When people dig deep in their pockets to help charitable causes the consequence is a feel-good factor. You have helped someone in need ~ in need of brainwashing.
One supposes that virtue signalling cash for courses could be considered a new kind of Black Economy or perhaps known as the Black Market.

Donations for charitable causes made by Britons have reportedly gone to fund questionable courses meant to teach employees to resist unconscious biases like being gender conscious, embracing LGBT ideology and of course supporting the notorious Black Lives Matter corporations.

At least 122 UK-based charities, from large multinationals to small community groups, have spent money on ‘unconscious bias training’ for employees, according to a report by the Telegraph published on Friday. What it discovered is likely just the tip of the iceberg,’ the report said since companies offering such courses brag about having many undisclosed clients in the voluntary sector.

The industry originated from the Implicit-Association Test. The required examination helped create a sprawling consultation business, which tells clients that it can make employees more aware of and less influenced by their prejudices.

Critics see bias training as a scam, just a chance for spineless corporations and public officials to signal their virtue by showing the ‘woke’ mob they are active in the fight against racism, sexism and other bad-isms in the workplace.

The expected result of the training is a wider acceptance of diversity and traits such as gender, race and sexuality, which some see as an ideologically motivated outcome that does not necessarily correlate with either healthier working relations or productivity. But, should donations to charitable cause be diverted to fund blatant propaganda courses earning profits for race mixing and sexual deviate propaganda?

Unconscious bias training courses to eliminate patriotic or natural relationships prejudices is highly popular in universities. Those victims of such brainwashing courses studying at Somerville College Oxford was required to score 100 per cent in a test after taking an online course, according to the Daily Mail.

Some of the charities questioned by the Telegraph said the training they paid for was voluntary for employees to take part in, came at minimal cost and had a positive effect on staff, but refused to provide further details. The newspaper said day courses of this kind are advertised at around £300 ($420) per person.

Nevertheless, some believe there were better ways to spend the money, considering it originates from donations. ’I hope that, in future, if charities are wasting the money that people have donated on things like this, then the Government will be able to step in and do something about it,’ MP Ben Bradley said.
The Conservative lawmaker had refused to take part in such training when it was introduced in Whitehall last September in the wake of Black Lives Matter protests. Source

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