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by perpetualpatzer
2138 days ago
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If this is a topic that interests you, I'd encourage you to listen to the oral arguments/ opinion announcements from the landmark supreme court cases: Bakke [0] and Grutter [1], the latter of which parent references. The legal underpinning, at least, of considering race in admissions actually IS to make a better class and in turn, a better experience for students. I also find it a more compelling moral argument than the past injustices or tilting the scales arguments. If the goal is reparations for past injustices, surely japanese internment should count for something. If the goal is to balance the economic scales, we should penalize underrepresented students from wealthy families (and frankly, the preference should be along economic, not racial lines). If the goal is to ensure students don't graduate thinking black (or non-asian, or athletic, or poor, ...) people are dumb because I didn't meet any in my prestigious college class, that seems to me a worthwhile goal that is legitimately furthered by trying to create a diverse class. To GP's point, I don't have data, but also think that outcome is hard to measure. [0]https://www.oyez.org/cases/1979/76-811
[1]https://www.oyez.org/cases/2002/02-241 |
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Is there a concrete actionable principle you can state, to be applied by everyone who needs to apply it?