Nothing in my statement indicated that we could instantly change our instinct of group participation/exclusion . It was mostly an acknowledgement that there is no such thing as instantaneous change and treating "African Americans" differently just reinforces the idea that "African Americans" are different. And I don't even understand trying to explain to me the differentiation within a broad class as if I were ignorant to the fact...it's basically a retelling of my argument. Beyond the fact that these classes are generally discussed as if they aren't divided into sub-classes, the sub-classes are oppressed in different ways and a blanket fix for "African Americans" will not work the same for all.
it wasn't a retelling, it was an acknowledgement. I was saying that you're right that "black people" isn't an indivisible unit, but that that wasn't particularly relevant because the set of subclasses that make up the class of black people have a certain set of shared experiences, and that recognizing them as a group is valuable, even if outliers exist.
Beyond that, policies based on broad classes create backlash which will reinforce anger, hate, and racism. I'm sure your aware of the fact that many people find it hard to admit when they have performed poorly at work...how many of them latch on to affirmative action as the reason they were expelled? How many ears hear their complaint and agree? Then there is the basic psychological principle of confirmation bias...why would African Americans need this much help if they weren't lazy thugs? Finally, once balance is achieved through class/race based policy, what do we do? Do we leave them in place creating a tipping point giving privilege to the formerly oppressed? Do we relinquish the policies and hope that the group think has gone away? Do we turn them on and off as things overflow and falter?
is your argument that, if we try to rectify systemic oppression, privileged people will try to fight it through whatever means they can get their hands on? because if so, you're absolutely right. you're just wrong that there's any way around it. people will certainly blame affirmative action for them losing their jobs, but in the meantime people of color will have gotten good jobs, and that does a hell of a lot more towards combating systemic oppression than white people loudly declaring that they don't see race ever will.
The issues are caused by underlying beliefs and broad category solutions meant to create balance are not seen as that, especially when an undeserving member of the oppressed class benefits from that solution. Group think doesn't permit intellectual dissection and the human mind remembers the offensive more than the non-offensive. People don't remember the hundreds of deserving people helped, they remember the one undeserving person.
again, this is an argument about perception, not oppression. sure, you'll get some grumpy old racists, but that is not worse than the situation we have now, it just feels worse because you're not bearing the brunt of modern oppression. if we as a society take real steps to combat institutional oppression your life will probably get worse, at least in the short term. so will mine. but the world will get better, and in the end that's better for all of us.
They aren't solutions, they are poor bandages, and they are short sighted. My post wasn't saying "we need to think better individually is all" and it wasn't saying "stop talking about race, that's the problem", it was saying "Solutions to societal problems and proposed policies need to be tailored to acknowledge and allow individualism rather than provide blind blanket support." I believe focusing on the individualism within the classes has far better potential to destroy group-think/racism over time than discussing a class which is suffering as if all members were interchangeable.
fundamentally, society-scale problems
can't be solved by individual-scale solutions because societies don't function like a collection of individuals. at a personal scale you can make sacrifices for the greater good, but large-scale classes will always behave in line with their incentives. if the societal incentive structure rewards oppression, we will always have oppression, no matter how sad it makes us individually. this is because people in positions of power get there by exploiting whatever incentive set the current system puts in place. if a society rewards oppression, then the winners in that society will be people who aren't interested in dismantling oppression. the only way to change that is to apply high pressure to reshape the system in order to destroy that incentive, not to just personally start living as if it doesn't exist.
in the grand scheme of things you, as an individual, are fundamentally powerless. no matter how you choose to conduct your personal business, you will have no measurable effect on society as a whole. I don't say that as an insult: there are very few people for whom that's not true. it just means that any individualist solution you may attempt will be doomed before it begins because, to a reasonable margin of error, you as an individual do not exist. heck, to a reasonable margin of error, the entirety of your social circle probably doesn't exist. the only way we can make a difference is collectively, and in order to do that we can't bog ourselves down with the useless concept of the individual.