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Second. It should at least be an abstraction of what it is trying to convey. Prejudiced people's first impression seeing that flag necessarily implies thinking about skin-tones. With that, there comes more stereotypes. With that, there comes more prejudices. With that, there comes a cognitive effect that you initially wanted to fight against.

Good thing that you (OP) started this thought and its accompanying discussion. I would rather start with:

"Does racial equality need a flag?"