By Garion
Frankel
Thursday,
July 06, 2023
Last Thursday,
the Supreme Court decisively struck down affirmative-action programs
practiced by Harvard and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The
Court declared that affirmative action, which allowed universities to employ
race-conscious admissions programs, violated the 14th Amendment’s
equal-protection clause.
Unsurprisingly,
the boo-birds immediately emerged from the woodwork. The Biden
administration, left-leaning
journalists, and
progressive activists alike decried the ruling as a significant step back in
the fight against systemic racism and discrimination. The Court’s decision,
they say, will homogenize universities and harm efforts to achieve
socio-demographic equity in education. Raul Reyes, an attorney who frequently
writes for CNN and MSNBC, called the ruling “out of touch,” and argued that “the end of affirmative
action will limit the ability of Latinos to access selective colleges and
attain economic mobility.”
What a
load of baloney.
The
complaints addressing Hispanic communities particularly interest me. Though my
last name might mislead you, I am Mexican American. My grandmother, who
emigrated from Mexico, often drove me to school, and I was named a National
Hispanic Merit Scholar in high school. I’ve earned two degrees, and I’m currently working
on my third, at the fine state school Texas A&M. Based on these activists’
logic, I should weep because my younger cousins and future children will
apparently never have a fair shake at Harvard.
I’m not
weeping. Hispanics are perfectly capable of determining their own positions on
affirmative action. We are also capable of becoming doctors, lawyers, or
researchers without affirmative action.
If
affirmative-action advocates want to generate support among Hispanics, they
need to stop turning to the bigotry of low expectations. The whining and
pontificating should stop because America’s Hispanic communities deserve better
than being babied.
My claim
that the collective activist complaining amounts to babying is not an
exaggeration. Affirmative-action advocates have been preparing for years for
the program’s end. More specifically, friendly media outlets and academics have
highlighted activist efforts to galvanize support for affirmative action in
Hispanic communities. They typically glorify protesters, label Hispanic opponents to
affirmative action as racists, and connect Hispanic college attendance to social justice more broadly.
The
media is truly of one mind on affirmative action. Many journalists freely cite activists who assert that
Hispanic voters “do not know what the goal of [affirmative action] is”
and proclaim that its end will “crush”
diversity in elite professions.
These
arguments are patronizing. The clear implications are that Hispanics are too
stupid to know what’s good for us, are incapable of attending college without
some form of institutional support, and have to be involved in social-justice
activism in order to have worth.
Even if
you agree with the idea of affirmative action, the policy accomplishes very
little. A landmark 2005 study found that “the elimination of race-based
admissions preferences in California and Texas had little or no effect on the
decisions of highly qualified minorities to submit their SAT scores (and
presumably apply) to the selective institutions in the two states.”
Moreover,
the study found little evidence that affirmative action “seduces” minority
students towards elite universities. Instead, “the fact that their SAT-sending
behavior did not change after the elimination of affirmative action suggests
that minority applicants thought they deserved consideration for admission at
top schools irrespective of affirmative action.”
In other
words, we Hispanic students know our worth. We know that we are capable of
attending good universities, and we know that we don’t need government help to
attend them. The idea that minorities will never be able
to succeed in a merit-based system is pernicious and ridiculous. With that in mind, it’s no wonder
that Hispanics are beginning to reject what some have called “progressives’ paternal
politics.”
Affirmative
action is now illegal throughout most of higher education, but the war goes on,
as affirmative-action policies remain in both the private sector and K–12 education. At this rate, progressives should
look elsewhere for activism fodder. Sooner or later, Hispanics are going to get
sick of the condescension.
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