Supreme Court on Affirmative Action: 'Eliminating Racial Discrimination Means Eliminating All of It'
In a 6–3 decision, the Court ruled that race-based affirmative action in college admissions violates the 14th Amendment.

The Supreme Court has stuck down race-based affirmative action in college admissions. In a 6–3 decision today, the Court ruled that both Harvard and the University of North Carolina's admissions policies engaged in unlawful racial discrimination, violating the 14th Amendment's Equal Protection Clause. The decision effectively ends almost 50 years of legalized racial discrimination in the college admissions process.
"Eliminating racial discrimination means eliminating all of it," wrote Chief Justice John Roberts in the Court's majority opinion. "In other words, the student must be treated based on his or her experiences as an individual—not on the basis of race."
The ruling in Students for Fair Admissions v. President and Fellows of Harvard College marks a decisive victory for those who had long hailed the practice as unjust and unconstitutional. It also reaffirms a reading of the 14th Amendment as prohibiting racial discrimination in all but the narrowest of circumstances, even when such discrimination is done in service of an otherwise "noble" goal.
The Reason Foundation (the nonprofit that publishes this website) wrote an amicus brief last year urging the Court to rule against Harvard and UNC.
The evidence that both universities engaged in racial discrimination, particularly against Asian applicants, is staggering. According to the ruling, "over 80% of all black applicants in the top academic decile were admitted to UNC, while under 70% of white and Asian applicants in that decile were admitted." At Harvard, an Asian American applicant in the top academic decile has a lower chance of being admitted than a black student in the fourth-lowest academic decile.
"While the dissent would certainly not permit university programs that discriminated against black and Latino applicants, it is perfectly willing to let the programs here continue," wrote Roberts. "In its view, this Court is supposed to tell state actors when they have picked the right races to benefit."
While the ruling has attracted strong condemnation from supporters of race-conscious college admissions, polling suggests that a majority of Americans of all racial groups disapprove of these policies. A 2019 Pew Research poll found that 73 percent of all Americans, including 62 percent of black Americans and 65 percent of Hispanic Americans, did not think that colleges should be able to consider an applicant's race or ethnicity when making decisions about student admissions.
As reflected in the Court's ruling, the best argument against affirmative action in college admissions is a simple one: All people are created equal and should be treated equally before the law. Treating individuals differently based on their race is an unacceptable affront to this idea, even if it is in the service of a well-intentioned goal. Taking this idea further, treating college applicants differently based on any demographic trait—including legacy status—offends this same principle.
It's possible to believe these principles while also acknowledging that many racial minority groups—black Americans in particular—are affected by past and present racial discrimination. As Justice Clarence Thomas wrote in a concurring opinion, "While I am painfully aware of the social and economic ravages which have befallen my race and all who suffer discrimination, I hold out enduring hope that this country will live up to its principles so clearly enunciated in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States: that all men are created equal, are equal citizens, and must be treated equally before the law."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Ibram X Kendi hardest hit.
Is his next book, "Asshole Fragility, An Autobiography"?
That implies introspection and/or self-awareness. I'm putting my money on zero lessons learned and "Clarence Thomas: The New Black Face of White Guilt".
Clarence Thomas has no idea what it's like to be black!
/Joy Behar
Amazing! I've been making $85 every hour since i started freelancing over the internet half a year ago... I work from home several hours daily and do basic work i get from this company that i stumbled upon online... I am very happy to share this work opportunity to you... It's definetly the best job i ever had...Check it out here...... http://Www.Easywork7.com
FIRE is pretty upset too...
https://twitter.com/StrangelEdweird/status/1674455311195811853?t=bLjXVMsY6u04Dm71RFOMcQ&s=19
Anyone applauding this Supreme Court decision on the basis of merit who isn’t also decrying legacy admissions seems logically and ethically inconsistent to me, at best.
I know plenty who oppose the former but never mention the latter. If only for purely rhetorical reasons, they should be quite vocal about both.
Because if merit is your foundational principle, then any deviations from that principle should offend you. Otherwise you seem ethically and logically inconsistent to me.
If you can forego merit in certain circumstances but not others, you have some explaining to do.
What is Legacy Admissions are a quid-pro-quo to people who are likely to make (significant) gifts to the college in question?
The OP is a midwit who's probably where he is now due to affirmative action, and is butthurt that his way was made unconstitutionally.
Like all leftists, he resents the successful and heritage.
Legacy students are statistically indistinguishable from general admission students, and will bring in more money than almost all non legacy students. It's laughable to compare generally good students from successful families to low performance affirmative action students with no roots.
I think you'll see a drastic difference in both performance and objective metrics between the two groups.
Or for people whose daddies already made big donations.
I’d actually have no problem with this if it was explicit.
Sorry folks, neither am I dark enough to claim racism, nor did I go (or even apply) to the same college as my father.
As to the statistics, sorry for the bad editing ("is" should have been "if") but it's a hypothetical, or a question. Do you have stats and reference to back up your assertion?
Do concerns about legacy admissions also apply to public offices? Asking for several US political dynasties.
ps. Does serving as a VP also count as legacy?
The main beneficiaries of legacy admissions are the colleges. Legacies are a gold mine, and if they go away, alumni contributions will plummet.
Kids who get in because of legacy policies are either able to cut it or not, If they can't cut it, they get a bullshit credential in something like "whining little git studies" and find employment with someone who owes their parents a favor.
-jcr
Who blindly supports or demands legacy admissions?
The worst part of the ruling is Roberts explicitly excluded workplaces, government offices, and government contracting.
Damn. That does suck.
I'm guessing it didn't apply to congressional districting maps either.
The worst part of the ruling is Roberts explicitly excluded workplaces, government offices, and government contracting.
I haven’t read the ruling yet, but my gut reaction is: Anyone receiving tax dollars (which ideally should be no one) should have been included. Private businesses should be free to hire anyway they see fit, racist or otherwise.
It's Roberts, what did you expect?
Roberts penned the opinion, but five other Justices concurred.
They have to rule on the matter before them. It's up to other plaintiffs to sue over racial discrimination outside of university admissions.
-jcr
Devil’s advocate: you want your students to graduate, not just enter school. If your extended family is all doctors, PhDs, lawyers, etc. then that suggests you will graduate.
My example is obviously only true for selective universities. MIT asked such a question – not just whether family members went to MIT. If all of the applicants are 1500+ on the SAT and great GPAs, then such a question may help with the graduation question.
I don’t have a strong opinion but I think this falls in the matching argument space rather than being obviously wrong per the alumni donors theory (clearly not a valid merit reason).
They would have already displayed superior intellect/work effort in high school to earn a spot legitimately.
And if they didn't, that's a strong indication they are either coasting on the family name, or not bright enough to make it in college.
What's the volume problem? How many legacy admissions are there at Harvard, yearly, that wouldn't otherwise make it; vs. how many affirmative action admissions, that wouldn't otherwise make it; vs. how many denials of qualified applicants, that would otherwise make it but for the first two.
Black alumni who donate millions have their children treated well, also.
"In other words, the student must be treated based on his or her experiences as an individual—not on the basis of race."
Counting the ways this can literally be interpreted to allow race into the admission equation.
One way that can be done is include family income as a "tie-breaking" measure. It's not race-based, but since a larger percentage of Black and Latino, etc., students come from lower-income families, by nature, a slightly larger number of those would end up with seats than Whites or Asians.
Unfortunately, family income has a low correlation with success in college, at least compared with SAT scores. And it certainly wouldn't help Asian students. In fact, now that I have thought about it. Let's NOT do this.
You certainly came up with one way in the ways I was imagining could be counted.
Remember, there are entire boards of people in these institutions that make a living doing this. If anyone thinks they’re just going to erase the white board, send everyone home and clean out all those filing cabinets, they've got another thing coming.
Edit:
Fully expect to see a jaw-dropping set of convoluted standards that essentially weave narratives around the individual's "lived experience as a Person of Color" which will then be taken into account during the admissions process.
I mean look what happened with that orchestra that did blind auditions. They looked around and realized it was mostly white and Asian people, so they said, "we're not doing blind auditions anymore". The desire to have racist *cough* race-conscious policies is so overwhelmingly powerful, it must not be underestimated.
And I'm really trying to avoid the 3000 word comment here, but this is the fundamental basis of how Critical Race Theory was born in the academies. It came about from a sense of ennui around the failures of the civil rights era to result in fully realized equal outcomes. So a new radical approach was to be considered, and out of that came Critical Race Theory.
They've already put in metrics like lived experience that have no possible external validation or correlation to success but are used to mark down asians and puff up black/latino applicants. I expect more in the same vein.
"Fully expect to see a jaw-dropping set of convoluted standards that essentially weave narratives around the individual’s “lived experience as a Person of Color” which will then be taken into account during the admissions process."
I would be surprised NOT to see it. It will be fun to see which ones end up in court....
If anyone thinks....another thinK coming.
Agreed. It is a very common mistake, like writing “would of” instead of “would have”. These things grate on my nerves (or maybe I should say “great on my nerves”) but life goes on.
And, to be fair, I am not the brightest bulb in the chandelier.
I wish I could argue but I can also see all the ways the DIE crowd will work to bend this ruling to basically the same extent that New York and Illinois have bent Bruen.
Do they really want "balanced" racial outcomes? Or, as I have often responded when people post "Race is the most important thing" with "Marxism is the most important thing. Race is just a tactic."
Like based on xis or her "lived" experience?
Let the " 'Elp I'm being oppressed" Olympics begin.
now there's the violence inherent in the system!
While I'm happy about the ruling, it's not going to have a huge impact. Affirmative action will still be the de facto law of the land.
Which still seems fair. It rules out granting a competitive advantage to say, the daughters of an African-American President based on their race, in favor of someone who can show a modicum of suffering.
While the ruling has attracted strong condemnation from supporters of race-conscious college admissions,
The KKK are a race-conscious group. Prove me wrong.
Yes. The democrats have always been race focused and promote segregation. From the KKK to today.
Democrats. Telling black people what to do since 1827.
Every racist white Republican voter: "The Democrats are the party of white racism". If that were true, the Democrats would still hold the South - and you lot would be voting for them.
BTW I thought the Democrats were the party of BLM and Antifa and anti-white racism? Or is that an entirely different Democratic Party with coincidentally the same name
"BTW I thought the Democrats were the party of BLM and Antifa and anti-white racism?"
They're not? News to me.
Is every white Republican voter racist?
Dems dreamed up a different strategy, Johnson-era: Build a low-expectation plantation in exchange for the black vote. Prove me wrong!
You mean dems convinced these groups to advocate for self segregation? The same outcome tbey advocated for with the KKK?
You aren't a bright one shrike.
Still not shrike, you lying fuckwit.
Why do black voters consistently vote Democrat? Because in your view they’re too ignorant to see that the Democrats are racists while the GOP aren’t? Because they’ve been tricked by the Democrats? Any explanation you come up with will rest on fundamentally racist assumptions about black voters.
This is clear as mud. I can't believe SCOTUS actually found a way to make it more confusing and selectively interpretable than it already was. Truly takes talent.
Standard Roberts ruling for any controversial ruling.
"Not only are we going to split this baby in half, we're going to make paper dolls out of it at the same time."
Treating individuals differently based on their race is an unacceptable affront to this idea, even if it is in the service of a well-intentioned goal. Taking this idea further, treating college applicants differently based on any demographic trait—including legacy status—offends this same principle.
FYI, this principle eviscerates the people pushing and teaching that thing in schools that's not being taught or pushed.
Except that colleges, even not-for-profit colleges, are businesses, and ought to be free to admit people based on the financial advantage to the college (so long as they are academically qualified.)
The real travesty, we discovered a few years ago, was that athletic scholarships, long viewed as a path to higher education for children from economically disadvantage backgrounds (many of whom came from groups which historically faced discrimination or worse), was actually a way for children of the wealthy to increase their chances of admission by hiring a squash coach or qualifying for the sailing team on Daddy's yacht.
"Except that colleges, even not-for-profit colleges, are businesses, and ought to be free to admit people based on the financial advantage to the college"
As long as that financial advantage isn't coming from tax dollars.
Corruption is so hot right now.
Please explain. Why would a ruling about college admissions, based on equal protection, affect whether a particular curriculum is taught in K-12 public schools somewhere?
"...While the ruling has attracted strong condemnation from supporters of racIST college admissions..."
Spelling corrected.
“I hold out enduring hope that this country will live up to its principles so clearly enunciated in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States: that all men are created equal, are equal citizens, and must be treated equally before the law.””
I’m literally shaking right now. What a misogynist.
Is mishomotransogynist a thing yet?
Pretty sure shrike and sarc qualify for that term.
I want you to know that I hate you for that linguistic abomination. ????
Well a women doesn't really exist anymore - bleeders, breeders, "bonus hole" owners..
>>The Supreme Court has stuck down race-based affirmative action in college admissions.
how about "struck" instead of "has stuck"? also, good for them it was past time.
Emma's a diversity hire
And it really should be "has stricken."
they taught us to not use "has stricken" over "struck" for active language purposes or something ... and never the word "that"
Stylistically, it's better to say "the Supreme Court struck" rather than "the Supreme Court has stricken." But, in fairness, the old participles are dying out along with the subjunctive, so "has struck" could probably be considered standard English at this point, even though it's technically like saying "I have went."
/grammar pedant
Grammar has eroded so badly that many people now refer to an individual person as "they."
You should see what they did to biology.
I still can't explain how much the use of plurals for singular pisses me off.
I am firmly in your camp. Maybe I should say "we are firmly in your camp". I just cannot bring myself (ourself) to throw out communication rules so ingrained in my brain, or to be bullied into submission.
The singular “they” goes way back, centuries before the current gender trend:
https://public.oed.com/blog/a-brief-history-of-singular-they/
Years before the current gender trend, I would use it sometimes in bland corporate memos I had to write on occasion where I had to make sure I didn’t sound sexist. It was less awkward than turning all the “he”’s into “he or she”’s.
I love the grasping done to try and legitimize modern pseudo-intellectualism by using tenuous historical arguments.
I always use the individual's name whenever possible to avoid the s/he conundrum.
Something tells me your user experience with college admissions will not change in the least, despite this decision.
Nope.
White guilt is a poison which began in academia, it won't die until they die.
In CA we outlawed affirmative action over 20 years ago. The UC was very open about their determination to find ways around it, and they have (i.e., they've already pioneered this "tell us about your racial struggle in your personal essay" angle).
Reuters researched family trees of pols and identified which had slave owners. 5 living Prez, 2 SC judges, 11 Gov, 100 Congress critters.
Granted, getting a conversation started about this can look like a struggle session. But avoiding all discussion about said legacy is cowardice. Only those who have reason to find out more because their ancestors were slaves are allowed. And they are ignored and infantilized. Or put on a pedestal.
The issue is still the American kryptonite
You're right. We definitely need to look into more ways to blame people today for things they didn't do, but some random ancestor of theirs did in the past.
I can't even begin to understand the logic of constant race baiting.
Of course. Unless that ancestor built this country and fought for and paid the price for freedom for us all.
Selective memory of the ancestors we want praised. And the amnesia about others.
Hey even better - play the game of which brother of a different mother is sold into slavery and which one goes to Congress. Because that happened to.
So you suggest an enumerated family honor system? -20 points for slave owners, +30 for a war hero?
Except war hero is always kind of a plus in any point in history. Even if they fought for a wrong or losing side, there’s still a baseline martial/sacrifice respect. Where slave owning only started getting a stench in certain parts of the world after a few centuries ago. Before then it was “look how great I am! I own 300 slaves!” *golf claps all around*
I’m not sure it’s apples to apples.
Ancient member of the rolling class: “I own 300 slaves!”
His peers: “You want a cookie?”
It wasn’t even praiseworthy, it was just par for the course.
What? So, now someone has to hope their ancestor sacrificed enough for you to meet some level of social credit? That's just fucking twisted in all sorts of ways.
You're totally missing the point of knowing your own ancestry. I guess I'm never surprised by that though.
You missing a complete understanding of individualism is of no surprise.
Then what was the point of bringing it up in the first place? If that's a defense of affirmative action, then that's pathetic of you.
Mention the fact that Kamala is a descendant of the biggest slave owner in Jamaica (I think it’s Jamaica, might be Bahamas). I dare you! Doing so got me the bum’s rush on a Reddit forum.
Every living president... except Trump.
Isn’t it interesting that Trump was the only president who’s family never owned slaves?
Redneck, racist, ultra-far-right-wing radical Texas did it better -- giving scholarships to state universities for any high school student who graduates in the top 10% of his or her class. Although it did create an incentive for some families to move to marginal school districts, thereby gentrifying them.
You fools! Howard and Spelman Universities are going to be crawling with VC! Cheyney's next! It's Tet all over again!
lolz
As Justice Clarence Thomas wrote in a concurring opinion, “While I am painfully aware of the social and economic ravages which have befallen my race and all who suffer discrimination, I hold out enduring hope that this country will live up to its principles so clearly enunciated in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States
Ivory tower hope means very little to the people being affected right now.
Ivory tower hope means very little to the people being affected right now.
Right, that's why they decided Harvard shouldn't be discriminating against Asians.
You mean, we can't fix racism by busing kids all over the county? Ok, well, I've got half a dozen more ivory tower hope ideas in the pipeline. Surely one of them will work.
So when the Asians figure out that they still can't get in due to legacy admissions, quiet "donations", and good old fashioned "we don't like your kind around here" ; will they then realize they were used as a racial crowbar to screw other minorities and Muffy & Biff are laughing all the way to the country club ?
LOL
Perception wholly created by watching TV is wild
Race blind admissions are good enough for Cal Tech, and has not caused any decline in their academic reputation.
Lol, how many legacy students do you think there are?
Poor ignorant lefty. The size of the obstacles you put forward wouldn't make a difference. You're just pissed your racist standards have been tossed aside.
https://edsource.org/2020/dropping-affirmative-action-had-huge-impact-on-californias-public-universities/642437
https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/M21-4312
Objective:
To examine the association between state affirmative action bans and percentage of enrollment in U.S. public medical schools from underrepresented racial and ethnic groups.
Results:
The percentage of enrollment from underrepresented racial and ethnic groups was 14.8% in U.S. public medical schools in the year before ban implementation in states with bans. The adjusted percentage of underrepresented students in ban schools decreased by 4.8 percentage points (95% CI, −6.3 to −3.2 percentage points) 5 years after ban implementation relative to the year before implementation, whereas the adjusted percentage in control schools increased by 0.7 percentage point (CI, −0.1 to 1.6 percentage points), for a relative difference, or difference-in-differences estimate, of −5.5 percentage points (CI, −7.1 to −3.9 percentage points).
Conclusion:
State affirmative action bans were associated with significant reductions in the percentage of students in U.S. public medical schools from underrepresented racial and ethnic groups.
White enrollment in colleges dropped after the repeal of Jim Crow.
No doubt that you are still pissed off about it.
You mean the morons who will no longer be automatically accepted to Harvard or UNC based solely on their skin color? Tragic.
Muh private organizations?
no do the civil rights act, shitlib
We doing jeopardy?
“What is the act that nullified the bill of rights?”
It's like counting the nails as they are driven into the coffin. RIP BoR.
In a 6–3 decision, the Court ruled that race-based affirmative action in college admissions violates the 14th Amendment.
Prompting congressional Democrats to call for the repeal of the 14th Amendment.
At least they show their true colors now.
So far it's just been demanding that they pack the court to 13 justices.
Never. That'd fuck birthright citizenship too.
So, OK, maybe you're on to something here...
Thomas really eviscerates both Sotomayor and Jackson, especially Jackson. Small wonder the Democrats hate him.
JUSTICE JACKSON has a different view. Rather than focusing on individuals as individuals, her dissent focuses on the historical subjugation of black Americans, invoking statistical racial gaps to argue in favor of defining and categorizing individuals by their race. As she sees things, we are all inexorably trapped in a fundamentally racist society, with the original sin of slavery and the historical subjugation of black Americans still determining our lives today. Post, at 1–26 (dissenting opinion). The panacea, she counsels, is to unquestioningly accede to the view of elite experts and reallocate society’s riches by racial means as necessary to “level the playing field,” all as judged by racial metrics. Post, at 26. I strongly disagree.
By the way, yet another faith-based argument. Tyrone didn't get into Harvard because his great great grandmother was a slave.
That's literally the argument. It's literally Ibram X Kendi's argument. It is literally the entire basis behind Critical Race Theory: There is a gap, there is disparate impact, therefore racism.
they do NOT want to go down the rabbit hole of cognitive performance differences by race.
I've found IQ correlates more with living outside Maine than race.
No one is allowed to do that any more. Not just them.
Good thing this wasn't about sex discrimination. Jackson would have no idea what to do!
Hell, she's not a biologist.
Or a Constitutional scholar.
Or even someone accepted to law school based on merit.
Did he mention that the elite experts she would have us live under are rich white women?
For sound economic perspective go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
the shitlib river of tears is already a wonder to behold.
The excerpts I've read from Sotomayor and Jackson cement my opinion that they are two to the lowest IQ justices ever to server. Just sad and embarrassing.
Sotomayor is the wisest of Latinas. She said so herself.
https://www.harvard.edu/admissionscase/2023/06/29/supreme-court-decision/
Found on their website – “The Court also ruled that colleges and universities may consider in admissions decisions “an applicant’s discussion of how race affected his or her life, be it through discrimination, inspiration, or otherwise.” We will certainly comply with the Court’s decision.”
So…nothing will probably actually change and they will just be better at hiding it.
^ this is exactly correct and already borne out by California's UC system that is legally bound by a statewide proposition to eliminate affirmative action. They end-arounded it and fully discriminate against whites and asians with impunity.
I kinda hope they let fewer Asians in now out of spite
It means they can't subtract 100 points from the SAT scores of Asian American students. That's a start.
Which is why they are moving to eliminate the SAT.
It took California’s universities two years to get their racial distribution back to what it was before Prop 209.
I doubt it will even take the Ivies two months.
The irony of the ethnicity based supreme court ruling on this... So does the supreme court convene in opposition to the 14th amendment and the constitution of the US by allowing KBJ to be there? Sounds like they should be ruling over us for sure.
You can't beat the simple logic of Roberts: "The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race."
From abc news when Breyer left the court.
"...at the White House, officially following through on his campaign promise made two years ago to the day to nominate the first Black woman to the Supreme Court of the United States."
Rofl this ruling is so awesome. At least ethnic discrimination isn't unconstitutional when the president and Senate do it to the supreme court, only when it's a private college doing it to kids spending government money. Is this how logic works? If the party taking money is "private" but the money being spent going to it is "public" the supreme court has jurisdiction to rule on how it is run. They rule that spending government money and considering ethnicity when doing so is unconstitutional. Shouldn't KJB be impeached immediately on the grounds that her hiring was unconstitutional? Then the entire federal government will have to tear itself apart as most of its hirings are probably for equity at this point. It's like our rulers are laughing at us at this point. This is a "let them eat cake" moment but most people are just gonna say "well at least we can eat cake". Rofl!
https://twitter.com/greg_price11/status/1674463061195862017?t=dM_hWXqu2rLutpisF-vdyA&s=19
Reporter: "Is this a rogue court?"
Biden: "This is not a normal court."
[Video]
"ya usually those assholes were totes in our pocket wtf"
https://twitter.com/ConceptualJames/status/1674462814981828630?t=neKZRNAPGa2XiJrhk66ohw&s=19
The American Association of Colleges and Universities calls striking down race-based admissios (so, striking down racial discrimination) "... a major setback for higher education and for our democracy."
"Our democracy."
[Link]
I mean, is this the AACU admitting without requiring race based admissions the higher education progressive institutions in this country are so racist that they are going to discriminate against black and Hispanic people? Or are they saying they believe black and Hispanic people are inferior to white and Asian people so they need the help from white saviors?
The illogic and racism of the left on this issue is monumentally staggering.
It was actually 6-3 and 6-2 since one of the Justices recused herself from the Harvard case.
That may have been one of the most bizarre non-recusal recusals that has ever occurred.
How many Asian American owned plantations were there in the Antebellum south?
Don't really know, but I'll bet there were huge numbers of plantations owned by Democrats.
Relevance to modern times?
Surprisingly, there are many.
Sophistry is an art, and not all works of art are masterpieces, but you can do better than this.
Implying that the Democrats of nearly 200 years ago are anything like modern-day Democrats is a prime example of sophistry. All they share is a name.
About the same as systemic racism.
https://twitter.com/greg_price11/status/1674436523977064452?t=sBLP506EupUArJ7nt0Z56Q&s=19
Wisconsin State Senator LaTonya Johnson says “fuck the suburbs” on the senate floor during a debate on crime spilling from cities to suburbs.
[Video]
That's sort of the point of state legislatures overruling local zoning ordinances to allow higher density housing, as Reason cheers them on.
Lol
One of the DNC's prime "influencer" accounts...
https://twitter.com/ericareport/status/1674453321078415362?t=0q6-oWLkxBnOZf4Dy7-O8Q&s=19
Today's Supreme Court decision is a direct attack on Black people. No Black person will be able to succeed in a merit-based system which is exactly why affirmative-action based programs were needed. Today's decision is a TRAVESTY!!!
did Robert Johnson chime in yet?
That has to be parody, right?
In a sane country, yes. Do you think this is a sane or serious country?
"While the dissent would certainly not permit university programs that discriminated against black and Latino applicants, it is perfectly willing to let the programs here continue," wrote Roberts. "In its view, this Court is supposed to tell state actors when they have picked the right races to benefit."
That sounds like something Thomas would say; very in-your-face. I wonder if he helped the Chief write the majority opinion.
https://twitter.com/SteveGuest/status/1674514678385393666?t=lhVUVdAuOc_r9Q35PvhCWg&s=19
WHAT ON EARTH IS JOE BIDEN DOING?
It's live TV!
[Video]
I don't like the guy, but as someone who had grandparents I cared about with memory problems I really hate to see this.
The entire admissions process is ridiculous.
They are splitting hairs and counting the number of angels on the head of a pin.
The better solution would be to identify the GPA/test score cutoffs that predict a reasonable chance of success, and then select the students by lottery from the entire population with adequate scores.
Think of it as an ETF instead of a managed fund. Better outcomes are likely.
>>while also acknowledging that many racial minority groups ... are affected by past and present racial discrimination.
equivalent to indicting "majority groups". can't do it.
I think the true reason the leftist politicians and bureaucrats are so upset/afraid over this decision is because, now, all the billions upon billions that are funneled into “poor minority communities” whether it be for after school programs, free internet, school issued tablets (has anyone seen the nonsense these are filled with?), increased spending per student, etc….it will all now be more scrutinized.
The corrupt politicians and bureaucrats that misuse, mismanage, embezzle, etc. these funds and have nothing to show for it, will now actually have to give these kids an education. No more automatic admissions into college when some of these kids can barely read or count to ten. The idea that these low income areas are in need of more funding is preposterous.
No, it means they will need to increase their funding to succeed.
The ruling seems a pretty straightforward application of the 14th Amendment -- Harvard can't discriminate based on race against Asian Americans. Yet 99% of the news coverage failed to mention how egregiously Harvard was violating the equal protection clause, actually subtracting points from standardized test scores based on race.
And Justice Sotomayor ought to be impeached for calling the 14th Amendment "a superficial rule of colorblindness." She seemed to have confused the Court's ruling today as new law, rather than the simple text of the long-existing law. President Biden and others bemoaned the loss of 40 years of precedent, but 40 years of precedent ought to be discarded when it is patently wrong.
Where was the whining when America threw out 400 years of precedent?
Everyone tweets #StopAsianHate, the Supreme Court did something about it today.
In the very not-frozen District of Columbia, the liberals were forced to eat Grutter v. Bollinger. And there was much rejoicing.
Why not repeal the 14th Amendment so that universities could resume affirmative action?
"Eliminating racial discrimination means eliminating all of it," wrote Chief Justice John Roberts in the Court's majority opinion. "In other words, the student must be treated based on his or her experiences as an individual—not on the basis of race."
How about if those experiences convince a student they are an oppressed individual victim of a mean society? Can they get bonus points for admissions with elevated victim status?
Like being descended ftom Holocaust survivors?
Any demographic trait? You mean like SAT scores, GPA or literally any quantifiable trait. How stupid do you have to be to write such a thing.
"While I am painfully aware of the social and economic ravages which have befallen my race and all who suffer discrimination, I hold out enduring hope that this country will live up to its principles so clearly enunciated in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States: that all men are created equal, are equal citizens, and must be treated equally before the law."
"Except for people who say But Jesus says... They are superior and exempt from any and all discrimination laws if they declare sky daddy says so."
-Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch, with concurring opinions trying to mask the Christian supremacy by Kavanaugh, Barret, and Roberts.
This is much better work than Mikes attempt up the thread. Could probably be a little more abstract rather than straight into the christian angle, but still a solid effort.
https://yourlogicalfallacyis.com/strawman
Lol. What an idiot. ^
Who'da'thunk that David Duke was personally in charge of admissions at Harvard and that affirmative action was the only thing forcing him to begrudging allow those rascally coloreds to attend.
Why can't private universities, and private businesses in general, discriminate as they wish? State universities--an entirely different matter.
Working part-time, I bring home almost $14,000 per month. I was keen to find out after hearing several others describe how much money they were able to make online. Well, it all sb-02 came to pass and completely altered my life. Now, everyone needs to try this work by using this website. . . Detail Are Here———————————————————>>> workingbitecoin12.com
They can, if they stop accepting government funding. Same goes for Title IX.
Democrats Devastated As Supreme Court Bans Racism
Babylon Bee | Fake News You Can Trust
https://babylonbee.com/news/democrats-devastated-as-supreme-court-bans-racism
How closely reality resembles parody!
But don’t worry the Democrats and Biden have a way to keep racism going, and to keep Asians out of prestigious colleges.
“Adversity admissions”! Just show how you have been “kept down” and the colleges get to decide who gets in! Wanna bet it isn’t Asians?
That's a start, now end the race based hiring, promotion, government loans and contracts based on race. Time we live up to the virtue of treating everyone equal as individuals. That would truly be the end of institutional racism.
The [WE] mob RULES party (i.e. "democracy") without no Supreme Law over their tyranny has to rule over someone and their favorite flavors are skin-color, gender, $bank (deserved or not), and sun-gods 'climate' religion affiliation.
There is no such thing as a [WE] mob RULES party without minions to RULE over.
Next-up; Racist Democrats threaten to stuff the Supreme Court.
Ref: FDR.
Why would this affect campus diversity at all?
Unless this is a tacit admission by Harvard that the only reason they were admitting black people was because they were forced?
While the ruling has attracted strong condemnation from
supporters of race-conscious college admissions,racistsThe Reason writers' word choices reveal who they are appealing to don't they.
As reflected in the Court's ruling, the best argument against affirmative action in college admissions
We should all understand affirmative action was not in question in this ruling, race preferences are the issue. Affirmative Action means actions like advertising in black targeted media and ensuring inner city schools, and their attendees, understand the requirements and evaluation criteria of universities. We know this because for decades advocates for Affirmative Action insisted this was true for decades while claiming anyone who criticized AA as cover for quotas and race preferences was racist (and therefore wrong.
So it's very strange to see so-called libertarians participating in the left's effort's to obscure the difference between affirmative action and race preferences. It either means they are not knowledgeable enough to understand the difference, or that they do understand the difference but support the left's effort to obscure that difference to the public.
Good. The 14th Amendment, contrary to popular belief, does not allow for the redistribution of wealth, let alone judges doing so.