But those are two different statements: it's much easier to improve things than it is to create an equitable/equal society.
If you'd phrased your critique in terms of not taking immediately actionable steps, I possibly would have responded differently. (Would depend on the details. It wasn't instantaneous to get the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act written. If you were to claim it could be, I would likely object in similar fashion; if you were only to claim that it could be written in under a month, as it was, then I would of course agree. At this point, however, it could be instantly passed if there was the will, so if you claim that it not being passed is evidence of a certain type of lack of will, I would agree. If you claimed that it not passing was evidence of non-black people wanting black people to remain an underclass, as a typical group sentiment, I would want more reasons why this was the case as opposed to, for example, typical partisan posturing, power of police unions, and so on, being the dominant factors.)
Anyway, if you want to make a different argument and support it, maybe I'd agree with you, maybe I'd disagree, maybe I wouldn't be sure whether to agree or not. I was responding to what you said, though, and that was about things being fully equal, not just moving in that direction.