So how do you know they are less qualified than you since you are only qualified because you look more like the people who preceded you?
I'm sorry, what on earth are you talking about? What I'm qualified for depends on what I've accomplished, not what I look like. For example, I have a Master's degree in psychology, so I qualify to be a registered psychologist in Australia.
Or do you think I'm more qualified merely because my parents were immigrant labourers who happened to be White?
What is this qualified? A did something in situation X and B didn't do something in situation X because it was in situation Y? Why the hell did God bother with a particular lump of clay? Obviously it wasn't more qualified. It was probably selected on a whim. Got it yet?
No, frankly, I don't know what you're talking about. God and lumps of clay??
If a medical school uses MCAT as a selection criterion, then people who score higher on the MCAT are more qualified to become a medical student than people who score lower. It isn't that difficult a concept?!?
It depends on what you're talking about, and how I rank on the criteria devised to measure quality. For example, if I were a 100 metre sprinter, the main way I would qualify for the Olympic team is to be ranked at the top of the qualifying heats.
You're the one who stepped in the shit. So what?
Don't go flopping around justifying your 'values' that your kin devised.
What?!
Take the thinking of Eric Hoffer, put people in situations where they need to do something and those people will do the job.
Gad. The elitism reeks.
I don't understand what you've said, but let me ask: should we shave a few seconds off the running times of American athletes who are Black (ie pretend they're faster than they are), so that they don't need to run as fast to qualify for the Olympic team?
After all, an elite level athlete is clearly qualified to be in the Olympics, and to rank them based on actual running time is just 'elitist', isn't it? It isn't as if the White runners were metaphorically 'tripped' earlier in the race, is it?