You assume you're the one paying the mortgage, and have that power. If you don't have the power on your own, or it IS in fact, a vote because you're all paying the mortgage together, you're out of luck.
Well what are the premises of the hypothetical? You never specified, beyond saying that it was YOUR house.
But wait, what kind of discrimination do they tackle first?
They'll spin someone around in an office chair really fast and then make them throw a dart at a bunch of index cards on a dart board, and whichever one they hit will be the one they choose.
Or, you know, a random number generator.
Who leads it? Is it being staffed by people who are bigots themselves and people don't know yet? Who vets them so that doesn't happen, etc etc
Good questions that I don't know the answers to, but at least we're thinking on the right track.
True enough....But...Well, there are people deliberately gumming up the works everywhere you look when it comes to social issues because they ARE bigoted and want to discriminate, either because they're assholes, or because they were raised to believe that it's normal.
I don't think that fighting discrimination with discrimination is justifiable even in this case.
You know, I'm really beginning to think that you process things differently from most of us. Like...With VERY little emotion for everything.
The thought has occurred to me more than once...
Can it be said to be "based in law" if it in no way represents the intent, wording, or practice of that law? It's "based in" it in a pretty tenuous way.
It's "based in law" in that it's copy-pasted from law. The law that #BLM is trying to repeal.
It's trying to solve a racial disparity in treatment.
By discriminating. They're trying to solve a racial disparity by discriminating on the basis of race. That's unjustifiable in my opinion.
Just as if 1 neighbourhood is receiving 100 dollars in grant money, and a 2nd neighbourhood is receiving 200 dollars, it's more to-the-point to say, "invest more in neighbourhood 1" rather than "all neighbourhoods deserve money!"
The first addresses the discrepancy. The second ignores it: allows people to carry on pretending that the two neighbourhoods are on equal footing.
And that would be fine, because a neighborhood is a geographic location, not a protected class like race.
Why must a solution intended for our world, context and all, also work in an absurd hypothetical or a vacuum?
Because if it's not valid logic in an absurd hypothetical or a vacuum, it's not valid logic anywhere.
Strictly, of course, that it's "in base 10" is context. Absolutely every specification you could add is context; just a less complex level of context.
Ok, then context is part of the premise and can’t just be ignored.
Yes, premises make up context, and yes, they can be ignored. That's the thing about logic, you can tweak it to your satisfaction by adding and subtracting premises to your hearts content. Whether or not you get something useful at the end of it is a separate matter.
If you want to say "your logic is useless because it doesn't take into account X, Y, and Z, when doing so would change the outcome", that would be fair. But people here have been saying "Noooo you can't just remove the context like that!" like the mere act of making a hypothetical is the objectionable thing.