To me, if a child is being raised to be truly color blind, as they should be, then it isn't a matter of having klickies that look like themselves, but rather of realistic diversity. I grew up having friends of more than one race, and as a child, I was naturally drawn to dolls and toys of all colors. I am white, but one of my favorite baby dolls as a small child was black. Her name was Penelope. I didn't love her because she was black, or in spite of her being black, it was more like the race just didn't matter at all to me, because I hadn't been taught it was important. I also had black Barbies, mostly because I picked them based on the outfit they were wearing, and the race wasn't a factor. Isn't that how it should be? If you teach children they should pick out toys with the same race as themselves, you are teaching them that races should not intermingle, or that they are so different from people of another race they can't possibly be friends with them. Because the dolls are rarely supposed to BE the child in the child's mind. They don't name their dolls or klickys their own name.
I agree, but before children can embrace toys of all ethnicities, that diversity must exist in toys. If they are constantly presented one image of humanity, it makes them aware of race and desperate to find an image that looks like themselves. This is particularly dangerous in toys that represent ideal beauty (in Playmobil - princesses, brides, fairies - we've had so many fairies in the mystery figures and they're all white).
Growing up, the one baby doll I cared for at all was the one and only brunette. She was incredibly pale, but all my other baby dolls, all my Barbies (save one knock-off Skipper that was African American), my porcelain doll, the evil battery operated almost life-sized doll, the large rag doll, the girl on one of my sweaters, and even the stupid fairy on my bedspread were blonde, blue-eyed, and pale skinned - most wore pink. They were gifts from well-meaning, probably race-blind people (my parents didn't have the money to buy us much). Playmobil was the most diverse - they actually had different hair colors.