From The Guardian

So Affirmative Action is basically dead for college admissions, further dismantling Civil Rights era legislation.

Way to go, SCOTUS. /s

  • @axtualdave
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    61 year ago

    I’m not a fan of this ruling. Not on the merits, but on the results.

    Affirmative Action fell into the “Equity” column in that “Equality - Equity - Justice” spectrum. Remember that comic with the baseball game, a fence, and 3 kids of varying heights trying to watch?

    Equality says they can all go to the fence and try to watch, and everyone gets a box to stand on, though, even with the box, the shortest kid can’t see over the fence.

    Equity says that everyone gets boxes of varying heights so they can all see over the fence.

    Justice advocates replacing the fence with a chain-link fence tat everyone can see through without the need for boxes in the first place.

    It’s nice to pretend that we don’t need boxes, and racism is “over”, but that’s just pretending.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      01 year ago

      I’m not american, so I don’t have a horse in this race. But I believe that being racist to fix equity is a terrible compromise. It’s putting people of a certain ethnicity (white & asian) into their own little box with more competition.

      Give black & hispanic people monetary aid. Aid them more in high school by assisting black majority schools. But if the system lets you say the sentence “I would have gotten into X university if I was a different race”, then the system is broken.

      Finally, it’s not usually “black people” vs “white people”, it’s “poor people” vs “rich people”. Black/hispanic people might be over-represented in the poor group, which is a huge problem. But aiding the poor is completely non-racist, benefits virtually everybody, and has the side effect of slowly reducing the amount of poor black/hispanic people

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      01 year ago

      I’m not american, so I don’t have a horse in this race. But I believe that being racist to fix equity is a terrible compromise. It’s putting people of a certain ethnicity (white & asian) into their own little box with more competition.

      Give black & hispanic people monetary aid. Aid them more in high school by assisting black majority schools. But if the system lets you say the sentence “I would have gotten into X university if I was a different race”, then the system is broken.

      Finally, it’s not usually “black people” vs “white people”, it’s “poor people” vs “rich people”. Black/hispanic people might be over-represented in the poor group, which is a huge problem. But aiding the poor is completely non-racist, benefits virtually everybody, and has the side effect of slowly reducing the amount of poor black/hispanic people.