@yankee00
1) "Being six foot tall basketball player or a 300lb sumo wrestler are completely differrent demands than having white skin to teach English."
Not sure what your arguments are but I think you are saying that there is a valid excuse to discriminate against people under 6 feet tall because being tall has a desirable advantage in basketball while the color of the skin has no bearing on the quality of teaching. However, just because you are tall doesn't make you a good basketball player and just because you're 5'7 like Spud Webb doesn't mean you can't slam dunk a ball and make it in the NBA. Most Chinese think being White is a good indicator of your English ability, rightly or wrongly. In most Chinese's mind, foreign means English, how many times do people say I want a foreign teacher when they meant they want a English teacher. If you are White, 99% of the time you are a native European/American therefore you are a native speaker of foreign language(i.e. English). If you are Asian like ABCs and CBCs, it is quite possible that the school is fooling you and the teacher is actually only someone who studied abroad.
2) "To teach English, you need the qualification, skill and experience. Why do Black teachers who meet those demands have to be paid less than Whites because of the way they look?"
I don't think they are paying Black teachers less, once hired they pay everyone the same. Also, this Black/White issue is mostly an American hangup, I think they are screening against Asians instead of Blacks. It's harder convincing paying parents that the Chinese dude they are looking at actually speaks perfect English even if they hear them speak. But if it is a foreign face, such objects are almost never present.
Another point on this is, most training schools are not looking for "teachers", they are looking for billboards. The market demands foreign faces, having a foreign face attracts customers, bottom line.
3) "By agreeing with this absurd belief from Chinese parents, you are only encouraging and enforcing their ignorance and naivety. If you are a teacher, you are supposed to help educate people, not keep them in ignorance"
I'm not agreeing to this absurdity and I do make such arguments to those that bother to listen, however, it's irreverent to this issue. As foreigners what are we suppose to do? Should a White faced foreigner go through the interview process, get hired and then refuse to work citing the school discriminating policy? Should non-white faced foreigners stand in front of the school and ask every parent why they believe only white-faced foreigners are qualified to teach English and try to convince them that non-Whites are also qualified?
Also, are we really "teachers". How many English "teachers" in China see teaching as their profession? Or is it a transition, a job that pays the bill while sightseeing in China? I for one, never consider myself as a teacher and I've been doing this for almost 10 years. I'm a speaking coach, a proofreader, an idiom explain-er but never a teacher.
Anyway, as always, my views are said with all due respect. No flaming or trolling intended.
Cheers~