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  • When we imagine getting into college in the US, it often looks like a race to fill a

  • limited number of seats.

  • A good SAT score?

  • +10.

  • Class president? +8.

  • You play the bassoon?

  • +15.

  • We mostly agree that these factors are a good way to decide who should get a seat.

  • But there's one factor where Americans disagree...

  • Race.

  • Should race continue to play a role in how colleges pick their students?”

  • Why should I be discriminated against because I'm white?”

  • As a tool to increase diversity, affirmative action has been successful.”

  • Why are you supporting - explicitly supporting - a system that penalizes people for the color

  • of their skin?”

  • High achieving kids, having under-resourced neighborhoods and under-resourced schools

  • need and deserve a leg up in admissions.”

  • There's a reason this debate makes you want to cry, and it's not just because it's about

  • race.

  • It's because we suck at talking about race-based affirmative action.

  • And there are two simple reasons why.

  • One reason we suck at talking about affirmative action is because many of us don't actually

  • know what it is.

  • It was originally a way for colleges and universities to give special consideration to racial minorities

  • to help undo the effects of past discrimination.

  • And for many schools, it meant setting aside a certain percentage of their seats for minority

  • applicants, including the University of California Davis Medical School.

  • But that changed in 1978 because of this man, Allan Bakke.

  • Bakke was rejected twice by the UC-Davis medical school.

  • So he filed a lawsuit.

  • Back then, the school reserved 16 of the 100 seats for minority students, in an effort

  • to remedy past discrimination.

  • It was a quota.

  • Bakke argued he had higher academic scores than several minority students who were accepted.

  • And in 1978, the Supreme Court sided with Bakke.

  • The court said the school couldn't use quotas to racially balance the student body.

  • And that they couldn't consider race to remedy past racial discrimination.

  • The reasoning?

  • Justice Lewis Powell wrote that societal discrimination is not a valid reason for considering race.

  • So, Bakke was admitted to UC-Davis and became a doctor.

  • Ninety-seven medical students graduated there today, among them, Allan Bakke.”

  • But his case didn't end affirmative action.

  • It just redefined it.

  • Here's the rest of Justice Powell's decision: "the only state interest that fairly may be

  • viewed as compelling on this record is the interest of a university in a diverse student body."

  • So university administrators could no longer use affirmative action to address past discrimination,

  • but they could use it to create a diverse student body.

  • And, to be fair, diversity is beneficial to everyone.

  • For example, research shows that it exposes students to different ways of thinking, which

  • helps them better solve problems.

  • But here's what's so confusing.

  • The Court said colleges couldn't use quotas to create diversity.

  • But later, the court said colleges needed concrete diversity goals.

  • So how do you have a goal without naming an actual number?

  • Well, one way would be to give bonuses to all students of a certain race.

  • But in 2003, the Court said that was not allowed.

  • Instead, schools could consider an individual student's raceif it was a factor

  • of another factor.

  • All of this means that our debates tend to paint a picture of affirmative action that

  • just isn't correct.

  • It's not a racial bonus or quota.

  • And it's not about historical discrimination.

  • It's a very narrow, and frankly confusing, tool for colleges to create more racial

  • diversity.

  • And it's that tiny sliver of affirmative action that many conservatives want to kill.

  • And the latest effort comes in the form of a highly charged allegation:

  • Harvard is discriminating against Asian Americans.

  • “A group of about 60 Asian organizations is suing Harvard University.”

  • At issue is whether the university imposes a cap on the number of qualified Asian-American

  • students that it admits.”

  • But Harvard's argument is essentially that the Supreme Court says that we can use

  • race in admissions to diversify our campus.”

  • Harvard assigns each applicant something called a "personal" score to measure subjective things

  • like kindness, courage, and leadership.

  • And Asian applicants are scored lower on that metric than white applicants.

  • Meanwhile, on the academic metric, Asian applicants tend to score higher than white applicants.

  • So the plaintiffs argue that, since Asians have better academic profiles, Harvard is

  • using this "personal" scores to balance out the number of Asians they get.

  • Which is, ultimately, a fancy racial quota.

  • But in this chart, you can see that the share of Asian students varies a lot from year to year.

  • If Harvard had a quota, you'd expect that share to stay the same.

  • But even if Harvard wins its case, affirmative action opponents hope that this case will eventually

  • go to the Supreme Court, a body that's recently become more conservative.

  • And their ultimate hope is that this Court will rule broadly — and just kill affirmative

  • action entirely.

  • But there's another part of story that we glossed over — and it makes this debate

  • very confusing.

  • Harvard really is giving Asians lower personal scores.

  • And many Asians are pretty angry.

  • Asian-American students are marked down, subjectively.”

  • “I mean, courage, bravery, saying that Asian-American students lack that?

  • It's insulting.”

  • It brings up the inevitable question: Where do Asians fit into the affirmative action

  • debate?

  • It's a confusing question because Asians certainly face discrimination, but we've also had a

  • lot of success in higher education.

  • At very selective private colleges, Asians make up the second biggest group, even though

  • we're a much smaller portion of the US population.

  • But this isn't because Asians work harder or care more about education.

  • Here's a chart of immigration to the US since 1820.

  • That tiny red sliver is Asians.

  • You can see that, for much of American history, the US severely limited Asian immigration

  • and enacted racist policies like the Chinese Exclusion Act.

  • This means most of our families weren't subject to policies like Jim Crow and redlining that

  • engineered separate schools and neighborhoods for white people.

  • The US eventually allowed Asians into the country, and we arrived in large numbers.

  • But US immigration policy selected for certain types of people.

  • Here, we can see the percentage of newly arrived US immigrants with college degrees.

  • And Asians are among the most educated.

  • This doesn't mean that all Asian Americans share the same history.

  • Asia is a big continent, and our histories vary pretty widely.

  • Here, we can see poverty rates are very different across these groups.

  • But by looking at our histories — which were largely determined by our skin color

  • and ethnicitywe can understand how Asians might face racist admissions practices.

  • But how that doesn't mean Asians suffer systemic disadvantages in education.

  • And that's the other reason we suck at talking about affirmative action: we often ignore

  • the history.

  • Opponents of affirmative action say that any policy that considers a person's race violates the

  • 14th Amendment, which says everyone is guaranteed "equal protection of the laws."

  • But looking at our history helps us understand why that's misleading.

  • The equal protection clause was created to protect the rights of black people after the

  • Civil War.

  • And the Supreme Court has cited it in decisions like Brown v. Board and Loving v. Virginia, cases

  • that made American society more inclusive.

  • And the Supreme Court has ruled, time and again, that being inclusive doesn't mean we

  • have to be colorblind.

  • For example, today's schools are still highly segregated and children of color still face

  • major disadvantages.

  • So creating a more inclusive system requires us to recognize the role of race in America.

  • And this is arguably the best defense of affirmative action.

  • But the Supreme Court says that schools can't use the history racial discrimination as a defense

  • for considering race.

  • The only thing schools can say is: diversity is good for everyone.

  • And soon, if this Harvard case makes it in front of the Court, colleges might not even

  • be able to make that argument.

  • Which means a place like Harvardthe training ground for America's elite, where about one

  • in four students are currently black or Hispanicwould go back to looking the way it did

  • two generations ago.

  • And conservatives will finally get the colorblind process they've long dreamed of.

When we imagine getting into college in the US, it often looks like a race to fill a

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