Call it what it is
In October of 2006, Yale freshman Jian Li filed a civil rights complaint against Princeton University for rejecting his application for admission. He claimed that he was discriminated against because his application was rejected on the basis of his nationality; Asian American.
“Theoretically, affirmative action is supposed to take spots away from white applicants and redistribute them to underrepresented minorities,” Li told the Daily Princetonian. “What’s happening is one segment of the minority population is losing places to another segment of minorities, namely Asians to underrepresented minorities.”
Li points to a study conducted by two Princeton professors which concluded that if colleges were to remove the consideration of race from the admissions process that white applicants would feel little effect. Asian students, on the other hand, would fill nearly four out of every five places in admitted class that are currently taken by African American or Hispanic students.
Dare I say there exists a quota that limits the number of Asian students that are being accepted into elite colleges? This situation bears a striking resemblance to the quota used in the 20th century by institutions such as Harvard and Yale to keep Jews out of the Ivy League. In today’s supposedly more progressive and politically correct society we recognize that this was a discriminatory act.
A. Lawrence Lowell, Harvard’s president during this time boldly stated that Jews were a detriment to the school. “The summer hotel that is ruined by admitting Jews meets its fate … because they drive away the Gentiles, and then after the Gentiles have left, they leave also.”
They claimed that they weren’t admitting Jews not because they weren’t qualified but because having them would change the “feel” of the school. The same thing is happening today and we’re using affirmative action as a tool to accomplish it. We’ve also given that “feeling” a new name: diversity.
The irony in this is that it is becoming more and more apparent that the supposed benefits of affirmative action and diversity in education are often ephemeral and practically nonexistent.
Peter Kirsanow, a member of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, says that black students are often admitted into universities above their skill level and end up doing poorly and being unable to compete with their classmates.
This mismatch caused by affirmative action has been noticed by UCLA law professor Richard Sander, who found that nearly half of black law students reside in the bottom ten percent of their law-school classes.
Kirsanow asks: “Would college administrators continue to mouth platitudes about affirmative action if their students knew that preferential admissions cause black law students to flunk out at two-and-a-half times the rate of whites? Or that black law students are six times less likely to pass the bar? Or that half of black law students never become lawyers?”
The call for the removal of affirmative action in its entirety may be a little too rash, because I have seen many who have benefited from the system. It is essential; however, to have the gumption to call a spade a spade and realize that the diversity that college campuses try and create comes at the expense of an Asian population which is severely being discriminated against.
— Shivani Khanna
Comments
Fantastic article, I completely agree with your position. People need to wake up and smell the discrimination. I don’t think most folks who support this sort of affirmative action choose to address the fact that for every black or Hispanic student who is minority’d into college, there is a more deserving individual (of potentially ANY race) who should have been there. Come on, this is ridiculous.
Posted by: Kumars | January 24, 2007 7:31 PM
Shivani,
Excellent commentary. Did you hear the latest development in the Princeton case? Check this out from the NY Times:
At Princeton, a Parody Raises Questions of Bias
Posted by: dporreca | January 24, 2007 10:21 PM