And? Discrimination is primarily due to powerful groups leveraging that power for the own advantage. It's not the same thing as saying any groups are "inherently" racist or evil.
Not according to CRT theory, or any similar analysis. It's why people can say, without irony, that all men are sexist, or all whites are racist, because conciously or not, they can't help but benefit from and perpetuate their sexism/racism/ableism/cishetropatriarchy. It's why there's the idea of "intent doesn't matter, impact does" floating around (which is in sharp contrast to how law usually operates). It's why "racism = prejudice plus power" is a thing, despite all the contradictions that entails. It's why the chart, among other things, can claim that Christians are the oppressor group, when by raw numbers, Christians are the most oppressed religious group in the world.
CRT's a dead end, because all it offers is broad generalizations of oppressor and oppressed. By the very chart, I fall into one oppressed group (non-Christian), but I'd apparently stop being oppressed if I converted. Likewise, I'm an oppressor by being able-bodied, but I could disable myself and fall into the oppressed group. And if I was feeling pretty down, I could leave Christianity and make myself more oppressed, while changing my gender and likewise make myself further oppressed as well, before starting a business from home, and leaving the middle class to become an oppressive capitalist.
You may think I'm exagerating, but this is the kind of absolutism I've seen preached, and have showcased before (e.g. the "all white people are racist" article). It's why Antia Sarkeesian can state "there’s no such thing as sexism against men. That's because sexism is prejudice + power. Men are the dominant gender with power in society," which means that men I've experience suffering domestic violence, or struggling to find language classes because the only ones available were women only, weren't actually experiencing any hardship, and that a recent investigation into the lack of domestic violence shelters for men was a waste of time, because men, by definition, cannot suffer in such a manner.
If you want to state that women, on average, experience more disadvantages then men, then yes, I completely agree. But if you want to say that group identity is the be all and end all of whether you're oppressor or oppressed, then I'm afraid I don't. Call me old fashioned, but I'm inclined to believe that a lot of these isms require intent, even if I can still acknowledge that some groups may have it easier than others.
The important question isn't 'is the program not working well'. The important question is 'what are the trade offs by having this program.' I.e. what are its pros and cons. Focusing on just negatives doesn't tell us anything. Property rights has a whole bunch of negatives, but there are many more positives that outweigh the negatives.
By the indications I've mentioned, such programs AREN'T working.
Again, if you start a program to combat bias, and all the program does is make people more biased, then how can it be considered a success or cost-effective?