The liberty principle for this Freedom Friday concerns equality for all Americans and the authority of the U.S. Supreme Court being supreme in the land. For years, U.S. colleges and universities based their admissions on race rather than meritocracy. Then they were called on it.
The Supreme Court ruled in 2023 that colleges and universities must “comply with the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment in their admissions policies.” The current question is whether the colleges and universities are complying to the court decision or cheating. Hans von Spakovsky and GianCarlo Canaparo wrote of the circumstances in their article published at The Daily Signal.
In June of 2023, in Students for Fair
Admissions v. Harvard and the University of North Carolina, the Supreme Court
held that the academy had to end its pernicious policy of discriminating on the
basis of race in deciding whether to admit students. The colleges argued they
need to discriminate to achieve “diversity,” a practice based, as Chief Justice
John Roberts said, on the “offensive and demeaning assumption that [students]
of a particular race, because of their race, think alike.”
“Universities,” the court held, “have for
too long” not treated students as individuals, but have “concluded, wrongly,
that the touchstone of an individual’s identity is not challenges bested,
skills built, or lessons learned, but the color of their skin. Our
constitutional history does not tolerate that choice.”
The response by the universities to the
many criticisms of these discriminatory practices, which included their using
overbroad, underinclusive, and arbitrary racial categories, said the court, was
“trust us.”
So, can we trust them, or have they been practicing a latter-day form of “massive resistance” to complying with the Students for Fair Admissions decision and the constitutional requirement to treat their students equally, without regard to skin color?
Keep in mind that
the students who sued Harvard and the University of North Carolina were Asian
Americans, who were discriminated against to keep their numbers down in the
admitted classes of schools such as Harvard, UNC, Yale, Duke, and Princeton,
among many others.
Despite having higher test scores and
better academic credentials than other applicants, they were being
disproportionately kept out of these schools, and by a wide margin.
Duke, Yale, and Princeton, along with 13
other schools, filed an amicus brief in the case claiming that if the Supreme
Court eliminated their ability to discriminate, they would not be able to
maintain the diverse composition of their student bodies. Instead, they would
have a “racially and ethnically homogenous class” – i.e., the proportion of
minority students (anyone who isn’t Asian or white) within the student
population would decrease.
The universities’ “consideration of race
and ethnicity in admissions avoids this outcome,” they said, warning that if
they could not consider race, there would be, for example, “a near 33% reduction
in the number of African American students admitted” and similar reductions for
other “underrepresented” minority groups.
Relevant to all of this are the recent
race statistics released by some schools for the Class of 2028. Yale, for
example, which was discriminating against Asian American students, just like
Harvard and UNC, engineered a 6-percentage-point drop in the admission of Asian
American students, which went from 30% in the Class of 2027 to only 24% in the
Class of 2028. On the other hand, the percentage of black and Native American
students was unchanged.
Similarly, at Princeton, the percentage of
Asian American students fell from 26% to 23.8%, and at Duke, from 35% to 29%.
These numbers suggest that the schools are
either cheating, or that they lied to the Supreme Court when they said that a
victory for Asian Americans at Harvard “would undercut [their] vital efforts to
attain diverse student bodies.”
As it turns out, the schools have had no
trouble attaining what they call “diverse” student bodies; that is, a student
body where fewer Asian American students get in than deserve to.
So, did they lie to the Supreme Court? Or
did they figure out how to cheat?
The
authors indicated that there is “reason to think that they may be cheating.”
Then they gave reasons for that belief: (1) “influential left-wing deans and
professors have been explicit about getting around the decision.” (2) “President
Danielle Holley of Mount Holyoke College publicly declared that her school
still thinks it’s important to racially balance its student body, and so the
schools’ admission process “will have to” be less transparent. (3) “the
Biden-Harris administration issued guidance to help schools carefully
circumvent the ruling,” (4) “left-wing academics have begun acclimatizing the
public to the idea of openly disobeying Supreme Court opinions they don’t like.”
After
sharing reasons for the belief that the universities and colleges are cheating,
the authors gave several ways in which they could be cheating: (1) “encourage
applicants to disclose their race in essays,” (2) “require or encourage
applicants to submit photos or to do application interviews from which their
race can be determined,” (3) “give advantages and disadvantages to applicants
from ZIP codes or high schools where students of one race or another tend to
congregate.”
The organization behind the Supreme Court
victory against Harvard and UNC has put these schools on notice that they are
its next target. And the next time that the Justice Department is controlled by
people who aren’t racial ideologues, these schools may well be targets of the
federal government, too.
We hope, however, that these schools will agree, without coercion, that racial discrimination is illegal, unconstitutional, and immoral. But we aren’t holding our breath.
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