’s board diversity rules, which had mandated that listed companies either appoint directors from specified demographic groups—namely women, underrepresented minorities, or LGBTQ+ individuals—or provide an explanation for non-compliance. The court determined that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) exceeded its statutory authority under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 by approving these rules. The majority opinion emphasized that the SEC’s endorsement of Nasdaq’s requirements did not align with the Act’s primary objectives, which focus on preventing fraud, manipulation, and promoting fair competition in securities markets. This ruling underscores the judiciary’s stance on the limitations of regulatory bodies in enforcing corporate diversity mandates, highlighting the ongoing debate over the extent to which such initiatives should influence corporate governance. These practices perpetuate the divisive narrative that success is unattainable for minorities without intervention, diminishing individual dignity and fostering resentment among employees.

The cultural costs are equally dire. Identity-based hiring fosters workplace conflict, reduces morale and stifles innovation. Employees, aware of these quotas, question whether their colleagues were hired for their talents or their identity. This breeds division, diminishes teamwork and ultimately hurts organizational performance. Moreover, the fear of appearing “insensitive” silences dissent, stifling the creative friction that drives innovation.

The path to restoring meritocracy is clear. Companies must prioritize skills-based hiring, blind applications, and diversity sourcing that expands talent pipelines without sacrificing standards. These methods promote inclusivity while ensuring that the most capable individuals—regardless of identity—rise to the top.

Azoria’s strategy underscores this principle. By excluding underperforming DEI-driven firms from its portfolio, the Meritocracy ETF sends a powerful message: excellence, not identity, drives success. And the invitation remains open. Companies willing to abandon identity quotas and recommit to merit will be welcomed back, ensuring their investors and employees reap the rewards of competence and innovation.

Corporate America stands at a crossroads. It can continue down the path of identity-based hiring, sacrificing innovation, productivity and shareholder value, or it can reclaim the principles that made it great. The choice is clear. By embracing meritocracy, America’s companies can rebuild their reputations, deliver superior returns, and restore the dignity of every employee. As Azoria’s Fishback aptly observes, “We’re betting on merit.” It’s time for the rest of corporate America to do the same.

Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion are beginning to crumble – none too soon


Diversity: a range of different things.

Equity: the quality of being fair and impartial.

Inclusion: a person or thing that is included within a larger group or structure.

Go try to find a definition of diversity that doesn’t include all the Critical Race Theory terms. Unless you have an old dictionary that you must leaf through the pages of, you won’t find an uncorrupted definition. 

Supposedly, DEI is the antidote to the gross discrimination we are observing today in most mainstream media (MSM). Regretfully, it is thanks to MSM that there are even such aberrations called WOKE, Critical Race Theory, Environment, Social, Governance (ESG), an investing principle that prioritizes environmental issues, social issues, and corporate governance, and every other Social Justice issue you can name. AND it encompasses every aspect of your life. And DEI is based on Critical Race Theory.

For those who need a bit of background on the birth of the  Marxist problem  developed to spur a hopeful but impossible resolution – (Hegelian Dialectic)  read Herbert Marcuse And CRT:  A Solution Looking For A Problem by Scott Sturman, MD, USAFA ’72. 

The crux: Critical Race prophet Herbert Marcuse, a German-born Marxist and “Father of the New Left,” evolved from an obscure academic to a formative figure in Critical Race Theory. His many books and articles, filled with abstruse prose and revolutionary terminology, served as a template and validating authority for the perpetrators of violence and social unrest in the 1960s.

Despite Marcuse’s lifetime of publishing nuanced commentary that attempted to explain and understand the failure of Marxism, his personal boogeyman was capitalism. He spent a career exploring its oppressive and repressive elements and was aghast that workers did not share his disdain and revolt against their masters.

Since Marxism is tantamount to perfection, then any variance must necessarily be the fault of the workers. Flummoxed by this irrationality, the members of the Frankfurt School, of which Marcuse was a member, employed psychotherapy to discern why those who would benefit most from revolution eschewed it.

Confronted with the dilemma, the Critical Theorists deduced that workers had not developed a suitable level of consciousness regarding their plight. Essentially, they did not grasp their misery.

Revolution required the introduction of radical subjectivity to foment discontent and the realization that labor represented enslavement that was economically and socially intolerable. This dynamic represents Marcuse’s concept of alienation, which was made possible by concealment, a process of intrinsic domination within capitalist societies whereby these contradictions are purposefully hidden.

Thus, only by arousing the workers’ consciousness can problems be solved by revolution.

At this point, Marcuse departs from orthodox Marxist dogma, which is wedded to proletarian revolt, and proposes countless marginalized, oppressed groups seeking radical change.

The “inner history of the individual” stipulates that all human differences are a potential source of conflict.

Marcuse’s insights came to fruition in 1964 with the publication of the book “One-Dimensional Mind”. Here he covers his bases and points out that domination is no longer dependent on force or an authority figure but one-dimensional thinking, the antithesis of critical thinking, which relies on two-dimensional thinking. One-dimensional thinking subverts its better by:

  1. The system makes people feel freer than they are in actuality.
  2. The system provides just enough goods to pacify the citizen.
  3. The citizen identifies with his oppressor. (Stockholm    Syndrome)
  4. Political discourse is eliminated.

Once again, a tidy, contrived, circular argument places all the blame on capitalism and exonerates Marxism and its reinterpretations.

Fragmentation of society into component groups is the sine qua non of revolution, and like CRT founder Richard Delgado, Marcuse paid special tribute to radical feminism, which offered in his view “the most important and potentially the most radical political movement we have.” This movement offered a vehicle for all oppressed classes.

Understanding the usefulness of division to achieve revolutionary goals, Marcuse professed androgyny – what better way to stir the pot and disrupt societal norms?

Liberation was useful only to a point, however. According to Marcuse, too much individuality impedes the freedom of others, so freedom and happiness must be limited for coexistence.

The desires of the individual must conform and identify with the apparatus, which in turn defines humanity.

ONCE AGAIN, THE PROMISE OF UTOPIA DESCENDS TO ANARCHY AND RESURRECTS AS OLIGARCHY, WITH FREEDOM AS THE MAJOR CASUALTY.

Back to DEI.

DEI is basedJust recently, the Inclusion at Work Panel, an independent U.K. organization, published a report that found little evidence “DEI efforts such as mandatory anti-bias training and corporate policy overhauls have any positive effect on corporate culture.” In fact, as we are seeing companies fleeing from DEI, the truth – the fallacies of DEI – are coming home to roost. And a lot of people and pension funds are out of a lot of $$$.

As Tennessee Senator Marsha Blackburn stated: “DEI is an initiative that has been co-opted by the radical Left to lead Americans to believe it will reduce discrimination and quell bias. In reality, the Left has hijacked DEI as part of their hidden agenda to pit Americans of different races, religions, and genders against each other. But studies show that DEI programs accomplish the exact opposite of what the Left wants Americans to believe they do – a report by Harvard Business Review details how most diversity programs fail to increase diversity, and studies indicate that DEI can activate bias or spark a harmful backlash against workers.” 

The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission reported a 20% rise in discrimination charges in FY22. In cases related to K-12 education, there was a 144% increase in complaints since 2021. Hmmmmm. Gee Whiz, we have DEI working overtime, and things are getting worse, not better? What can possibly be wrong with this picture?

DEI is based on Critical Race Theory.  Unlike many philosophical works on race that demand a more enriched and critical conversation with whites about race, CRT is adamant about its radical activism, which challenges not only the idea of white privilege but the property rights that whites maintain. CRT’s skepticism to the commonsensical approaches of liberalism and integrationist thought reverses many of the issues philosophical investigations of race aim to achieve. Rather than creating a world of peaceful racial co-existence, CRT works from that premise that, in America, such a world is impossible, and as a consequence, racism cannot be studied with its eye on that illusory promise. In short, CRT maintains that race and racism are inextricable manifestations of the American ethos and, as such, cannot be cured by a constructive engagement with whites.

Or as Tommy J. Curry says in an essay Will the Real CRT Please Stand Up,   “… within Critical Race Theory, racism is not something to be overcome or dispelled because it is a permanent part of the United States culture.” (emphasis added)

Or as Martin Luther King, Jr. said with heartfelt emotion:

So even though we face the difficulties of today and tomorrow, I still have a dream. It is a dream deeply rooted in the American dream. I have a dream that one day, this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.

I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character. I have a dream today.

That speech was in 1963. The Civil Rights Act, written the next year, was to fulfill King Jr.’s dream. And it was. We had been coming out of segregation, and people all over this country were accepting that it would be erased from our laws and behaviors. And we were well on the way until the Global Elite decided to ignite false prejudices in the 

We can thus conclude that no matter how many statistics show there is, at most, systemic anti-Black racism in the United States is marginal. Yet, MSM, government, and schools will be pushing the lie of Critical Race Theory as a must to rectify the almost negligible race issue. Many institutions of higher education are the focus of antisemitism today.

… University of California, Berkeley’s hiring rubric for the grant’s funds, which has been adopted by many other universities, including Northwestern University and the University of Southern California, “penalizes job candidates for espousing colorblind equality and gives low scores to those who say they intend to ‘treat everyone the same,’” according to John Sailer’s opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal.  

“The NIH, perhaps most notably, has begun rolling out mandatory ‘Plans for Enhancing Diverse Perspectives.’ The NIH BRAIN initiative upholds the diverse teams working together and capitalizing on innovative ideas and distinct perspectives outperform homogeneous teams. The BRAIN initiative is firmly committed to fostering diversity, inclusivity, and accessibility in the research community.” Don’t worry, be happy. Those researchers and doctors at NIH may not be the best and brightest, but they will be WOKE. So if you ain’t white, male, and heterosexual, you will be fine if you enter those hallowed doors or “benefit” from some of their recent research. 

STARRS — Stand Together Against Racism and Radicalism in the Services – an organization that understands the difference between discrimination and social justice states: DEI, at its core, minimizes merit-based, objective value systems and promotes the widespread use of quotas and discrimination based on sex and race. STARRS also notes that “record-high suicide rates in the armed forces, estrangement from fellow service members, and the current recruitment crisis reflect poor morale. ; The pool of Americans from which the military has drawn upon (sic) since the country’s beginnings is alienated by leftist DOD doctrines. Comments from military service members, veterans, and their families indicate that they are no longer recommending military service due to the pervasiveness of CRT and DEI policies throughout the armed forces.

Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, protects employees and job applicants from employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, and national origin. “Nuff said. 

Those pushing DEI, ESG, and CRT are mostly stakeholders (non-governmental organizations [NGOs] attached to the United Nations and doing the bidding of the global elite. They have skin in the game; their job is to be useful idiots, fodder in the asymmetrical war being fought (without guns, so far).

Finally, we are seeing some common sense (or fear of lawsuits for not following the Civil Rights Act) in a number of big businesses and some universities saying adios to DEI and ESG. Molson Coors, Ford Motor Co., John Deere, Lowe’s, Harley-Davidson, and Tractor Supply Co. are just the first to wake up and get out. This should be the beginning of the end – even if it is just one of the illegal, abhorrent tools of asymmetric warfare. Some universities are also showing common sense on this issue.

If the Civil Rights Act wasn’t functioning, I could see a need for other options, but that is not the case. And, regretfully, DEI is not what it’s being sold as – a panacea for a non-functional Act; it is, instead, a repugnant tool to cancel our culture – with we Americans doing the canceling.

It’s time to slay the dragon and get back to good ol’ basic values, attitudes, and beliefs.