People always complain that it's the intention of racist jokes that matters, not the mere fact that they are racist. Why can people have such insight when it comes to comedy but not to bigger issues like this?Lilani said:So, basically you're saying that these scholarships are beneficial because, statistically, there are more poor or financially burdened black students and families.
If that's the case, then have the scholarship be dedicated to any students in bad financial situations and who show academic valor. To give any student, or human being in general, an advantage or a resource that another doesn't have access to due to the color of their skin is racism. There are poor black people, and there are also poor white people, Hispanics, Indians, Inuits, and Asians. Helping out hard-working students who need the help is a great thing to do, but if you start allowing such help to be color-coded then our mindset is no better than it was 60 years ago.
I acknowledge that it's racist, but I base my approval of it not on the assumption that there are more poor black people, but that poor black people make up a greater proportion of black people in total due to the vicissitudes of the poverty trap.
There are indeed poor elements in other groups, and they should and do (afaik) get their own scholarships. I don't see a problem with that.
Those others are considered for other scholarships, instead. Allow me to explain:a problem with is the fact that the scholarships were designated for African-American students, meaning that no others would have been considered.
Say we only had one scholarship for everyone. That scholarship would be competed for by everyone. White and black, rich and poor. The rich have an obvious advantage, so let's rule them out...
We now have a scholarship for the poor. This would be competed for by the poor, white and black. This appears reasonable, but then one must consider that there are more poor blacks/blacks than there are poor whites/whites. However, there are physically more poor whites than poor blacks...
This means that for each scholarship for the poor, there will be more white applications than black applications. This means it is more likely that a white will get the scholarship. This will do little to lift the status of whites as a whole. The same scholarship in the hands of a black would make a bigger dent on that overall poverty percentage, and so will do more good to blacks as a whole...
As the scholarship would do more proportional good going to blacks than to whites, I think it's fine to remove the massive competition of whites, and offer it solely to blacks.