Fundamentally, the nature of a field such as software development, or any kind of software/hardware interaction, is that neither the software nor the hardware care about the race, gender, age, or background that their operator is taking part of programming them in.
Not gonna deny that it'd be smart every now and again to factor those differences in, but the blunt reality is that these cold machines don't care who you are or what you are. They only function.
Stack Overflow, as a consequence of Q&A, is an attempt to isolate and cut out all of the extra fluff about empathy and ethics, since both of those things are subjective and cannot be concretely answered. We'll have opinions, but opinions aren't facts, and Q&A is about facts.
Stack Overflow is entirely predicated on the notion of code or something that can be explained without knowing anything about the person that's asking it, or where they're from. In essence, we don't care by design; the fact that a person has written a poor question has nothing to do with their background in the slightest. (Well, maybe a bit on the English comprehension side, but there are legion non-native English speakers who are able to write questions effectively here.)
Surveys and questionnaires are an attempt by Stack Exchange to identify who the people are that are interacting with the machine. This means that you do get questions about your age, gender, and race. That makes complete sense.
The problem that I see with a survey that asks these questions is,
what question are you trying to answer?
This may represent the chief disconnect between staff and the larger Meta Stack Overflow community.
Staff see the users are people with diverse backgrounds and walks of life, and value this.
Power users see users as another person with another coding problem, with no opportunity or chance for the chit-chat.
Again, that is by design. I'm not here to play therapist or hear about how oppressive the field is for people of color. I'm here to answer your technical question, and that's about it.
The problem is that the company clearly has a different question in mind when engaging groups of people that use the site, as opposed to the people who are, for lack of a better phrase, left "holding the bag" on content moderation and curation.
Until we agree with the question they're trying to answer, we're never going to like these surveys.