People of colour in America are constantly bombarded with messaging that the consequences of their actions are not their own - somebody else is always at fault. Somebody else made them flunk school, somebody else made them break the law, somebody else, in purpose, made the bus late and they missed an interview, somebody else made them leave a pregnant significant other, or peddled them drugs. There's a boogieboo in the air that inhibits them, it's not them that need to self-improve and stick to the straight and narrow - it's the road that needs to be torn up. Absolutely not - we are all equal, regardless of skin colour. People of colour are on every level of government and public life - they're lawyers, they're police officers, they're doctors, they're mayors, they're in Congress - a PoC woman can be Vice President, a black man can be President, the most powerful man in the world. If you want to correct the sins of the forefathers, do it from within by being a paragon of society, not by blaming the specter of invisible racism that you cannot quantify. The former is a path to success, the latter a path of self-doubt, lack of accountability and defeat. You are robbing people of agency by removing personal responsibility from the equation. You are telling them, repeatedly, that no matter how hard they try, they will never perform as well as their white peers because they're brown. That's patently false.
Ah, how comforting and convenient. Poor minorities just need to take credit for their history of being enslaved, robbed, murdered, and learn to pull themselves up by their bootstraps, just like the... not people in power. I'm sorry, but you're living in an absolute fantasy if you believe in half of what you say here, considering how many lazy wealth inheritors exist today, and how many folk work multiple jobs only to remain in poverty and debt 'til their dying breath. The math isn't as simple as "Oh, stop buying crack and it'll all be swell!" considering murders and maiming by law enforcement can happen even to the innocent and hard working. The law might not outright call out racist names and call for the burning of crosses in yards, things evolve and change over time, but considering that the majority of the people can routinely vote for a president and still lose, there are rules in place that disadvantage them.
Considering that you can have someone do great in school, never choose violence or drugs, stay on the straight and narrow, but because they were born poor they have to work and forgo college, they may likely never make their way out of lower class. Completing high school does not guarantee success and a path to a better tomorrow. Excelling in college does not guarantee success. Having the ability to eat three meals a day and have a roof over your head is not a guarantee for those who want to try for more. Having the resources to get to school every day is not a guarantee. Having a family is not a guarantee of support if they're still dealing with the repercussions of intense persecution in their time, and until you've lived a day in the shoes of the desperate, you're hardly in a position to judge. You can prop up Obama and Kamila and say "See? Racism over!" But they're hardly examples of rising from the ashes.
I take back my earlier judgment. You actually are a monster, comrade, your playing a game or not doesn't even matter at this point.
It's one or the other - either it exists in the present and you can point out precise laws that discriminate based on race *or* it has existed in the past and the consequences are felt today, causing some to be in the position of playing catch-up. Decide which point you're arguing, because so far your response is a strawman. Nobody has ever said that no discrimination against black people has taken place over the centuries - the whole conversation is about common law at present. You pointing out past injustices is not a "W", it's changing the subject.
And the goalpost shifts. Disgusting.