[quote name='bmulligan']How on earth would you interpret my comment as black people are "defacto unqulaified" for employment? Are you purposefully trying to race bait me?
I'm not saying black people are automatically unqualified. I'm saying that racists have the same rights to freedom of choice as rational people do.[/quote]
Even when it affects a large proportion of a population because of race? So, you are merely a person who capitulates to the market, regardless of the inequality is foists on the populace. While not explicitly racist, it is certainly indirectly so. You can jump up and down and demand that you aren't a racist (or, rather, that your love for the "free market" supercedes any racial allegiance), but your willingness to support people's right to consistently keep black people out of jobs, and subsequently complain about how black people don't want to work, indicates otherwise. I notice that you have not addressed my comments about false agency being attributed to blacks regarding their unemployment status.
EDIT: Come to think of it, I am calling you a racist. I'm not beating around the bush, I gave you the benefit of the doubt. YOU ARE A RACIST. Your whole line of logic permits people in the marketplace to discriminate; you are saying that you don't mind racism. It's people's freedom to be as racist as they want to be. Before you turn that around into some horseshit "freedom" argument, keep in mind that there are limits on our freedom; we aren't free to drink and drive; we aren't free to indiscriminately shoot people; we aren't free to manufacture and sell meth; we aren't free to kick the living

out of our spouses; and, according to the civil rights act, we aren't free to choose applicant a over applicant b because applicant a is white and applicant b is not (which is *PRECISELY* what audit studies identify).
So, while people *are* free to hate whomever they want to, for whatever reason they want to, they are *not* free to practice and employ that hatred to the detriment of others. In essence, your "people are free to discriminate" argument is hollow, and reeks of other people bullshit "freedom' arguments, because almost all of them provide and assume "freedom" for a specific group, without fail to the detriment of others. In this case, your freedom of employers to discriminate against whomever they so choose
inhibits the freedom of other people to participate in the workforce free of discrimination.
So, with all that in mind, (1) your hollow "freedom" argument, (2) your permissiveness of racial discrimination in the marketplace, and (3) your loathing of anything that tries to run counter to (1) and (2), I conclude that yes, you, bmulligan, are racist.
For a business that caters to black racists, hiring a black person may be a pragmatic choice as well. You are not the arbiter of pragmatism versus fairness. No one is or shoud be except for the person doing the hiring. Do you want Hooters to have to start hiring flat-chested handicapped transexuals ?
Again, you're leaping from "denied employment because black" versus "not qualified for work." Perhaps you're implying some sort of slippery slope applies here, but you aren't stating it outright, and it makes you look foolish (and again makes your argument look like you're paralleling black de facto incapacity and physical incapacity for employment). I don't care who works at Hooters; if data show, however, that FULLY QUALIFIED PEOPLE AREN'T BEING HIRED BECAUSE THEY'RE BLACK, then I do care.
I'm not undermining anything. Proper proportions is the goal. Name any of the the other arguments and they pale in comparison to the benchmark of "proper representation". When that proper proportion is reached, the'll move on to other goals such as proper distribution of wealth by force.
Glad to see that you're so well read on the issue.

For you to deny the existence of other arguments people use to recommend AA is completely incorrect, and premised on the notion that you're afraid to confront discrimination-based arguments.
Audits are great for proving that there are racists in the world, and not much else unless you intend to use them to punnish people for being racists. I grasp the fact very well that qualified people are turned away from jobs becuase of race. The neat thing about our marketplace is that that person can try to find someone else that will hire them, find a black owned business, or start their own. With 12% of the population, that makes a huge market of people to cater to.
I thought you were so well read on the issues (since you, of course, seem to KNOW that there is only ONE argument for AA; that of proportionality); you would know, then, that there is discrimination in other aspects of the market than simply employment. Moneylending (credit, mortgages, business loans) is another major aspect. Would you provide a startup loan to someone with no credible experience in his or her field, black or not? Would you expect a return if they wanted to "market to themselves," being a primarily poor people? The market finds incentives to discrimination (John Yinger being one of the best to articulate that argument). Evidently, you have no idea how the market works, and how people are persistently denied opportunities at every angle because they are black. Until you can come to grips with that, I don't see how you're going to understand anything. Another victim of default white privelege.
You're already making a lot of false assumptions no matter what I say so why stop now ? I fully support hiring based on merit. But I also support hiring based on preference, no matter how misguided, idiotic, or offensive it may be. The issue is of freedom. Freedom to hire whomever you choose, for whatever reason.
Can you recognize the difficulties and contradictions of what you support? Can you admit that, where hiring based on merit and hiring based on preference meet, there is inherent conflict? Your sentence "Freedom to hire whomever you choose, for whatever reason" is FULLY contrary to hiring based on merit. This is a severe problem in your logic, and I hope you can see that.
That almost sounds like a threat, like you want to call me a racist, but you don't have the guts. I am not indifferent to racists, I don't like them. However I support their freedom to choose to be an idiot. Your indifference to freedom is more troubling than your ill-percieved notion that I hate black people. If that is all you can infer from my statements, than you're either incapable of understanding the concept of liberty, or just too emotional to think rationally. you can choose which.
Rational thinking would have put more blacks in the industrial workforce 50 years ago, since Jim Crow laws would have made it perfectly viable for them to be hired at wages far lower than their white counterparts (and if there's anything you can identify with in my arguments, the profit motive, comprised of high returns and low overhead, is Mother

ing KING in the marketplace). Furthermore, in order to avoid being replaced by a black worker willing to work for less, whites would then have to accept lower wages (to use boring business parlance) "to remain competitive in the market."
So, *rationally,* things would have turned out FAR different from the world we currently live in. 40 years AFTER the civil rights act, we find disparate unemployment rates between blacks and whites, we find disparate wages between blacks and whites (and also men and women, whites and hispanics as well). Your precious rational market should have eliminated those disparities, right?
YOUR MARKET HAS FAILED YOU.
That, I believe, is the foundation for your logic; that you seem to think that the market will sort everything out, when it has done little damage to race-based discrepancies 40 years after the CRA passed.
Waiting for Godot...