If there is anyone in this thread who has been screaming like an ideologue, it's you. Go back and read your posts. You ask when have I worked in a soup kitchen? Probably when you were in diapers. And for free, unlike your job. That was in between about a dozen other jobs doing accounting for various social help groups, beginning probably before you were born, judging by your energy in this thread. Plus a little more hands-on stuff. Plus my own family. Ever gone to your CPA firm job, where everyone is dressed to the hilt, with your mother's crap on your pants, right after you lifted her to her porta-potty so you could change her drenched sheets (that's urine, in case you've never helped people) and change her diapers? Ever had your wife divorce you because you did this every day and holiday for years? But back to the actual jobs.
Since all your assumptions are wrong, maybe you should question your assumptions about everything else. Instead of working in the comfort of the government job "helping" people to find minimum wage jobs and turning in the troublemakers, maybe you should live in a ghetto, as I have done as a white person, and find out why humans are as they are, instead of "helping people go to the right authorities when they have been wronged," as you put it. Maybe you should work where you are the only English-speaker (other than the owner employer) as I have done. Let's see your reaction when a Mexican 6 inches taller than you is angry that you deducted lunch money from his paycheck, and you have to explain to him and 20 of his friends your calculation--when none of them speak English. Your reaction would be to "go to the right authorities" so they can be put into jail. Let's see you deal with real people without your authority crutch.
For some reason, you want to compare resumes. You don't know how badly you will lose that contest. I'll show you mercy, end the resume comparison right here before I even begin, and return to the subject.
You will discover what it's like to be black if your live an authentic life without color of authority, immersed in poor people, and it will cause you to stop your nonsense about the "race card." Jesse Jackson should not have felt the way he did (he should feel that way about poor blacks, but not rich blacks), but when I see the reasons of those who oppose him, I have to criticize them more than I do him.