I've never been to NY and have only bought batteries, online, from B&H. I have no opinion about the case at hand. But the above is laughable.
1. Goldman Sachs was started by a Jew. Their most well-known employees of the past fifty years have been Jewish. There's plenty of others there to, but your assertion that they wouldn't "even consider interviewing" Jews is hilariously ignorant.
2. "The world has changed since then" only because of vigilant people fighting injustice. Do we really need to quote millenia of history demonstrating what happens when people think it can't happen anymore? Are you for real? Sorry, but the market doesn't solve every problem. Maybe we should have let people vote with their wallet on the slave trade. Just don't buy those cotton breeches, suh!
I stand corrected, I should have parsed my sentences more carefully. Of course Goldman, Salomon, Lehman, etc. were founded by Jews, and until the 1990's they hired only Jews, WASPS, and other white Christians, but no other ethnicities, and Goldman's first non-white partner was in 1991 or so, just for tokenism.
The other hiring rule applied to all the other white shoe firms, such as Dillon Read, First Boston, Morgan Stanley, etc., where Jews need not apply was the rule (forget about other ethnicities, brothers, hispanics, etc. applying, they'd laugh you out the door). In fact a Jewish classmate of mine told me that the fellow who interviewed him (the interviewer had a III after his name) asked him why he even bothered applying to the firm.
I won't even discuss the hiring of women in these testosterone-fillled places.
This is all ancient history to the young folks here, and most of the can't believe that the world was like that only a few decades ago.
As for your second statement, yes, the slave trade in the US was ended by the civil war, but blacks didn't get the vote until 1964. A lot of countries gained their independence by peaceful means, and war should only be a last resort.
The difference between the Civil War, Vietnam, and Iraq, is that in the Civil War, in two sentences (of the Gettysburg Address), Lincoln was able to state clearly why there was a need for the war, and what was the goal; whereas with Vietnam and Iraq, the public never got a straight answer, hence they were/are lost.