Yeah, well, such "logic" from you wouldn't surprise me.
In the US white people are far less likely to be in poverty than black people. I could provide statistics but different people record poverty differently so you get different statistics, the one I'm looking at has black people are 21.3% and white people at 9.9%.
You can try and change this, or you can deal with it, change things so there's more equality out there.
Some people don't want things to change, so they attack everything to do with making things more equal. They got angry when slavery was threatened, so angry that they tried to leave the Union. Then they got angry when segregation was ended. Now they're angry because they think DEI is unfair, even though white people are still getting all the good jobs.
You can see one of the largest racial disparities in the United States labor force simply by tilting your head back and gazing at the skies. There are 211,000 commercial pilots in the U.S. and only 3.9% of them are black. Only 3.4% of airline pilots are black. This gap is even larger in our
www.huttonaviation.com
"There are 211,000 commercial pilots in the U.S. and only 3.9% of them are black. Only 3.4% of airline pilots are black. This gap is even larger in our military. Out of the 14,000 pilots in the United States Air Force, only 300 are black. That is less than 2%."
They make up 14.4% of the population, and for some reason very few of them become pilots. Why?
Could it be that black people suffer more disadvantage that white people?
The U.S. Air Force has fewer than 300 active-duty Black pilots, and one just quit. Here's why.
www.flyingmag.com
Here's an article about black pilots in the Air Force.
"The IG found that enlisted Black Air Force service members were 72 percent more likely than their white counterparts to receive Uniform Code of Military Justice, Article 15, non-judicial punishment (NJP) as a form of discipline, which can include limited confinement, arrest in quarters, extra duties, or forfeiture of pay for incidents of minor misconduct. Black service members were 57 percent more likely than white service members to face courts-martial."
Is this a problem with black people, or is it a problem with people who are more likely to court martial or punish a black pilot?
"Of the more than 123,000 surveyed, about 60 percent of Black service members believed they do not and would not receive the same benefit of the doubt as white peers. "
Black members of the Air Force think there's racism
"And, about 40 percent of Black enlisted, civilians, and officers do not trust their chain of command to address issues related to racism, bias, and disparate career opportunities."
And they think that the chain of command doesn't care about it.
You can say things are equal, but you have all these people in the chain of command who maybe have bias and prejudice and they make it difficult for black people to achieve the same as a white person.
Now, you could confront this head on. Like the West Germans confronted Nazism from 1945 onwards, while East German and Austria didn't. Racism is much worse in the former East Germany and Austria than in the former West Germany.
People don't want to confront this, they'll blame this and that like it's a perfectly normal thing to do, without realizing what the situation is, without caring how it could be changed.