The Case Against Race-Based Affirmative Action

By Hector Luis Alamo, Jr., Being Latnio

On October 10, the Supreme Court will again reconsider the necessity and constitutionality of race-based affirmative action when it hears arguments in the case of Abigail, Fisher, a white woman who was rejected by the University of Texas and blames her rejection on the school’s partially race-based admissions process.

Opponents of such policies argue that race-neutral alternatives have been just as successful — if not more so — at fostering diversity on college campus across the nation. A few prominent supporters, like the University of California and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, argue that a switch from race-based polices to race-neutral ones would be detrimental to the racial diversity of America’s universities.

From NBC Latino:

“A new report out Wednesday offers a big reason for their optimism: evidence from at least some of the nine states that don’t use affirmative action that leading public universities can bring meaningful diversity to their campuses through race-neutral means.

That conclusion is vigorously disputed by supporters of race-based affirmative action, including universities in states like California which cannot under state law factor race into admissions decisions. The new report, by the Richard Kahlenberg, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation and prominent advocate of class-based affirmative action, calls those states’ race-neutral policies largely successful. The University of California and others call them a failure that’s left their campuses inadequately representative of the states they serve.

Kahlenberg also acknowledges that highly selective universities like UCLA and the Universities of California-Berkeley and Michigan haven’t recovered from drop-offs in minority enrollments after voters in those states outlawed racial preferences.

But in most places, the report argues, a combination of measures – aggressive outreach, de-emphasizing of standardized tests, affirmative action based on class instead of race, and even getting rid of legacy preferences that mostly benefit whites – has allowed minority representation on their campuses to recover to previous levels.”

Race-based affirmative action has served the country well, allowing countless students to receive an education at a college or university that they otherwise would’ve been unable to attend.

Nonetheless, no person who has benefited from race-based affirmative action can feel very good about it. Why should I, they ask themselves, be allowed to attend this school based primarily on the color of my skin or the color of my parent’s skin?

That’s because race is no longer the hindrance it once was — not in Obama’s America. Class is the newdeterminant of opportunity in the United States; poor is the new brown.

Switching to class-based affirmative action would achieve two things at once: diversity would increase on college campuses (because if you help the poor, you’re also helping blacks and Latinos, who are disproportionately so) and you allow poor whites, who might find it just as difficult to receive a good education as many blacks and Latinos do, to receive that education.

Does racism still exist? Is the soaring structure of institutionalized racism still intact? Of course it is. Yet, race-based affirmative action strikes me as doing more harm than good at tearing down racial discrimination.

There’s no policy more racist than one that would allow an admissions office to look at a student’s grades, deem the student ineligible for admission, but then somehow, through voodoo academics, reverse their decision based on the student’s race. It would be like someone telling me, Oh! you’re smart and Latino? — as though being smart and Latino were like juggling while riding a unicycle.

Nothing keeps Latinos from getting into elite schools, not technically, because no one in today’s America is rejected by a school based on race or ethnic background. But getting into an Ivy League school while being lower class — coming from a poor family and growing up in a dilapidated neighborhood plagued by every sickness that poverty carries with it — now that’s tough.

Class-based affirmative action would achieve the very thing that Martin Luther King dreamed so many decades ago — “that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.”

It’s not hard to be Latino and successful in today’s America. But to be poor and successful, now that takes character.

This article was first published in Being Latino.

Hector Luis Alamo, Jr., is an associate editor at Being Latino and a native son of Chicago’s Humboldt Park neighborhood. He received a B.A. in history at the University of Illinois at Chicago, where his concentration was on ethnic relations in the United States. While at UIC, he worked first as a staff writer for the Chicago Flame and later became the newspaper’s opinions editor. Since then he has contributed to various Chicago-area publications, most notably, Hispanically Speaking News and Gozamos. He has maintained a personal blog since 2007, YoungObservers.blogspot.com, where he discusses topics ranging from political history and philosophy to culture and music.

[Photo by KitAy]

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