Kimmel overheard a conversation between a white and a black student. "All women have the same problem with the patriarchy and are therefore in solidarity with each other." The black woman replied that she wasn't so sure. She said to the white woman, "When you wake up in the morning and look in the mirror, what do you see?" And the white woman said, "I see a woman." The black woman said, "You see, that's the problem for me. When I wake up in the morning and look in the india rcs data mirror, I see a black woman. For me, race is visible. For you, race is invisible. You don't see it." And then she said something remarkable: "That's how privilege works. Privileges are invisible to those who have them."
Kimmel realized that as a white man he sees himself in the mirror as a "default person" and that neither gender nor race is recognizable to him! And that's how it is for many people - although very few are ever granted a flash of inspiration of socially relevant proportions.
If those who have privileges over the unconscious continue to make up the overwhelming majority of those in power, then things will not get good enough on this planet quickly enough. And then, alongside them, there are the "really bad" ones. I would prefer if Nike went back to saying "just do it" and led the way as a brand with actions rather than words. We can use real role models in all areas.