As for racism, bias, and discrimination in America, believe me, "buddy," you don't want to go there. That is a Gordian knot that has plagued our country for hundreds of years, and we are always and constantly working as a country to improve our response to being a non-homogenous group of people who strive to see each other as brothers and sisters. We have a very long way to go, there is no doubt, but the problem of racism already has enough thorns. To pretend that the FMG's difficulty matching into derm has anything
Seriously. Two generations back minorities in this country couldn't even use the same water fountains or lunch counters. To whine about not giving a fair shot at a dermatology residency to NON-US citizens borders on the absurd, given how far we have come. We have issues we are working for in this country, and the strives toward divrsity in this country are monumental, but you get no sympathy on this one. It's somewhat of a miracle that medicine has come as far as it has.
Not everyone gets a derm residency. Most people who apply are eminently qualified. There is no real yardstick out there for who is best qualified -- we don't consider board scores the end all be all that perhaps other countries do (and in fact the creators of the USMLE are extremely unhappy with this kind of unintended use and are even talking about making it P/F someday not too many years down the road). Residency selection is not an objective process -- it is subjective, and PDs will weigh a variety of factors. And of course the factors they are most familiar with will be weighted more heavily accordingly. So if a PD doesn't know much about the quality of XYZ medical school in ABC country, that applicant won't get as much mileage from doing well there as someone who got A's at a school the PDs are familiar with and have matched many successful residents from. Such is life. That's not unfair, that's common sense.
And then when you add to that the political pressure of using not giving away federally funded slots to comparably qualified US individuals, it makes the decision awfully easy. We have plenty of residency needs for which we need to import talent, but that is driven by necessity, not equity. Dermatology isn't really one of those areas where the supply of qualified US individuals is lacking. If you were hoping for FM or OB, the story would be different.
And again, nobody is telling you not to apply, to take your shot. Just to understand that the odds may not be with you, and there are reasons why that have nothing to do with fairness or racism. And to a great extent, they have to do with selection criteria different than the numerical objective things you are focusing on.