| Replacing quality control with political correctness through equity and diversity In the official drive to become more woke, each of us is to  become more guiltily aware of the disparities in outcome of those on the  Official Pity List, women, blacks, sexual deviants etc. A byproduct of this  trend, has been an assault on competence and quality as these are deemed the  deplorable characteristics of "whiteness".
 To replace hard work and determination to create an  environment of diversity, equity and inclusion, the corporate aim is to recruit  members of underperforming groups, who have been weeded out through testing and  give the second and third rate first rate treatment. Because of woke-minded union, teachers and civil service  pension funds, which have swollen as baby boomers reach retirement age, social  justice considerations have trumped all else, even shareholder value, in  corporate investment criteria.  Under the new rules, corporations must assign priority to  environmental, social and governance matters or the investment funds will go  elsewhere. If one cannot bring oneself to tick off the ESG and DEI boxes, one  can no longer keep up with the corporate Joneses. So every recipient ends up  supporting a balance of incompetence, which now takes on the appearance of a  heartfelt political cause when it is nothing of the sort. Like all major corporations, in an economic recession, into  this vortex Boeing plane makers have been thrown, at a time of aviation  accidents are not so much the result of pilot error, but substandard work in  manufacture. Which turns out to be the result of a lack of regulatory  independence. To which we can now expect to have more accidents, or  "incidents", as the industry likes to call them, because of the new  wokeness, which allows the incompetent to rule the competent. Already, whistleblowers are sounding the alarm of less than  rigorous standards being applied to maintain greater factory output,  professional competence is being sidelined to accommodate women, racial  minorities and sexual deviants in positions of influence and authority. Most affected are two plane makers, Europe's Airbus with a  55 per cent market share and America's Boeing with 45 per cent. In terms of  accidents, Airbus has had 35 crashes in 28.3 million flights while Boeing leads  with by a hair with its 251 crashes from 461 million flights. Using the UN's  International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) statistics, from 2008 to 2019,  it seems that Boeing had more accidents than expected while Airbus had fewer. But Boeing whistleblowers are warning production defects on  its planes haven't been addressed by the company or the US regulator, the  Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), putting plane at greater risk of  accidents. Former Boeing employees say their concern about production  defects have been ignored. Boeing has been under intense scrutiny after a panel on a  737 MAX 9 aircraft blew off mid-flight.
 The FAA grounded all B737 MAX 9s while they investigated,  but they soon gave the green light for flights to resume. Boeing whistleblowers, speaking to the state-owned  Australian Broadcasting Company, painted a picture of a company culture that  prioritises production speed over quality and safety, leading to defects being  missed or ignored to meet deadlines. "This is a Boeing issue, this is not a 737 issue. Once  you understand what's happening inside of Boeing, you'll see why we're seeing  these kinds of issues," former Boeing quality manager John Barnett told  ABC. "Their culture is all about speed and production and  getting aeroplanes out the door. And any issues, any concerns that you bring up  are going to slow them down." Mr Barnett said cultural issues at Boeing have contributed  to lax safety standards on the aircraft production line. He reported several  safety problems to his superiors at the company, including defective parts  going missing and installed on aircraft without first being repaired. When these reports met a dead end Mr Barnett took his  concerns to the regulator, the FAA, who investigated and substantiated his  complaints that Boeing had lost track of hundreds of faulty parts which could  not be found. While the fatal crashes of two Boeing 737 MAX 8s in 2018  and 2019 were attributed to a design issue with a new piece of software known  as MCAS (maneuvering characteristics augmentation system), whistleblowers told  ABC the "elephant in the room" was chronic manufacturing and quality  control problems that show up as defects in planes shortly after leaving the  factory. After the more recent Alaska Airlines incident, in which a  door fell off mid-flight leaving a gaping hole in the aircraft, and passengers  were forced to put on emergency oxygen masks as the plane rapidly depressurised  at 16,000 feet. But some masks didn't work. Mr Barnett said he had raised the issue of faulty oxygen  masks during his time at Boeing, but said the issue was "swept under the  rug". "When I heard that some of the passengers on the 737  MAX 9 were saying that their oxygen masks won't work, it's like, well, we've  known about that since 2016. And they've done nothing about it," he said. Years earlier at the Charleston, South Carolina, factory,  Mr Barnett said he discovered that 25 per cent of oxygen mask systems and tanks  didn't initiate properly in one instance. He said when he reported it to his superiors at Boeing his  concerns were dismissed so he filed a whistleblower complaint to the FAA in  2017. When conditions were such to produce such substandard  results, diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) and its partner in crime  environment, social and governance (ESG), were becoming a reality in the  boardroom, but a year or two from being a working reality on the shop floor. But as the new Marxist slogan filtered from the top down,  its implications became widely understood. Already undermined by a need to  produce in its perpetual war with Europe's Airbus, Boeing, now uneasily merged  with McDonnell Douglas, and now re-headquartered in Chicago, it ceased to be  its old Seattle self, falling prey to soulless bean counters who could see no  further than the next quarter's earnings. So with quality control taking a back seat, it was now  entirely ignored unless its findings were plainly, existentially and instantly  catastrophic. Corners were cut and a flock of black swans were loosed upon the  world. If, like black swans, there was only a one in a thousand chance of the  accident happening, one makes that an inevitability if such QC oversights  multiply as oversights in the thousands creep by over time.And when we add the  strictures of DEI and ESG to the mix, we no longer include job performance into  the mix if that conflicts with diversity and equity goals, which have now been  given highest priority. Under these circumstances quality control will have  been replaced by politically correct control. So get ready!   |