|
|
|
|
|
by infosample
3387 days ago
|
|
> You can only get so far with this Is improving a problem not worthwhile without completely eliminating it? > "He's wearing gang clothes" or "I thought he was a rapper" Are gang clothes business attire now? That's what I see people of color wearing to interviews and work. |
|
Like is a simple Kangol t-shirt "gang clothes"? By the same token a Lulu Lemon or Izod shirt is, they're just different "gangs". People have a way of reading into things. A well-dressed black person might look "like a drug dealer" while a scruffy white dude might look "like a real programmer". It's a matter of perception. Our pattern matching is often badly distorted by the media.
Improving is always a good idea, but if it completely handicaps entire groups of people it's not necessarily an improvement, it's just shifting the artificial rejection criteria.