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Showing posts from August, 2025

Shane Windmeyer Is Rewriting the Rules of Leadership in a Post-DEI Era

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As organizations scale back and silence spreads, Shane Windmeyer is proving that courage, strategy, and humanity still matter—and must lead the way forward. In 2025, the word “diversity” has become a minefield. “Equity” draws suspicion. “Inclusion” gets diluted down to corporate lingo with no teeth. For some, DEI has become a thing of the past—a once-trendy acronym now abandoned under pressure from boardrooms, lawmakers, and public opinion. But not for Shane Windmeyer . While many leaders have pulled back, Windmeyer has stepped forward. While others rewrite mission statements to be more “neutral,” he is doubling down on truth. And while institutions flinch at the sound of identity politics, he is reminding them why identity—and belonging—matters more than ever. Based in North Carolina , Windmeyer has long been at the forefront of LGBTQ+ and equity work in the United States. But today, he’s doing more than defending inclusion. He’s reinventing what it means to lead with values in a cult...

They’re Coming for Us Again: What It Feels Like to Watch Queer and Trans Rights Rolled Back in 2025

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  This isn’t just backlash—it’s erasure. And it’s happening in real time. I don’t know how else to say it: they are coming for us. Not in a subtle way. Not in whispers. Not in isolated incidents. But in sweeping legislation, prime-time propaganda, school board crackdowns, and presidential campaign rallies. In the past two years, queer and trans people—especially youth—have been turned into political targets so routinely that it barely makes headlines anymore. I used to think we were moving forward. I really did. Marriage equality felt like a milestone. Trans visibility grew in pop culture. Pride festivals expanded in small towns. It started to feel like maybe—just maybe—we could live, love, and work without having to justify our existence every single day. But 2025 has reminded me of a cruel truth: progress is not permanent. And in America, every inch of queer joy comes with a fight. The Backlash Is Here—and It’s Organized We’re living through the most aggressive, coordina...

The Quiet Closures: How College Campuses Are Abandoning LGBTQ+ Students in 2025

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As DEI offices are shut down across the U.S., queer and trans students are losing lifelines—and demanding accountability In 2025, the LGBTQ+ rights movement is facing a new kind of threat. It doesn’t always come with slurs, protests, or viral headlines. Sometimes, it arrives quietly—in a university press release announcing the “restructuring” of student services, the quiet disappearance of a Pride Center’s webpage, or the removal of pronoun options from campus portals. Across the country, college students are waking up to the reality that the protections and affirmations they once took for granted are slipping away—and that LGBTQ+ lives on campus are being made invisible once more. DEI Is Under Siege—and Students Are Paying the Price Diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs have long served as a foundation for creating safer, more affirming educational spaces. But in dozens of states, lawmakers are introducing bills to defund, ban, or severely restrict any initiative perceiv...

How DEI Has Evolved in the Past 10 Years: From Awareness to Accountability by Shane Windmeyer

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  A Decade of Change, Challenge, and Transition in Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Over the last ten years, corporate DEI has shifted from symbolic gestures toward structural transformation—driven by external pressure, internal reckoning, and strategic reassessment. 1. The Dawn of Awareness — Pre‑2015 through 2019 In the mid-2010s, DEI was gaining recognition but remained confined mainly to HR: mandatory trainings, token representation targets, and unconscious-bias workshops. Dedicated C-suite roles were rare—less than 20% of Fortune 500 companies had Diversity Officers in 2005—and by 2022 that had grown to about 53% During this period, DEI was largely compliance-based , driven by regulation and reputation—not necessarily transformation. 2. The Post–George Floyd Surge in 2020 The murder of George Floyd ignited a DEI awakening: companies launched major racial equity initiatives, published annual diversity reports, and significantly increased staffing for inclusion teams. By 2020–2...