After the decision by the United States
Supreme Court concerning Affirmative Action was announced, a whole lot of
articles have been written for and against it. This post will do neither. It is
about time for our community to get off the merry-go-round of lies that have
been peddled to us for way too many years and start working on our own rules
for success and full access to the supposed American dream dammit!! The continuing
debate about affirmative action has been nothing but a thick ass smoke screen
of bogus sounds bites and numbing silence that has ignored the truth in order
to paint a false picture.
Affirmative Action has been the favorite
whipping post of many people (especially white conservatives) for years.
It
has to be the beauty that continues to be looked on as the beast. Much of the
debate around affirmative action has been centered on the bullshit red herring
of racial preferences. It’s the height of hypocrisy that white America loves to cry and
whine about the racial preference card when it comes to college admissions
and/or government contracts when resources are directed their way every day
based on race and historical advantages. These advantages based on race occur
every day but have roots in yesterday. The access to a strong network based on
family and neighborhood ties that were built over generations where us Black
folks were intentionally excluded from competing in those areas is a preference
based on race ain’t it?
Wealth passed on from generation to
generation that was gained in large or small part due to slavery, segregation,
and/or discrimination of Black folks is a preference based on race. It don’t
matter that that same discrimination is illegal as long as the fruits from the
past discrimination are still ripe to help give white folks an advantage.
Affirmative Action is not about reparations to us Blacks for past
discrimination. It is not about handing out preferences based on race (although
society already does a good job against us). It’s about eliminating the racial,
gender, and ethnic preferences that are still a big part of our society today.
It’s actually about merit. Merit is not what your momma or what your daddy or
your granddaddy did. It is not how well a silver or bronze or gold or platinum
spoon fits into your mouth. It is about you!! What have you done on your own?
Very few people stand on their own. Most of
“us” stand on the shoulders of the people that came before us, so if your
father’s or grandfather’s or mother’s or grandmother’s shoulders were bent due
to the weight of the inequality of their time, then you may not be able to
reach as many stars as someone without that disadvantage. Get it?
When
a child that grew up in a good to elite school system with plenty to eat,
little to fear in traveling to and from school and enough resources to pay
tutors to prepare for the SAT and/or ACT has good grades and great test scores
is it nature or nurture? The same can be asked about the child that has average
grades and scores but grew up in a mediocre school system where failure is not
only expected, it is embraced and yet this student is able to surpass all
expectations.
Is that nature or nurture? Who is really
more impressive? Hum? There is a wealth and opportunity gap in this country and
there always will be. Whereas the wealth gap is real, the opportunity gap may
not be completely justifiable; and the problem is that both gaps are in large
part based on racial preferences. The wealth gap numbers speak for themselves
and are shocking as hell. The opportunity gap may be a lot smaller than it was
a hundred years ago but it still exists and it exists in part due to lack of
opportunity for us that are still a part of our society today. Those gaps
continue for many reasons, the least of which is institutional racism that
still exist today. Yet, those gaps based on very real racial preferences are
masked by the lies of omission (we never discuss these truths) and/or the
excuses given to distract from the tower of inequity built upon an elitist
system that is inherently racist. Dammm!! The driving assumption behind the
attack on affirmative action is that undeserving and unqualified Black students
are given admission to elite universities solely based on their race, gender,
or ethnicity. The funny thing is no one can seem to define what is “qualified”
or who is the most “qualified.”
Who most deserves admission into a highly
competitive, highly selective, and highly ranked state university? Does the
student with access to the most money and therefore the best equipped to
provide resources to the university deserve to be admitted first? Should the
admission hierarchy be based on the student’s prior achievements, even if those
achievements may be as much a function of being born into a family with
resources as it is the student’s internal drive? Should it be based on a
student’s demonstrated track record of overcoming obstacles and barriers to
his/her success? Should it be based on the student’s likeliness of success in
college? Should it be based on being able to provide a unique perspective in
the pursuit of higher learning than most of the other student body?
Should it be based on all of the above?
No one seems to be willing to step up and
answer those questions. Instead we are left with the elitist fiction of social
Darwinism that only the students that have the numerically best grades, test
scores, and activities have earned the right to admission in the small number
of “elite” schools that are the only repository of knowledge. A convenient
talking point and definition of who is qualified that will always favor the
wealthy and empowered, while also dodging the reality that a big part of the
formula to evaluate who is most “qualified” is flawed and skewed to their
advantage. A big part of the current system of evaluating students for
admission to college is flawed. It is flawed in large part due to the
dependence on standardized tests that are not good predictors of likelihood of
success in college, but the tests are very good at giving an advantage to
children with resources and disadvantaging Blacks. Surprise! Surprise!
Surprise!
The bottom line is this. Our community has
to stop accepting the lies of the past and start thinking for ourselves. We
have to be clear about our own paths to success. We have to build, maintain,
and reinforce our own networks to build our own wealth and power (which
includes funding and attending HBCUs). We can no longer be slaves to the
majority’s definition of what is a relevant school or what constitutes
“qualified.” Texas , Florida , and Michigan just love the hell
outta their college football and basketball teams, which are over represented
by Black folks. I wonder if the coaches from those schools found as much
mistrust and animosity from minority star high school athletes during the
recruitment process as affirmative action has faced over the years if all of a
sudden the value of diversity in the student body at these universities would
start to be discussed. Crazy idea? Most first steps towards revolutions are.
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