Black Conservatives Celebrate Supreme Court Ruling to End College Quotas
Ambassadors with the Project 21 black leadership network cheered this week’s U.S. Supreme Court ruling on two seminal affirmative action cases: Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College and Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. University of North Carolina. Project 21 had filed an amicus brief in the Harvard case.
The Court ruled in favor of Students for Fair Admissions in both cases, by deciding that institutions of higher learning cannot use race as a factor in admissions.
In the Courtβs ruling, Chief Justice Roberts wrote that the Court says it has βpermitted race-based admissions only within the confines of narrow restrictions. University programs must comply with strict scrutiny, they may never use race as a stereotype or negative, and β at some point β they must end.β
βToday we have a 21st century Brown v. Board moment,β said Project 21 Chairman Horace Cooper. βFinally, the court has ruled that colleges and universities will have to use only methods that are βrace-neutralβ for admissions and will no longer be able to discriminate against or in favor of applicants based on their race.β
βNo student should have to worry that they will be prevented from entry into college because of their race, and thanks to todayβs ruling, no student will,β added Cooper.
Finally, the Court Admits the Harm to Students
In what may be considered the most important issue addressed during the Supreme Courtβs 2022-23 term, the cases challenged race-focused policies rooted in previous court decisions that suggested that diversity goals justify using preferences in admitting incoming freshman classes.
Since the 1978 SCOTUS ruling in University of California Regents v. Bakke, race has been allowed to be a factor in college admissions, no matter the harm inflicted on students considered less favorable by college admission boards. That injustice has been undone with todayβs ruling.
βUsing discriminatory practices to supposedly remedy past discrimination was always going to be a recipe for disaster,β said Project 21 Ambassador Christopher Arps. βUnfortunately, Asian students, who you thought would benefit from affirmative action, instead have become one of its biggest victims. Todayβs Supreme Court decision is a decisive victory towards Martin Luther King, Jr.βs dream of a colorblind society.β
Equality Under the Law
βThis is a self-evident truth: all men are created equal. That means the God-given, intrinsic importance of life, liberty, property and equal treatment under the law is concrete and inviolable,β said Project 21 Ambassador Mike Hill, a former member of the Florida House of Representatives. βAll people should be treated according to their performance. Past discrepancies regarding this truth are not corrected by new violations. Affirmative action is wrong on its face. The majority on the Supreme Court got this one right. Finally.β
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βI am ecstatic over the Supreme Courtβs decision to strike down Harvardβs and UNCβs discriminatory admissions policies,β said Project 21 Ambassador Melanie Collette. βAffirmative action, while well-intentioned, has become a twisted game that rewards skin color over merit and that punishes hard-working individuals who are white or Asian.β
βFor years, blacks have been told their achievements are not solely their own, and that their skin color somehow played a role in their successes,β added Collette. βItβs insulting and demeaning to suggest that blacks couldnβt have done this without affirmative actionβs handout.β
A Victory for American Values
Today was clearly a victory for the country,β added Donna Jackson, Project 21βs director of membership development. βFixing our college admission process shouldnβt start with affirmative action initiatives; it should start with accountability at the K-12 level. The process clearly punished success and rewarded failure. Merit-based admissions ensures we are competitive not only in the marketplace, but in the world where innovation is needed. Setting low expectations for our students only creates low performance outcomes. We must always strive to challenge the next generation to ensure American greatness.β
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