A bizarre article appeared this morning on The Advocate's website, by gay conservative James Kirchick, denouncing LGBT affirmative action.
The first thing that's bizarre about the article is that it's denouncing LGBT affirmative action. I don't know anyone who's proposing that, any municipality that's discussing an LGBT affirmative action program, or any school or business thinking about doing that. We can't even get ENDA passed, so no one's thinking about affirmative action. So weird.
Then Kirchick spends about 400 words discussing Aiden Quinn, a bus driver who had an accident while texting in Boston who also happened to be trans. The link to affirmative action?
"[Quinn] was initially hired as a minority and used her [sic] transgender status,'" an MBTA source told ABC News. The MBTA rebutted that charge, saying that Quinn was hired through a job lottery, although the T does advertise itself as an "affirmative action employer."
That's right, an anonymous, unconfirmed source, who doesn't explain how they know what they know or how the MBTA would go about determining whether someone is transgender. This is countered by the agency, on the record, presenting a perfectly confirmable and believable fact: that they, like many government agencies, use a job lottery for hiring qualified people.
He asks:
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