1) I know they are "incrementalist/gradualist approaches", which is why I put them forward against what I perceive as back-sliding, and why I kept reiterating that those approaches would constitute "slow forward movement". But they are approaches currently not being practically explored in our government, and I have less confidence "our judicial/electoral systems will remedy or, at very least, address over" a time that is sufficiently on the horizon.
2) Here we're simply using different goal-post. I'm more interested in the selective, line-item bases of discussion, because—while "on balance" progress on race relations is nice—I think looking at or arguing for purely "on balance" metrics obscures the many instances of on-going failure. I'm also wary of back-sliding, which is why I focus on the "line-item".
3) I'm not sure there are good answers, under our current economic ordering, beyond "liberal tweaking". The socialist would argue this is precisely the reason that an upending of our capitalist economic ordering is necessary.
- Yeah, I got that, I just wanted to re-emphasize it. Can you really say that they are approaches "not being practically explored" though? Maybe it'd be more accurate for you to just say: "These things need to happen now, and I don't think it would be especially prudent to wait for the usual machinations of government to bear out."
- I don't suppose that argument is wrong, it just seems a little nit-picky.
- So you believe that poverty is the primary factor contributing to racial inequality?