| >The problem is the algorithms are designed to put people in a group and then the groups are treated differently. That's not the problem, that's literally the solution. >That's the mechanism underpinning racism. And other disparities. Not at all. The mechanism underpinning racism is believing that race accounts for differences in human character or ability and that a particular race is superior to others. Disparities are not inherently racist. >Current garbage looks like this. I know three people that got popped for drugs. One served time and has a felony record. One had it reduced to a misdemeanor and did 10 hours of community service. And the third has no record at all. One had a long rap sheet and previously was in jail, one had a few priors, and the third had a clean record. You can probably guess the socioeconomic status each of those three and you'd guess correctly. We can both make up dumb anecdotes all day. >And I'm sure the algorithm will also guess correctly. The algorithm will correctly guess which of the three is more likely to flee, be a public threat, etc. Sounds like the algorithm is working. |
No. Racism is discriminating on the basis of race. Hatred of a race is just a form of racism.
The definition of racism[0] includes:
> (n) Discrimination or prejudice based on race.
If I’m a hiring manager and I turn a black person down simply because “blacks are more likely to commit crimes”, it’s racism; I’m discriminating simply on the basis of a stereotype about a race.
Even if your stereotype is based on statistics, it can be racist. Not all black people commit crimes, so saying “because statistically, your race commits more crimes, we’re going to keep a closer eye on you,” is racism. The race doesn’t commit the crime; the person does.
Keeping a closer watch on a group of people because of race leads to statistically more reporting of crimes committed by that race even if it’s not true (less police presence leads to less crimes being reported and visa versa).
Not to mention that generalizing a single statistic to an entire race ignores every other factor that causes it. Systematic racism is a thing, and because of it, blacks are statistically poorer than their fellow whites. Being poor leads to people doing things that a richer person wouldn’t do, such as stealing because they literally have no money to pay for it. Drug habits can form and getting off them is hard when society shuns you because you’re “wasting your money on drugs instead of food.” But if you’re rich enough to afford food, drugs, and insurance,[a] one could go to a doctor for help.
Simply put, it’s very easy to be racist without realizing it; People like easy to digest facts. But being willfully ignorant about the whole story isn’t right.
[0]: https://www.wordnik.com/words/racism
[a]: I’m not going to even get into how abhorrent the idea of needing health insurance is, and how we fine people for not having it