It was intentionally a bit satirical but satire is generally a
reductio ad absurdum intended to make a point.
Personal experience: In the late 1970s I applied for a job at a large company (AT&T). The hirer told me that he wold like to keep my application on file for some future opening because I was the most qualified applicant but he couldn't hire me for the position they were trying to fill because a minority was needed to meet the mandated quota. My 'white privilege' didn't help me.
A few weeks later, I got a call from them telling me that they had a new opening but I had already found another job at a different company.
AT & T
voluntarily committed to building a strong and diverse workforce, which has been a fairly successful and lucrative project for them. They are not, however, the nation's only employer or capable of hiring everyone who needs a job or promoting everyone in need of a promotion. Nor is it in their power to eliminate structural inequalities such as disparate educational opportunities, lack of healthcare, and disproportionate experiences of crime, that affect people long before they start seeking a job. Even within AT & T, despite their good intentions, diversity thins as you start looking at upper management as opposed to entry level positions, though I do not think this is for lack of trying. Not everything is under their control.
On a more personal note. I think you've got one hell of a case of sour grapes, claiming workplace discrimination when they literally
called you back to offer you another job, which you didn't need because you had one by then. You are incredibly blind to your own privilege, and obviously have no idea what it is like to look for work if you don't fit the unspoken profile of hireability. Hint: They don't call you back. And you don't have mutliple concurrent job opportunities to choose from like you're at a goddamned career buffet. You were in no way harmed by this experience, and
could not have been harmed by this experience, yet you're nursing an inexplicable grudge. Privilege in a nutshell.