affirmative action

How the Fight Against Affirmative Action at Harvard Could Threaten Rich Whites

Perpetually in jeopardy, the use of racial preferences in college admissions is under greater threat than ever.

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7 Reasons Why Betsy DeVos' Latest Hire May Be Her Scariest Yet

Since taking the helm at the Department of Education, Betsy DeVos has put together a who’s who of for-profiteers, regulatory rollback artists and civil rights skeptics. But her latest hire, conservative attorney Hans Bader for a job in the Office of General Counsel at the Department of Education, may be the most alarming so far. The appointment of Bader—and what we know of his most recent work as senior counsel at the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI), a libertarian think tank, from 2003-2017 as well as his past work as senior counsel at the conservative Center for Individual Rights (CIR)—raises multiple red flags about the ongoing love affair between extreme right-wing ideology and corporate influence in the Trump administration. Here are seven reasons why this latest hire may be DeVos' scariest yet.

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Students at Overwhelmingly White Universities are Missing out - I Know Because I was one of Them.

A recent episode of the Brian Lehrer Show on WNYC quickly got at everything that’s wrong with the debate over affirmative action and the larger issue of race and education. The show featured Marvin Krislov, former general counsel at the University of Michigan when the Supreme Court upheld race-based admissions there, discussing the news the Trump Administration plans to challenge university admissions policies “deemed to discriminate against white applicants.” And then a Michigan grad called in to rant.

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Rampant White Supremacy at the White House As Trump Tries to Distract His Base

Donald Trump is too dumb to be trusted to butter his own bread, but one thing his limited brain is capable of understanding is that tickling the racist impulses of much of white America makes them cheer for him. This explains the dizzying escalation of white supremacist gibberish emanating from the Trump administration over the past week. Trump is afraid he’s losing his proverbial “white working class” base and believes his best bet to win them back is to remind them that he shares their hatred and distrust of people they view as racially or ethnically Other. Unfortunately, he’s probably right.

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After Abigail Fisher

On Thursday, June 23, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of a race-conscious post-secondary admissions policy at the University of Texas at Austin.

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WATCH: Wilmore Brilliantly Rips Anti-Affirmative Action Crusader Abigail Fisher

Abigail Fisher has been whining about not being admitted into University of Texas for almost a decade. As someone who's also a white person who was not admitted into UT for failing to make the top 10% of my high school class (I'm a transfer student and proud of it!), I find her victim complex uniquely annoying. As does Larry Wilmore, who took aim at it Thursday night in a segment where he broke down what was at stake in Fisher v. University of Texas.

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Justice Scalia: Minority Students May Be Better Off Going to 'Lesser Schools'

US supreme court justice has suggested that black students may benefit from the end of affirmative action admissions policies in US universities because many are “pushed ahead too fast” and should go to “lesser schools” instead.

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Affirmative Action Is Back in Court. Arguments Against It Make No Sense

American conservatives have been engaged in a long war against the constitutionality of affirmative action at public universities and other institutions. The latest battle reached the US supreme court on Wednesday, as the justices once again heard oral arguments in Fisher v University of Texas, the challenge to the school’s affirmative action program.

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What Abigail Fisher’s Affirmative Action Case Is Really About

Update, June 29, 2015: The Supreme Court on Monday announced that it would again hear Fisher v. Texas, an affirmative action case in which a white woman claims she was denied admission to the University of Texas because of her race. In 2013, the Court ruled narrowly on the case, requiring the federal appeals court that had ruled against the woman, Abigail Fisher, to re-examine her arguments. Last year, the appeals court again decided against Fisher, affirming that race could be one of the factors considered in trying to diversify the student body at the university.

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Patricia Williams: The Latest Affirmative Action Decision Isn't Just About Race

This story originally appeared at The Nation, and is reprinted here with their permission.

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Segregation Alive and Well in U.S. Schools

As the U.S. Supreme Court upholds a ban on affirmative action in Michigan and the country marks 60 years since the landmark decision of Brown v. Board of Education, we look at how segregation is still pervasive in U.S. public schools. An explosive new report in ProPublica finds school integration never fully occurred, and in recent decades may have even been reversed. Focusing on three generations of the same family in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, the story concludes: "While segregation as it is practiced today may be different than it was 60 years ago, it is no less pernicious: in Tuscaloosa and elsewhere, it involves the removal and isolation of poor black and Latino students, in particular, from everyone else. In Tuscaloosa today, nearly one in three black students attends a school that looks as if Brown v. Board of Education never happened." We are joined by Nikole Hannah-Jones, whose article, "The Resegregation of America’s Schools," is the latest in the ProPublica series "Segregation Now: Investigating America’s Racial Divide."

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