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RE: Systemic Racism

I hear you, but the problem with trying to put the toothpaste back in the tube or un-spill the milk is the fact that it's impossible. Affirmative action may have been a good idea for a set space in time. The 60's in America is a great example. We weren't super cool with the whole notion of integration and needed a little push. However, one needs to examine the deleterious effects that it has on systems as a whole. If you are filling a spot with a person of color for the sole purpose that they're a person of color, then you're missing the forest through the trees and doing a great injustice to your business. The best way I can explain it is that it's the opposame of police quotas. If you ask the police if they got a quota to fill, they'll insist it's not true, but the fact of the matter remains. They know damn well that they do. They'll couch it behind a different and more convenient term, all the while playing that it doesn't even real. If an individual business owner in today's day and age failed to hire a more qualified person because of their skin color, then they deserve to lose in the market. Also, I'm biased as hell. Were I a business owner, I wouldn't hire anyone of a certain age bracket had I the slightest inkling that they "earned" a college degree. Color me racist if you choose, perhaps it's that, or maybe I'm all business and less heart. P.S. If I have to pay reparations for slavery when I never owned a slave, who will compensate me for my stolen car stereo system? Should it be all black men? If not, why? If yes to reparations, why is it the responsibility of all white men? What about the white women, Jews, and African American family lines who owned slaves? How about the tribal leaders who sold them down the river in the first place? Why is it just white males who did slavery? The idea of collective accountability is cute, but it's retarded and almost always leads to war. A great example of that is: Japan attacks Pearl Harbor. Therefore, your average Japanese resident of Hiroshima and Nagasaki must get turned into a nuclear shadow. Or someone takes down the trade centers, so we must have a 100-year war waged on largely innocent civilians. Collective prosecution is pure poison. Just wait for it. It's coming to a theater near you. World war is the inevitable outcome of our current trajectory. Here's to becoming a nuclear shadow as opposed to a puking pile of vomit. Sláinte!

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If I were a business owner, I wouldn't hire someone of a certain age group if I had even the slightest idea that they "deserved" a university degree.

Why would that be a criteria and even the only one? Isn't that prejudging something you haven't even experienced yet? If you were running a business, who exactly would you be looking for? Who would fit into your business and what would you look for in a co-worker? What would they need to be experienced in and what exactly would they need to know?

Isn't the question of a degree not meaningless, in the same way it's meaningless what skin color someone has, if male or female, if academic or non academic? What does count for you? With whom would you love to work together? Are these questions even answerable if you are not in the position right here and now running indeed a real business? But ..., for the sake of imagination, what would be your answers?

Damn, @erh.germany, that's a very poignant Alan Watts quote, it kind of hits close to home. I wish I could say I was speaking tongue in cheek, but quite honestly, I'd be terrified to hire some of the latest college grads. Modern Educayshun, critical race theory, intersectionality, and all the various gender and race studies steadily destroy people's minds like the rage virus from the movie '28 Days Later.' Generally speaking, I'd like to work with the most qualified person regardless of race, ethnicity, sexual preference, or gender. However, brainwashed people who got acclimated to "safe spaces" and neutered speech would be far too burdensome and likely have a poor work ethic to boot. But who am I kidding? I don't have a business or that great a work ethic myself. Even so, I could outshine many of the latest models the colleges are cranking out, and I don't even have a degree. And this is why, if they have a college degree, it is ideal that they graduated before the accelerated brainwashing sunk its hooks into people's minds. The time frame varies from country to country and state to state. The sad part is that these programs have now infiltrated high schools and grade schools too. I suspect homeschoolers will be in high demand for employers who want good employees. I'm not blanket judging everyone with a college degree, just saying that the colleges have done a lot of damage to so many people, and it's only going to get worse from here on out.

Hehe, a very humorous answer, thank you very much. I had suspected that, but it's nice to hear you say it and experience the reflection. I agree with you about the quality of universities and colleges. There is nothing left to the deep research of what one wants to understand under teaching. Everything is programme and predetermined, and where it is not, it is perhaps even the students themselves who first have to learn to accept a free-spirited professor. In my opinion, professors could also be practitioners and supplement their professional experience with sufficient theoretical study, but not replace it. Don't dwell too long on theory, because it makes you unreceptive to real life.
I think the problem you are addressing is centralisation and the creation of standards, an exceedingly boring affair. Plus the egalitarianism and the eager pursuit of unity, which forgets that everyone never has to agree absolutely on anything because it quickly ends up in dictation. The more dissent there is in a group, the nicer for the process of reaching consensus, as different perspectives can only enrich any group. The ability to reach consensus, however, is very atrophied in modern societies that do not see themselves as communal but as competitors to everything they do not know and do not understand.

Well said, very nice to meet you @erh.germany!

Nice to meet you, too :)