Google CEO Slams Fired Employee’s Viral Memo On Gender Differences

FILE - This Thursday, Jan. 3, 2013 file photo shows Google's headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. Google's latest "moonshot" project, announced Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2014, involves detecting cancer by swallowing a pill... FILE - This Thursday, Jan. 3, 2013 file photo shows Google's headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. Google's latest "moonshot" project, announced Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2014, involves detecting cancer by swallowing a pill. The pill is packed with tiny magnetic particles, which can travel through a patient's bloodstream, search for malignant cells and report their findings to a sensor device that you wear. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File) MORE LESS
Start your day with TPM.
Sign up for the Morning Memo newsletter

NEW YORK (AP) — A memo written by a male engineer at Google about gender differences sparked a quick rebuttal from Google after it circulated widely online.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai denounced the memo in an email on Monday for “advancing harmful gender stereotypes” and said he was cutting short a vacation to hold a town hall with staff on Thursday. The engineer, James Damore, was fired, according to Bloomberg , which cited an email from him. An email sent to an address believed to be used by Damore was not immediately returned; Google declined to comment.

The engineer’s widely shared memo, titled “Google’s Ideological Echo Chamber,” criticized Google for pushing mentoring and diversity programs and for “alienating conservatives.”

Google’s just-hired head of diversity, Danielle Brown, responded earlier with her own memo, saying that Google is “unequivocal in our belief that diversity and inclusion are critical to our success.” She said change is hard and “often uncomfortable.”

The battling messages come as Silicon Valley grapples with accusations of sexism and discrimination. Google is also in the midst of a Department of Labor investigation into whether it pays women less than men, while Uber’s CEO recently lost his job amid accusations of widespread sexual harassment and discrimination.

Leading tech companies, including Google, Facebook and Uber, have said they are trying to improve hiring and working conditions for women. But diversity numbers are barely changing .

The Google employee memo, which gained attention online over the weekend, begins by saying that only honest discussion will address a lack of equity. But it also asserts that women “prefer jobs in social and artistic areas” while more men “may like coding because it requires systemizing.”

The memo, which was shared on the tech blog Gizmodo, attributes biological differences between men and women to the reason why “we don’t have 50% representation of women in tech and leadership.”

While the engineer’s views were broadly and publicly criticized online, they echo the 2005 statements by then-Harvard President Lawrence Summers, who said the reason there are fewer female scientists at top universities is in part due to “innate” gender differences.

Brande Stellings, senior vice president of advisory services for Catalyst, a nonprofit advocacy group for women in the workplace, said the engineer’s viewpoints show “how ingrained, entrenched and harmful gender-based stereotypes truly are.”

“It’s much easier for some to point to ‘innate biological differences’ than to confront the unconscious biases and obstacles that get in the way of a level playing field,” Stellings wrote in an email.

Google, like other tech companies, has far fewer women than men in technology and leadership positions. Fifty-six percent of its workers are white and 35 percent are Asian, while Hispanic and Black employees make up 4 percent and 2 percent of its workforce, respectively, according to the company’s latest diversity report .

Tech companies say they are trying, by reaching out to and interviewing a broader range of job candidates, by offering coding classes, internships and mentorship programs and by holding mandatory “unconscious bias” training sessions for existing employees.

But, as the employee memo shows, not everyone at Google is happy with this.

Latest News
6
Show Comments

Notable Replies

  1. The Google employee memo, which gained attention online over the
    weekend, begins by saying that only honest discussion will address a
    lack of equity. But it also asserts that women “prefer jobs in social
    and artistic areas” while more men “may like coding because it requires
    systemizing.”

    We also prefer kneeing misogynistic assholes in the groin. Or was that too honest for you?

  2. Explains all the knitting and baking… he can’t have met todays Danish women, they will, in no uncertain terms, tell you, what you can do…

  3. "…women “prefer jobs in social and artistic areas” while more men “may like coding because it requires systemizing.”

    And that explains why men interrupt and talk over women in meetings, exclude from informal gatherings, mentoring, and job recommendations. It also explains the differences between project opportunities offered to women and those offered to men.

    There is nothing “honest” about this dude’s “honest discussion”. His arguments prove that he is an inobservant idiot.

    Anyone who spent 4 years studying engineering didn’t prefer a job in a social or artistic area. I feel sorry for his female subordinates (if any) and daughters.

  4. Seeing that Google’s CEO is Indian-American, reminded me I was talking with my parents and inlaws Sunday and my dad made some comment about how smart and tech savvy folks from India are and all I could think is, oh well for an 87 year old white guy he’s been a lot less prejudice than he could have been during my lifetime.

  5. He’s right, though. A woman’s place is in the home…

    …directory of the systems he used to support, fixing up his shitty code.

    I like how his screed included (paraphrasing) “Google probably won’t even allow me to say what I’m saying”. Now he and all the alt-right MRA douchebags get to proclaim that he was proven correct by his firing.

Continue the discussion at forums.talkingpointsmemo.com

Participants

Avatar for system1 Avatar for imkmu3 Avatar for boidster Avatar for dickweed Avatar for clauscph Avatar for canyoncountry

Continue Discussion
Masthead Masthead
Founder & Editor-in-Chief:
Executive Editor:
Managing Editor:
Deputy Editor:
Editor at Large:
General Counsel:
Publisher:
Head of Product:
Director of Technology:
Associate Publisher:
Front End Developer:
Senior Designer: