I wouldn't think to participate in thread necromancy like this, but I really got to ask:
First off, how can you get John Young's name wrong? Twice?:rant:
The second thing is where are you going with this 'white male privilege' stuff?
Astronaut Group 8, who were recruited in 1978, already were showing the way towards the day when NASA would fly people who are something other than white males. It's true that none of them could have completed training soon enough to fly STS-1, but that has less to do with gender inequality or racism than it has to do with realities of becoming a trained astronaut and then having the right skills for a particular mission.
For the record, the first mission with Group 8 members was STS-7 in June of '83, and Sally Ride became the first American women in space on that mission; and STS-8 in August of the same year had Guion Bluford aboard. So from 1978 forward, NASA had people in training who were not white males, and just two years after the first flight of the Shuttle the first female and black astronaut had missions and flew.
While not evidence of a absence of gender or racial inequality at NASA, Group 8 at the very least were a highly visible sign that times were changing, and the doors to being an astronaut where considerably more open.
Especially since, in a job requirements sense, starting with Group 8 NASA wouldn't require everyone to certified as a pilot anymore. The mission specialist position allowed people to become astronauts without also taking a year or so to go to pilot school, an extra hurdle that NASA foisted on 'scientist-astronauts' like those of
Group 4 and
Group 6. It could be argued that the requirement to be a pilot, especially a test pilot or military test pilot, more than anything else, is what caused NASA's astronauts to be as white and male as they were up to Group 8.
So, with all this in mind, where the heck are you getting that society wasn't ready for black or female astronauts? Or that it was 'years away', which in my mind, 'years' implies more than just two, more like 5 years at least.