not being discriminated against on the basis of one's race is a right. If other people in the society are not accorded the same right, you have an advantage over them, whether you chose that advantage or use it.
Someone having their legs broken by the mob doesn't enrich people whose legs are not broken. All of society is poorer and worse off.
Your reply seems to shows a deep and complacent ignorance. Read Virginia Woolf's "Professions for Women" for a case study of how discrimination disadvantages the discriminated against, and in a any competitive fields or in life experience in generally gives those who don't experience that discrimination a comparative advantage.
I would feel quite safe jogging in broad daylight in an upscale neighbourhood in Florida, enjoying the beautiful scenery. (Well I might worry about getting a heart attack, but not about racist whites. But, no, no advantage.
When I went to high school and university in the 1960s and 1970s, and then while teaching in University in the 1970 mto the present, I saw that as a student, as a white male had unasked for advantages over women and non-white students: no teacher or prof posted on their desk a sexy cartoon of someone who looked like me, and wrote my name on it; o-one told me that I was a pretty bubbly blonde girl therefore I didn't have to try hard at school, but I could be head cheerleader, and thus, unlike my classmate i was not shocked when it was leaked to me in the final year of high school that I had the second highest I Q in the class, upon which my classmate decided to work hard and raise her grades at the last minute; no-one mocked my race and its culture in class while the prof did nothing; no teacher or prof opined that men couldn't write great literature, that "Savages" couldn't write great literature or contribute to history; no prof sexually propositioned me while I was taking his course and when I refused him dropped my grades from As to Ds; no student insulted my racial identity directly and in very personal terms, in the pre-Internet days of research I was not afraid of being raped if i went to do research at the University library late at night. And of course, when I studied literature, I didn't have to wonder why there were so few people of my sex and race represented on the reading lists
As a gay man, closeted when I was young, I do know the discouraging effects of discrimination and prejudice, by presenting as a white male, I have been advantaged in comparison to the real-life people, my peers and then my students, who have suffered--real life people who dropped classes, changed majors, dropped out of university, stopped attending class.