By Will
Swaim
Thursday,
July 13, 2023
Among the
weirdest reactions to the Supreme Court’s June 29 decisions on affirmative
action, those megaphoned by California’s political class may be the most
unhinged.
Here’s
the reality: California voters banned race-based admissions in 1996. But in the
decades since, progressives have crafted multiple paths around that
prohibition. The result is a uniquely evolved system, a steam-blowing,
clanging, banging Rube Goldberg contraption of
progressive-media activism, unsupervised agency rulemaking, and political
grandstanding fueled by money and rage.
That
system is now likely to become the national average.
But
these deeper realities were absent from the end-times proclamations of
California’s political leaders following the Court’s decision in Students
for Fair Admissions v. Harvard. Senator Dianne Feinstein, only recently
called a racist by
San Francisco’s school board, hit Twitter to
declare that
the “deeply disappointing decision . . . will do long-term damage to our
ability to build diverse and robust institutes of higher education.” Democrat
Barbara Lee, a
congresswoman from Oakland who hopes to replace Feinstein in the U.S. Senate,
called the end of race-based university admissions part of “a coordinated
effort to uphold white supremacy.” In a tweet, former House speaker Nancy
Pelosi said
the Court’s ruling “narrows access to higher education & the crucial ladder
of opportunity that it provides. Its impact will be felt imminently,
diminishing hard-fought progress for racial justice.”
“This
ruling bends to right-wing extremists and upholds white supremacy,” said Cecily
Myart-Cruz, head
of the United Teachers of Los Angeles. “This egregious decision is a direct
attack on racial justice and widens inequality for working class communities of
color across the country.”
But Governor Gavin
Newsom beat
them all for incendiary language. He went January 6 on June 29, comparing the
majority to Klansmen:
The Supreme Court’s conservative majority has yet again upended
longstanding precedent, changing the law just because they now have the votes
to do so, without any care for the costs to society and students around the
country. Right-wing activists — including those donning robes — are trying to
take us back to the era of book bans and segregated campuses. As Justices
Sotomayor and Jackson put it powerfully, no one benefits from ignorance:
diverse schools are an essential component of the fabric of our democratic
society. While the path to equal opportunity has now been narrowed for millions
of students, no court case will ever shatter the California Dream. Our campus
doors remain open for all who want to work hard — and our commitment to
diversity, equity, and equal opportunity has never been stronger.
There
were countless others like that, left-wing jeremiads amplified by a progressive
commentariat that dominates what’s left of the state’s major newspapers. The
Court’s decision “will have catastrophic effects” for minority students,
the Los Angeles
Times predicted.
The Sacramento Bee chose the adjective
“devastating.” The Court’s decision summited “the height of conservative
judicial activism,” wrote the Bay Area’s Mercury News.
But just
beneath the hyperbole was a kind of calm, a peace that comes from knowing that
the decision will mean little in California and perhaps elsewhere. As the Mercury
News noted, “The experience of California — where affirmative action
was eliminated by Proposition 209 in 1996 — shows that it still will be
possible to have diversity in higher education, but it will take sustained
effort and it will be difficult.”
That
sustained effort has been relatively easy in California. But easy or hard, the
pursuit of “racial diversity” as the central purpose of university education is
absolutely essential to progressives’ broader social and political ambitions.
***
If you
want to know how post-affirmative-action America will look, consider admissions
to California’s two university systems.
California’s
reputation for excellence in K–12 education began its slow
decline in
1975, when first-term governor Jerry Brown signed legislation that abracadabraed
teachers’ unions from
voluntary associations into the state’s most powerful political entities. The
real-world effects of that single decision have been most savage in black and
Latino school districts, where the teachers’ unions’ one-size-fits-all,
industrial-scale processes have produced some of America’s worst outcomes.
That’s in part because of poverty, of course, but also because union
politicking locks poor kids into neighborhood schools where the worst (or
merely least experienced) teachers are kept on the job, where principals wield
only anemic authority over their staffs, and where political indoctrination
trumps reading and math. It was Myart-Cruz, head of L.A.’s
teachers’ union, who proudly declared that “our babies may not have learned all their times
tables” but “they know the difference between a riot and a protest. They know
the words insurrection and coup.”
The
result: Just 30 percent of California’s black high-school graduates read at
grade level; a mere 10 percent can handle grade-level math. But while student
test scores fall, politicians and teachers’-union leaders celebrate the
rise in graduation rates.
That
ought to be a red flag. But state university officials since 1996 have mastered
the art of pretending not to see the scam. Indeed, they’ve become willing
collaborators. In 2021, with graduation rates rising and test scores falling,
the University of California system — which includes Los Angeles, Berkeley, and
San Diego — bowed to political pressure and scrapped the SAT and ACT for all
applicants. “The settlement resolves a 2019 lawsuit brought by a coalition of
students, advocacy groups and the Compton Unified School District, a largely
Black and Hispanic district in Los Angeles County,” the New
York Times observed. “The plaintiffs said that the college entrance tests are biased
against poor and mainly Black and Hispanic students — and that by basing admissions
decisions on those tests, the system illegally discriminates against applicants
on the basis of their race, wealth and disability.”
A few
months later, in early 2022, the separate, more modest California
State University system
followed suit.
But
eliminating the SAT and ACT tests merely masked the K–12 failure. Predictably,
when students from lousy high schools enter the state’s universities, they
struggle or even drop out. They’re demoralized, and, when they leave, they’re
poorer, too, thanks in part
to student debt.
The
political class responds to this scandal not with a return to academic rigor
but with claims of systemic
racism — most
famously, per the state’s Reparations Task Force, time-traveling back to the
19th century where it finds an imagined
slave history in
the state that explains the origins of California’s educational crisis among
black children.
This is
America’s pedagogical future, and the Golden State’s university administrators
are already laying out the road map for their counterparts in the rest of the
nation. Much of their advice meets the standard laid out in the Court’s
decision — that admissions cannot be based on race or ethnicity but may include
(in a personal essay, for instance) evidence that an applicant had to overcome
challenges that include race or ethnicity. California calls this “holistic
review”; writing for the Court, Chief Justice John Roberts called it
acceptable: “Nothing in this opinion should be construed as prohibiting
universities from considering an applicant’s discussion of how race affected
his or her life, be it through discrimination, inspiration or otherwise.”
This is
what the rest of the nation can expect in the world of “post” race-based
admissions. There will be spotlights and cameras for public denunciations of
disparate outcomes in the nation’s universities. But there will be silence
around the pernicious impact of teachers’ unions on K–12 education as an
explanation for those outcomes. And every failure will be met with more urgent
calls for a progressive response.
The
average American voter, legitimately outraged, will likely continue to find
guidance from a consent manufactured by progressive activists. Progressive
politicians, judges, journalists, experts, university officials, and activists
will declare that the persistence of unequal outcomes is evidence of the
lingering impact of “badges and incidents of slavery,” “white supremacy,” and
“extremism,” bitter fruit from the tree first planted in 1619.
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