Walter E. Williams
Wednesday, June 24, 2009Ward Connerly, former University
of California Regent, has an article, "Study, Study, Study -- A Bad
Career Move" in the June 2, 2009 edition of Minding the Campus
(www.mindingthecampus.com) that should raise any decent American's level
of disgust for what's routinely practiced at most of our universities.
Mr. Connerly tells of a conversation he had with a high-ranking UC
administrator about a proposal that the administrator was developing to
increase campus diversity. Connerly asked the administrator why he
considered it important to tinker with admissions instead of just
letting the chips fall where they may. His response was that that unless
the university took steps to "guide" admissions decisions, the
University of California campuses would be dominated by Asians. When
Connerly asked, "What would be wrong with that?", the UC administrator
told him that Asians are "too dull -- they study, study, study." Then he
said to Connerly, "If you ever say I said this, I will have to deny it."
Connerly did not reveal the administrator's name. It would not have done
any good because it's part of a diversity vision shared by most college
administrators.
With the enactment of California's Proposition 209 in 1996, outlawing
racial discrimination in college admissions, Asian enrollment at UC
campuses has skyrocketed. UC Berkeley student body is 42 percent Asian
students; UC Irvine 55 percent; UC Riverside 43 percent; and UCLA 38
percent. Asian student enrollment on all nine UC campuses is over 40
percent. That's in a state where the Asian population is about 13
percent. When there are policies that emphasize and reward academic
achievement, Asians excel. College officials and others who are
proponents of "diversity" and equal representation find that outcome
offensive.
To deal with the Asian "menace," the UC Regents have proposed,
starting in 2010, that no longer will the top 12.5 percent of students
based on statewide performance be automatically admitted. Students won't
have to take SAT subject matter tests. Grades and test scores will no
longer weigh so heavily in admission decisions. This is simply gross
racial discrimination against those "dull" Asian students who "study,
study, study" in favor of "interesting" black, white and Hispanic
students who don't "study, study, study."
This is truly evil and would be readily condemned as such if applied
to other areas lacking in diversity. With blacks making up about 80
percent of professional basketball players, there is little or no
diversity in professional basketball. Even at college-level basketball,
it is not at all unusual to watch two teams playing and there not being
a single white player on the court, much less a Chinese or Japanese
player. I can think of several rule changes that might increase racial
diversity in professional and college basketball. How about eliminating
slam dunks and disallowing three-point shots? Restrict dribbling? Lower
the basket's height? These and other rule changes would take away the
"unfair" advantage that black players appear to have and create greater
basketball diversity. But wouldn't diversity so achieved be despicable?
If you answer yes, why would it be any less so when it's used to fulfill
somebody's vision of college diversity?
Ward Connerly ends his article saying, "There is one truth that is
universally applicable in the era of 'diversity,' especially in American
universities: an absolute unwillingness to accept the verdict of
colorblind policies." Hypocrisy is part and parcel of the liberal
academic elite. But the American people, who fund universities either as
parents, donors or taxpayers, should not accept this evilness and
there's a good way to stop it -- cut off the funding to racially
discriminating colleges and universities.
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