The topic of discussion for this Constitution Monday is the Department of Justice (DOJ) finding that “Yale University illegally discriminates against Asian and white Americans through its admissions process” as reported by Mike Gonzalez at The Heritage Foundation.
The Justice Department announced Thursday
following the probe by its Civil Rights Division that Yale’s undergraduate
admissions process is “in violation of Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.”
The DOJ announcement did not mention that
discrimination based on race in admissions, hiring, housing, etc., also
violates the equal protection clause of the Constitution’s 14th
Amendment. It eventually will be up to the Supreme Court to reverse some of its
prior misguided rulings that race can be used as a factor in these actions.
The article by Gonzalez also quotes
Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband: “Unlawfully dividing Americans into
racial and ethnic blocs fosters stereotypes, bitterness, and division.” Dreiband
added, “It is past time for American institutions to recognize that all people
should be treated with decency and respect and without unlawful regard to the
color of their skin.”
Gonzalez explained why universities
began giving racial preferences. In the Bakke decision in 1978, “the
Supreme Court has held that colleges receiving federal funds may consider
applicants’ race in certain limited circumstances as one of a number of
factors.” However, the DOJ pointed out that Yale was using race in a way that
was “anything but limited.”
In the Bakke decision, the
Supreme Court warned universities to not use racial quotas as a remedy for past
discrimination. However, Justice Lewis Powell in writing the controlling
opinion in the 4-4-1 decision, indicated that race could be considered in
combination with other factors. His reasoning was that "achieving a
diverse student body is sufficiently compelling to justify consideration of
race in admissions decisions under some circumstances.”
The Justice Department said Thursday, for
example, that at Yale, “the great majority of applicants, Asian Americans and
whites, have only one-tenth to one-fourth of the likelihood of admission as
African American applicants with comparable academic credentials. Yale rejects
scores of Asian American and white applicants each year based on their race.”
Gonzalez
explained that decisions in the workplace, both private and public sector, were
the “result of the effort to end segregation and other forms of blatant
discrimination during the civil rights era.” He wrote that President John
Kennedy signed an executive order in 1961 instructing federal contractors to
take “affirmative action to ensure that applicants are treated equally without
regard to race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.” This means that all
hiring and promoting decisions should be based on ability and what the person
could bring to the organization. This seems to be a reasonable way for
employers to make their employment decisions. However, not everyone thinks this
way.
President
Lyndon Johnson had a different policy. To him, “Affirmative action” meant “the
opposite: making hiring, contracting and housing decisions with regard to race,
sex, and national origin.” This policy is in direct opposition to the constitutional
principle that all people are created equal.
I
agree with Gonzalez who wrote, “It is time to start enforcing our laws in a
colorblind fashion.” In 1890, abolitionist Frederick Douglas stated that the
government should be “a broad shield” that protects all Americans and its
business is “to see that every American citizen is alike and equally protected
in his civil and personal rights.”
It
seems to me that Americans have been bending over backwards to right the wrong
of slavery. We cannot go back 400 years to change history. We cannot even go
back 60 years to the time that the civil rights legislation was passed. We must
start where we are and move forward. We discriminate against other races, while
attempting to right the wrongs of the past. The business of our government is
to make sure that all Americans are treated equally before the law without regard
to race, religion, sex, or any other difference.
No comments:
Post a Comment