so you thought MBTI was all fun and games? Well you were wrong, because it's used by corps to literally clone their favorite employees,
Isn't that what the theory of evolution says? That the most successful organism is replicated in the species in its environment, until it becomes the dominant type of organism of its species in its environment?
which of course entails discriminating against minorities, women and gay people.
If the company's favourite employee is a minority, a woman or LGBT, then it discriminates against people who aren't a minority, aren't a woman and aren't LGBT.
It's only going to discriminate against minorities, women and LGBT, if
everyone's favourite employee is
always not a minority, not a woman, and not LGBT.
But if someone believes that
everyone's favourite employee is
always not a minority, not a woman, and not LGBT, then isn't that person discriminating against minorities, women and LGBT?
So isn't MBTI then only racist, sexist & homophobic, to those who already believe that the entire world is racist, sexist & homophobic, including minorities, women and LGBT.
Doesn't it seem rather unrealistic, and somewhat racist, sexist & homophobic, to believe that even minorities, women and LGBT would prefer employees who are not minorities, not women and not LGBT?
It's sort of like in Minority Report where they use futuristic technology to throw people in jail before they have committed a crime.
You mean the way a dwarf is probably not going picked toplay pro basketball in the NBA? Or someone with an LSAT score of 110 is probably not going to be accepted to Harvard Law School?
Is it a societal problem?
Kind of.
If an African-American with a degree in architecture wants to get hired as an architect, but only 1% of architect jobs go to African-Americans, and he applies to 100 architect jobs, then doesn't he get hired as an architect anyway?
It only becomes a problem if the guy doesn't send out as many applications as the probability of such a person aiming for such a job being successful.
But that wouldn't be frustrating unless if he wasn't successful anyway, or only applied for 50 jobs, and he expected some invisible hand to come ensure that he would get the job he wanted anyway.
It's only a problem for society, when people are encouraged to stop trying and expect the invisible hand to do the rest, but then the invisible hand doesn't.
If that invisible hand is 'society' or 'the government' or 'the public sector', then it expects society or an agent of society would pick up the slack, but doesn't.
So that's a failure of society to meet people's expectations.
However, if the society also provides public education, then those who attended public education were taught what to expect from society.
Then society told those people to expect those things, and yet did not fulfil those promises.
Is it a problem when society promises to do things that it doesn't? Have you cosnidered that maybe unfulfilled election promises & unrealised societal expectations have serious consequences, and are not all fun and games after all?
on a more serious note i've seen a personality test be used in a hiring process once - it was at the absolutely final stage and more or less as a pointless addition to all the other parts of the hiring process. Maybe it's different in US, i dunno.
I had an MBTI test in one job interview. It was for a sales job. They clearly wanted an ESTP. It was easy to answer the questions to fake a result of ESTP. It was just a question of whether I wanted to.
Since the questionnaire was clearly aiming for ESTPs, they probably had a work environment that was oriented for ESTPs. I'd probably need to pretend to be an ESTP to be successful there.
So the only question was: would I be willing to pretend to be an ESTP to get and keep a sales job and be successful at it, because it's an ESTP-oriented workplace?
Lots of people would. I wasn't that keen on sales anyway.