Fallacious thinking. AA doesn't solve problems, and in fact creates new ones.
I didn't use the word "solve," so don't credit it to my opinion. I said address. To address in this sense means to deal with or to confront; to deal with something does not necessarily mean to solve it. One can deal with, or address, an issue in a superficial or ineffective manner. I maintain that AA deals with a limited aspect of racism in a somewhat ineffective way. No fallacy.
Removing AA will at least get rid of the new problems it caused. It's fallacious to think that AA should remain because "removing it won't solve old problems".
If the only bridge into town, the only access to town, needs repair, you repair it, or you build another. But if you have no other way into town, you have to keep using the bridge until you do one of those two things. This could be dangerous. It could give way. But if you dismantle it before you have created a new bridge, you have no way into town at all. What if no one builds a new bridge for months? For years? What if no one ever builds a new bridge?
What do you do when you see the access you have provided is faulty, but you have provided no other access?
Are we yet building a new bridge which will keep qualified people from being judged on their apepearance, and which will dismantle the stereotypes which are now firmly embedded within that appearance?
Anyway, I'm not sure what are the problems AA is supposed to solve.
Then perhaps you will take the responsibility to educate yourself. If you don't know something, it's hardly my job to spoon feed you the info.
Racial discrimination? So we can solve racial discrimination by enforcing... racial discrimination. Genius!
Since you admit to having gaps in your knowledge of AA, on what basis do you make the above claim? Do you know what you are talking about?
Who is being discriminated against? No one has yet shown proof that one less-deserving person was awarded something
in favor of, or
instead of someone who deserved it more. Can you? Or are you just spouting empty rhetoric?
If you can show a certain number of cases of this, under the aegis of Affirmative Action, does this mean that Affirmative Action is worthless and should be done away with, or does it only mean that any program is only as good as the humans who put it into effect? How many mistakes of that nature have to be made under AA in order for it to be worthless?
This IS a fallacy: begging the question.
"Affirmative Action is wrong, because it gives preference to non-whites over whites, thus resulting in whites not getting a job because they are white."
Until you prove that this has occurred, that this preference is indeed given, your conclusion is contained in your premise, and that is begging the question.