|
|
|
|
|
by sanmon3186
1566 days ago
|
|
I knew someone would say that. Caste issues are much more complex in my view. Feel free to disagree. Imagine having two friends, one dirt poor and another fairly rich (but comes from a lower caste). Both appears in an entrance exams for the engineering degree. The poor score 99% but fails to make it but the rich dude who score 70% makes it to the college. He gets caste reservation. One may say that reservation is is off topic but is it really? It is a lifelong reminder of who you are, to both the friends. The poor friend who somehow makes it to the Silicon Valley, is often reminded of his caste privileges. The rich lower caste friend, gets discriminated for his caste and economic privileges that others find undeserving. |
|
There was a reddit thread that went super viral right after the SuperBowl (with zero data) about "demographics of people in the tv ads vs US demographics", and everyone was obsessing over how black people were vastly overrepresented versus their demographics... and STILL white people were also over-represented.
Don't kid yourself that just because you hear (or even experience) anecdotes of people belonging to the dominant group being "discriminated" against that it's the norm.
Simple - go try applying for jobs with a white-sounding versus a black-sounding name and see what happens.
And btw, this is literally what CRT is, and actual experts and academics have shown over and over and over again that the political systems are tilted against the non-dominant groups, even with the boogeyman of affirmative action.