it's sad, the country is NOT ready for a discussion about the realities. As i said, there are many minorities that are only disadvantaged by themselves. No father figure, 12 brothers and sisters and see no way out other than gangs/drugs. etc . . . . but hey as long as the "get theirs"
Can you please explain the effects on a group of centuries of discrimination - denial of wealth and education and being 2nd class - on a group? (Hint: No, you can't)
You're just pointing a finger and saying 'who cares'.
Where is one actually constructive thing in your comments that will help? There isn't one.
There are people who improve things and people who demand they not be improved.
I'm not saying there aren't big probles in difference groups (and noted that includes Wall Street, shocking no one on the right had anything to say about that).
The question includes a couple things - one is what is effective to address problems, and another is pointing out that just pointing your finger to blame and not have any understanding of the continuing effects of past discrimination rather than looking at trying to improve things isn't helpful. So far, those points are lost on the responders.
It's about education, really, to overcome the myths of race issues.
JFK knew he had to educate the American people about why segregation was a moral issue and not just a legal issue - and he helped the nation change.
We need some similar education about things like affirmative action - and that includes more demands on minorities to make changes.
Gangs are a huge problem - but some people think 'those are just bad people' and have no idea really what the vaccum is that causes them to exist. Those people are happy to do nothing about gangs except watch as they do terrible things and demand always longer prison sentences and more aggressive law enforcement, with no idea how to actually improve things.
I don't hear many people criticize Colin Powell or Condoleezza Rice as undeserving (Condoleezza Rice Rice might be attacked as the worst Secretary of State in history, but the issue is who appointed her and the same criticisms would apply to white colleagues such as Paul Wolfowitz and Donald Rumsfeld) - but they don't acknowledge that affirmative action played an important role in those 'deserving people' overcoming obstacles.
A black child and a white child today are born equal and the law is no longer the instrument of discrimination. That's progress.
But the injustice soon begins and includes the effects of past discrimination. It's a circular argument to waste time on 'it's their fault' versus 'the effects of past racism'.
But it's asking too much of people to say stop pointing fingers and consider what will help things. They'll just give these 'it's 100% their fault and that's the only solution' comments.
It's really ugly for the group who has far more to point their fingers at the poor and accuse them of greed. It's selfish and immoral.
There should be more of a spirit of agreeing we want to see a society with more equality of opportunity.
That includes both demanding more but also a bit of effort to improve things, and that includes affirmative action to address continuing effects of discrimination.
You can't just remove discrimination from the law and say 'all the centuries of discrimination are fixed now'.
This isn't demanding excessive things - it's relatively modest adjustments, such as more equality for schools and where there's a great underrepresentation, have modest adjustments to address that for groups of underrepresented but qualified people. It's a little like building women's sports by things including extra recruiting efforts, given that there's a strong history of male-dominated funding and neglect for those programs.
The costs are modest and have nice benefits - the 'affirmative action' policies for women's sports have done a lot of good for women.
If the government needs middle eastern speakers for groups like the military and CIA and puts extra efforts into training and recruitng them, that's not bad is it? Similarly, if the country has large inequalities in specific areas for no good reason other than past discrimination, and takes modest steps to get things more proportional, that's not a huge problem is it? At the end of the process you have more of that 'colorblind society' we all say we want, but not everyone really gives a crap about.
Doing nothing is the easy answer. It worked for hundreds of years for slavery, it worked for a century of legal discrimination. What's the problem? It took a very long time to come to view those things really as shameful policies we can be glad we changed; but now it's the same thing, doing nothing is easier. What's the problem?