Adversity.net

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Adversity.net
Available inEnglish
Created byTim Fay
URLadversity.net
Launched1997
Current statusActive

Adversity.net was a website dedicated to opposing affirmative action and other race-conscious policies. The site criticized such policies on the grounds that they adversely affect white people, and it claimed to have been established "for victims of reverse discrimination".[1][2]

History[edit]

Adversity.net was founded by businessman Tim Fay in 1997. Fay claims that he was the victim of reverse discrimination when, in 1987, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) prohibited his four-person firm FayComm from bidding on a potential contract. Instead, FEMA awarded the contract to Technical Resources, Inc., a 100-person firm which the government had deemed "disadvantaged."[3]

Reception in academia[edit]

Sociologist Fred Pincus describes Adversity.net as "the premier site" promoting the idea that "whites are hurt" by race-conscious policies such as affirmative action. He also criticizes the site for misleadingly equating "goals" of affirmative action policies with racial quotas.[1] Carol M. Swain wrote that adversity.net was an example of a website that was created to enable "whites who believe they have been victims of affirmative action programs to share their sense of grievance and outrage with a sympathetic audience of fellow whites."[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Pincus, Fred L. (2003). Reverse Discrimination: Dismantling the Myth. Lynne Rienner Publishers. pp. 46. ISBN 9781588262035.
  2. ^ a b Swain, Carol M. (2002-06-10). The New White Nationalism in America: Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge University Press. p. 223. ISBN 9780521808866.
  3. ^ Bean, Jonathan J. (Summer 2003). "Shame of the Cities: Setting Aside Justice for the "Disadvantaged"". The Independent Review. 8 (1): 47–52. JSTOR 24562595.

External links[edit]