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As I was indicating, ignoring inequities in the system and pretending as if they don’t exist is discriminating based on race because it tacitly allows inequities to continue unchecked.There is nothing wrong with discriminating, but discriminating based on “race, creed or color” is wrong.
It’s similar to a lie of omission. I can lie by not telling the entire true. Everything I say may be true, but my statement can still ultimately be a lie because it’s incomplete in such a way as to give a false impression. In a similar way, one can commit a discrimination of omission. Everything you do might look “fair,” if you’re just myopically looking at that one small situation, but because your “fairness” doesn’t take the whole picture – with its inequities – into account, you end up committing discrimination on a broad, societal level.
As I said, discrimination based on race is going to happen, no matter what we do. We have to decide which kind of discrimination based on race we want: is it the discrimination that tacitly allows inequities to continue unchecked? Or is it the discrimination that seeks to address these inequities?
To reject one of these options “because it’s discrimination!” is not a sufficient reason, because both involve discrimination based on race.