Morning Wire - The End of Woke? Corporate DEI Retreat | Sunday Extra
Episode Date: November 3, 2024In this episode, filmmaker and activist Robby Starbuck reveals why prominent companies are distancing themselves from Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives and what it means for American ...businesses. Get the facts first on Morning Wire. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Is corporate America beginning to turn away from DEI?
A string of high-profile companies have announced that they're abandoning their diversity,
equity, and inclusion policies and programs while distancing themselves from controversial progressive groups.
In this episode, we speak with Robbie Starbuck, a filmmaker and activist who the New York Times
recently described as someone who has managed to scare virtually all of corporate America.
Starbuck is one of the people leading the movement away from DEI.
I'm Georgia Howe with Daily Wire Editor-in-Chief John Bickley.
It's Saturday, November 3rd, and this is an extra edition of Morning Wire.
Hey guys, producer Brandon here.
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Joining us now is filmmaker
and conservative activist
Robbie Starbuck.
Robbie, thanks for coming on.
So you've been racking up millions of views
and some big headlines
in recent weeks with your work
exposing DEI practices
and major companies.
First, for those who haven't been tracking this
as closely, could you walk us
through some of the developments sparked by your efforts?
Yeah, definitely.
So this all started with a whistleblower that came forward to me about tractor supply.
And essentially, they were an employee there and they said,
Robbie, you've got to know what has changed here because I've been here a long time
and I don't recognize the company and the culture and the direction it's going.
And neither can a lot of my friends who work for the company.
And so I reviewed this stuff they sent me in to be perfectly candid with you.
I did not believe it.
I own a farm.
I've got cattle.
I've got chickens.
I take my kids to tractor supply on a weekly basis.
I just, I couldn't reconcile the place that I went to and the people who worked there with the stuff I was seeing.
And so for folks who haven't seen the stuff I've been exposing, you know, in the case of tractor supply, they'd been funding these crazy pride events, LGBTQ plus youth centers where they're pro transitioning kids and illegal immigration, a group in favor of illegal immigration, and stopping deportations and so on and so forth.
And now there was some disconnect.
I will say this from the CEO and these policies. So I don't think this was like dictates of the CEO who was a
true believer. I think that he sort of lost control of the culture in some downstream stuff.
But to Tractor Supplies credit, I will say they did the most complete turnaround we have seen.
And it was a great standard that they set for other companies to show that you're not going to lose
everything if you turn around on this woke ideology that has been poisoning companies.
And so at that point, you know, the way we ran the tractor.
supply thing was a little different. At the very beginning, when I realized there was a serious
problem here, I said, what has been the problem with boycotts in America? Why have they not
been successful? And how did we get here? And so I had to put together sort of the fact that
all of this accelerated after George Floyd. And it was under the noses of a lot of executives who
didn't quite realize what they were green lighting. And now they've had four years to experience it.
And many of those people have, you know, buyer's remorse. And so they just need an excuse to get rid of it,
because this is essentially a house of cards.
You know, there's a group called the HRC
who has this scoring system called the CEI scoring system,
corporate equality index.
And it's essentially a social credit system for wokeness
to inject woke policies into the workplace.
And I identified the same thing with them.
They don't have actual popular support with people.
It's a house of cards.
They're only popular among, you know,
gender studies professors,
Marxist college students,
and maybe the elite centers of power in our country.
And because of that,
they were able to fool companies into believing they needed to listen to them. And so this is where I go back to
blaming conservatives. For too long, we accepted the idea of being a silent majority. That's something
we should all be ashamed of. We should never be a silent majority because it allows very loud,
small groups of people like these radicals to run everything. So what we said is what is the PR strategy
they will run in return against us exposing policies like this? And it's very simple. You would wait for
things to blow over. That's the expected policy route PR takes on things like this,
because they're used to them being one, maybe two-day stories, if it's a really bad three days.
And we said, no, we're going to build something out where this goes on informing the customer base for over a month if necessary.
And let's see how the companies do with that long of an education campaign.
And so it proved very effective in that respect.
We were able to flip the policies entirely at tractor supply.
Then we moved on to John Deere, where we also changed corporate policy, got them to stop funding pride events and stop woke trainings.
Then we moved on after that to Harley Davidson.
Harley Davidson was a real battle because their CEO is a true believer.
He was the first, I think at least, the first true believer that we faced off with.
And so he's a man who was intent on spreading these types of woke, progressive, so-called,
which I hate even using because it's the most regressive mindset you could possibly have,
but they call it progressive set of policy measures and ideologies that they want to force into global companies.
In fact, he co-founded the B-T,
team with Sir Richard Branson, which has the explicit purpose of replacing leadership in global
corporations from people who were just trying to make good money for their company to people
who are social activists. And so this was an explicit purpose thing for him. He wanted to turn
Harley Davidson all electric by 2030. They'd injected the craziest trainings, you know,
recommending books like white fragility to their employee base and funding pride events, so on and so
forth. Okay. In fact, one pride event that they sponsored had a rage room for angry people next to
the section where kids could interact with drag queens next to the play catch with the dad
section for people with daddy issues. So, I mean, we're talking crazy town. This is just pure lunacy.
And we exposed it along the way. It took a long time, but we were able to flip Harley Davidson as
well. They changed a myriad of their policies. I mean, a ton of them. And that's all listed.
One of the big things with all these companies, we got them to disengage from the HRC-CEI scoring system
because we've explained very clearly how this is a partisan group who hates your customer base essentially.
I mean, that's the way I see it, at least. When I look at their social media and see the stuff they say about Republicans,
I mean, just today, they called me a MAGA weirdo. Okay, so why would a company with a conservative consumer base ever do anything with this group?
And so they're only making it easier for us to make that point as they use terms like calling me a MAGA weirdo.
But from there, you know, as a byproduct of exposing Harley, we also flipped Polaris, another motorsports company,
Indian motorcycle, and they got rid of DEI. And then after that, we turned our sites on Jack Daniels,
but Jack Daniels noticed we were looking through their LinkedIn pages, and they preemptively changed
their woke policies. And again, broke away from the HRC, so on and so forth. That trend continued
again after that with Lowe's. Lowe's also preemptively changed their policies. After I wrote an
email to them on Friday by Monday morning, I received an email anonymously. I would be willing to guess that
that was probably sent by corporate because they had my email address from the messages I had sent
them. And so they reach out on the Monday following the Friday where I send them these messages
and announce all these policy changes, drop all of this crazy woke stuff. And then it happens again
yesterday with Ford Motor Company. So Ford's CEO is on the board of Harley Davidson, saw what every,
you know, everything that that company was exposed for. And then also on the board of Ford is the CEO of
John Deere, who experienced what their company went through from me exposing them.
So there was, you know, I think a mood forward of, hey, we don't want to go through that.
And there is a lot of material.
And so they changed their policies.
And, you know, we're going company by company.
What I've said is we're going to go one by one and inject sanity back into corporate
America and make things normal again.
I'm not asking them to take on my policy positions.
I'm asking them to just be neutral, get rid of the politics and social issues, stop
shoving it down people's throats, just have them go to work, do a great job, provide great service,
great products, and you're going to do just fine in this economy. But if you go down this route,
there is a new awakened consumer that wants to make companies very aware that the consumer,
the customer is going to be king again. Not BlackRock. That's not the person walking through
your door. Black Rock's not walking in. Vanguard's not walking in. The HRC is not walking in.
State Streets, not none of these places are, okay, these Wall Street entities, woke entities,
they don't shop at your store.
Normal everyday people do,
and they're very acutely aware of their buying power
and how they can vote with their dollar now.
And so we've made that point very clear
to these companies at this point
where many companies just fear being next
and they don't want to be next.
So I think we're going to continue to see a cascade
of these policies being removed from major companies.
Well, as you noted, it seems like there's an eagerness
by some of these companies, not all of them, for sure,
but an eagerness to sort of have an excuse
to get out of this. Are you sensing that about the marketplace in general? Yeah, I mean, because let's just
think about the reality of the economy. You know, you're at a place right now where the economy's not
great. Companies have to tighten their belt if they want to be able to turn a profit and thrive,
especially if they're a public company who has a fiduciary duty to their shareholders.
So traditionally, when that happens, what do you do? You go look at your company top to bottom and
say, what's costing us money, what's making us money. You focus on the areas making you money and
cut the fat on the things that don't. Well, guess what? DEI doesn't make any of these companies money.
If it did, they would not remove one policy, period. I would have no effect. They would not do anything
I'm asking them to do if DEI made them money. The premise that DEI would make companies money was
sold by McKinsey. And to be perfectly honest with you, I am shocked there has not been lawsuits
from people who were advised by McKinsey to that effect, because it is not only not been profitable.
It is now a liability for companies, and it's a massive one. And if,
you look at actual intangibles, if you look at measurable results, okay, look at the London Stock
Exchange, they have a diversity ETF. It underperforms every other index fund, period. It's very
clear this stuff is not a moneymaker. And so I think there's definitely those executives that are
just sitting there going, well, this is a great excuse to cut the fat and be able to do it
with the excuse that, hey, we didn't realize there was such, you know, sort of division
among the customer base as to what these policies mean to them and how offensive this could be to a sizable
portion of our customer base. So we've just got to disengage and go into neutral. And that's why you've seen
in a number of these statements. They talk about the changing landscape in our country, you know,
the changing mood. Well, the mood is one of people have experienced this for four years. And anybody who's
watching that's had to do one of these trainings knows that you would prefer to get a colonoscopy rather
than go through another one of them. And you're not alone. In fact, I've had a ton of Democrats
reach out to me telling me even that they're so sick of this stuff. They disagree with me on this
issue, that issue, which by the way, I think is kind of funny, like when they reach out and they're like,
just so you know, I disagree with you on all these other things. It's like, okay, nobody needs to know that.
This is not an airport. You don't need to announce it. But thank you for letting me know all the things
you disagree with me on. But then they end it with, but I agree with you on DEI. This stuff's crazy.
This is what happened in my workplace. I was passed up for a job that I was, you know,
eminently qualified for that I had been working toward for a decade. And they brought in somebody
that checked a diversity box. And I was directly told that it was.
because we needed to, you know, increase diversity. And this is not what I signed up for,
so on and so forth. So that's kind of like the person who voted for the leopard who said they wouldn't
eat their face. And then after they win the election, they get their face eaten off.
That's kind of what's happening to a lot of these Democrats who work in these companies and then
get affected by DEI policy. So I think there's definitely this big movement against it.
And a lot of executives are just happy to have an excuse to get rid of it.
Yeah, there's financial disincentive to be involved in this. There's also the legal risk.
and you mention this in one particular instance.
Have you heard much about that from anybody that you've consulted with
on how to approach these situations?
Is there a legal component for these companies,
a fear about what their workforce or maybe their customer base
might do in response to these policies?
Well, you know, for us, we don't have to be the person making that threat,
you know, because the truth is everybody understands the pitfalls here and the liabilities.
There are major liabilities surrounding what has happened with the EEI policy,
specifically the, quote, targets.
All these companies like to say, we don't have quotas. We don't have quotas. Well, if you have goals or targets, you're just using different words for quota. And when you go into your hiring profiles, and I can see that you put their race by their name, their skin color by their name in consideration of their hiring, it's very clear what's going on there. And then when you have whistleblowers within the company saying, oh, yeah, explicitly, we get rewarded for hiring minorities. We get extra money for that versus hiring a white person. It's very clear there has been
discriminatory policies throughout many parts of corporate America. And lawyers at those companies
know the pitfalls. They know the liabilities. And many of them, to their credit, I will say,
even some who agree with the whole DEI mindset, have actually been warning their companies for a while
about the potential for their being major liabilities here. I think we have only begun to step into
that area. There's some great groups like America First Legal who are beginning to try to hold
companies accountable with lawsuits. I think it's just the tip of the iceberg. You're going to see this
for the next five, six years just grow in terms of the number of lawsuits and legal ramifications
for what has been done here in these DEI departments. And then there's the religious side of this.
You know, there's people being forced to essentially violate their closely held faith values,
which, you know, has its own pitfalls for a legal department at a corporation. If you're doing that
in such a way that threatens somebody's livelihood and you're asking them to violate their faith in order
to keep their livelihood, you know, there's a lot of angles to this legally that are really areas
companies need to be concerned about. But to be frank, they're so obvious that I don't even have to be the
one to point them out. And that's kind of a great thing because I can stick to just asking for neutrality,
because when it comes to the legal side of this, they are acutely aware that they are in dangerous territory.
Now, you mentioned your approach with tractor supply, the first company in which you started to expose
the DEI agenda. Can you talk us through that approach? How did you actually make this a longer term
issue for them rather than a two or three-day news cycle problem? Well, I recognize that if I put everything,
in one video that I had put together on the company via whistleblowers and also open source investigation,
that it was going to be so much content. I couldn't possibly expect one person to sit there and
listen to it for hours. And so I said, well, the smart approach is let's give a concise summary
in like a 10 minute video. It ended up being, I think, nine minutes. And we're going to give sort of
the broad strokes. And then every day, we're going to give them more new information.
And that's what we've done is we've kept a consistent stream of information.
about the woke policies and practices of these companies.
And that has given people time to take this information in on their own time.
You know, because maybe that first day I posted that, that big video with the Broadstrokes,
maybe a quarter of my audience wasn't online that day.
Well, what happens?
Maybe the next day when I post the next thing, that quarter sees it.
And then they amplify to their audience.
And then new people start to see what it is that we're sharing on a day-over-day basis.
So you extend the network of people who become aware of the problem by just kind of stringing it
out over a longer period of time. So it's good for reporting and getting the information out there
to a wider audience, but also, you know, has the added bonus of kind of defeating the PR
strategy to get over the hump of a bad story. Final question in a more personal one. You're not
only an activist, but also a filmmaker. What brought you to this point? How did you go from making
music videos in L.A. to breaking major political stories here in Nashville? Well, you know,
I directed Oscar-winning actors, actresses, some of the biggest music stores, but I decided
I had to come out in 2015 and endorse President Trump during the Republican primary because I knew that the country needed a disruptor and frankly the world needed a disruptor. We had kind of gotten into this. Politics as usual that had led us down a very dangerous path. And my family coming from Cuba, I'm very concerned about the direction that we had turned and are turning being one that is going to lead us to a new form of communism. Not the type that my family faced in Cuba, not the type from the USSR, but a whole new brand of it where optically they will never admit their communism.
but they have total ideological control of the companies and the institutions that surround our daily
life. And it's a very dangerous idea because it's something that could outlive other more
brutal forms of communism, but will be just as merciless in the way that it destroys the lives
of citizens. But once you consolidate that power, it's an incredibly dangerous thing. So I knew I had to
use every piece of influence I could possibly muster to try to change some hearts and minds
and, you know, explain to them why somebody of my background is opposed to this left-wing policy
and why we need to stand up for our rights and our country at this point and be willing to lose things.
You know, I lost my career in Hollywood. I burned it down, essentially. We lost business overnight
by me endorsing Trump, but it was the right thing to do. And it also cleared the way to make it
a little bit easier for the next person in that industry. And, you know, I knew I needed to throw myself
into my work and what I believed in. And that's what we've done. We created the war on children,
which has been the most watched documentary of the year with over 50 million views.
And I think it's opened a lot of eyes to the dangers our kids face and sort of how we can
stand up against this monstrous Marxist machine.
And then now with defeating these woke companies, it's all kind of, you know, puzzle pieces
to do what we can in every which way to help bring this country back to sanity so that we can
give our kids the opportunity that they deserve to have, really the American dream, because
it has slipped through our fingers.
Kids no longer have that promise of the American dream.
we need to deliver that back to them. And so step by step, that's kind of what we're working
towards doing between me and my wife. Well, really a compelling story and your personal passion
is clearly evident in the work that you're doing. Robbie, thank you so much for joining us.
Thank you. I appreciate you covering it.
That was filmmaker and activist Robbie Starbuck, and this has been an extra edition of Morning Wire.
