So you are fine with the fact that some people of privilege benefit from AA and some people not of privilege are discriminated against by AA?
As I said, with any social policy – any attempt to do things to improve society as a whole – there are always going to be individual cases you can find where the policy causes problems for people.
We’re not talking about the individual cases here – or, at least, it’s misguided and myopic to focus in on a handful of individual cases when the issue at hand isn’t an individual one, but a societal one. The purpose of the policy is to address broad social problems that exist today that we, as a society, want to address.
But to take joy in the fact that some people who lack any sort of privilege are discriminated against is pretty immoral.
Strictly speaking, I don’t “take joy” in the fact that you can find a handful of cases where people are hampered a little bit by the policy, but I do take issue with people who blow these few cases out of proportion and engage in what I consider whining about the “unfairness” of it all. I may, at times, phrase my response to this in rhetorically entertaining ways, but the underlying and undeniable fact is that life isn’t fair.
Now, we can have an unfairness in which there are broad inequities divided on racial lines – resulting from factors not in our control – or we can have unfairness in which we attempt to address these inequities. Neither is perfectly “fair” because perfectly fair doesn’t exist…the question is what we want to do, the question is which unfairness we want to plump for.
What percentage of the population is it ok to discriminate against? 1%, 5%, 10%?
As I have been implicitly indicating, I don’t think “discrimination” is the proper way to frame this issue. There’s always going to be unfairness, no matter what you do. The question is whether you want the unfairness that maintains certain inequities or whether you want an unfairness that attempts, as best as possible, to take those inequities into account and address them.
The fact that you can always – always – find some sob stories, no matter which policy you pick, isn’t relevant.