Friday, September 20, 2013


Affirmative Action
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/affirmative-action/

Affirmative action is an issue that directly affects me as a college applicant. I may be refused entry to a college because another less qualified applicant who happens to be a minority fills my slot. This seems to me horribly unfair, and I disagree with any favoritism at all in terms of college, jobs, and anything else applicable.

                I understand that minorities in the US are often underrepresented in the higher echelons of society and education; however, I do not believe that the way to fix this is by discriminating against people who are better qualified and will perform better in the positions that are in question. In the Supreme Court Case Regents of the University of California v. Bakke (1973), the ruling overturned the rejection of Allan Bakke on the basis of his race (white), setting a precedent against affirmative action. Justice Powell, who cast the deciding vote, wrote that choosing a student based on their race goes against Title IV of the Civil Rights Act, which promises that no person will be discriminated against on the grounds of race.

                However, more recent Supreme Court decisions have upheld limited affirmative action. Modern arguments for affirmative action state that as universities are training the future leadership of the US, students at college should roughly represent the diversity of the US, because the leadership of the nation should represent the diversity of the nation. I disagree with this because it seems to me that the future should not lie with the most ethnically diverse leadership; rather the most effective leadership. Basically, I think that discrimination based on race should not exist, and people defending ‘affirmative action’ should call it what it is; discrimination against people who work harder, score higher, and perform better on the basis of their skin color and/or gender. This is exactly what rights activists have been fighting against for generations. Is discrimination really different just because it is aimed at white males instead of minorities and women? I think not.