I is suspecting that the main bone of the (now) topic is that it's not that such programs exist, but how they are 'managed'.
I'll be dull and boring, and keep using the same example I always bring out. Aboriginal person decides he wants to be a mechanic. He doesn't have the grades, so he 'pulls the race card', and gets into the course as an ATSI student (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander) - fully funded scholarship. He pulls out of the course only a month or 2 in - thus meaning someone else was unable to get into the course, and it was too late to start it from that point. Said Aboriginal student just couldn't deal with it. Even though academically this was already known, he still got in based purely on race.
Similarly, I knew when I was on the dole, if I desperately needed social security money, I'd have to run through hoops. I also know, that if I was ATSI, then I'd get that money pretty much straight away.
So - that raises the question... was I in any lesser need than anyone else, at that time?
When a person is in need, then a person is in need - and race, creed, colour, sex, etc etc etc, should have no bearing on the subject (although... if you've put yourself in that place of need deliberately, then that's a different matter, IMHO... and that's a H for Honest - not Humble )
So what JC said is still quite correct... but so is what Saydrah and Shadow have said. Just depends on the angle you look at it from....
I'll be dull and boring, and keep using the same example I always bring out. Aboriginal person decides he wants to be a mechanic. He doesn't have the grades, so he 'pulls the race card', and gets into the course as an ATSI student (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander) - fully funded scholarship. He pulls out of the course only a month or 2 in - thus meaning someone else was unable to get into the course, and it was too late to start it from that point. Said Aboriginal student just couldn't deal with it. Even though academically this was already known, he still got in based purely on race.
Similarly, I knew when I was on the dole, if I desperately needed social security money, I'd have to run through hoops. I also know, that if I was ATSI, then I'd get that money pretty much straight away.
So - that raises the question... was I in any lesser need than anyone else, at that time?
When a person is in need, then a person is in need - and race, creed, colour, sex, etc etc etc, should have no bearing on the subject (although... if you've put yourself in that place of need deliberately, then that's a different matter, IMHO... and that's a H for Honest - not Humble )
So what JC said is still quite correct... but so is what Saydrah and Shadow have said. Just depends on the angle you look at it from....
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