(*HEAVY SIGH*)
From a careful reading of the convoluted brief that the
University of Texas filed this week in Fisher v. University of Texas, one thing
is clear: The university spent a fortune building a byzantine admissions
edifice whose purpose is to disguise how, and how much, the “holistic review”
process that it uses in making decisions about which students to admit is
race-based.
The Supreme Court will hear the case in October.
Abigail Fisher, a white student, says that she was denied
admission to UT’s undergraduate program because of her race.
As Peter Schmidt points out in The Chronicle of Higher
Education, UT in its brief marshals arguments “that explicitly seek to win over
Justice Anthony M. Kennedy,” who by virtue of being the Court’s swing vote on
most matters racial has become in effect the national Dean of Admissions for
schools seeking to preserve race preferences.
(*PURSED LIPS*)
Consider, for example, the lengths, or depths, to which
UT has gone to bury its consideration of race in the admissions process:
Applicants whose grades put them in the top 10% of their high-school graduating
class are automatically admitted.
* RACE NEUTRAL; SO FAR, SO GOOD...
For other applicants, the measure of their qualifications
is a combination of their Academic Index (AI) score, which reflects grades and
test scores, and Personal Achievement Index (PAI) score, which is where the
process goes subterranean.
According to the brief, an applicant’s PAI score is based
on two essays and a Personal Achievement Score (PAS).
Essays are reviewed by specially trained readers, and are
scored on a race-blind basis from 1 to 6.
* OK...
The PAS score ranges from 1 to 6 as well, and is based on
holistic consideration of six equally-weighted factors: leadership potential,
extracurricular activities, honors and awards, work experience, community
service, and special circumstances.
The “special circumstances” factor is broken down into
seven attributes, including socioeconomic considerations, and — as of 2005 — an
applicant’s race.
* JEEZUS FRIGGIN' CHRIST...!!!
Race is one of seven components of a single factor in the
PAS score, which comprises one third of the PAI, which is one of two numerical
values (PAI and AI) that places a student on the admissions grid, from which
students are admitted race-blind in groups. In other words, race is “a factor
of a factor of a factor of a factor” in UT’s holistic review.
* FOLKS... DOES ANYONE BELIEVE THIS SHIT? AND IN ANY
CASE, REGARDLESS OF PAST FLAWED AND THUS ILLEGITIMATE SUPREME COURT RULINGS,
THIS IS REVERSE DISCRIMINATION AND THUS UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
No "automatic" advantage or value is assigned
to race or any other PAS factor.
(*SMIRK*) (*WINK-WINK; NUDGE-NUDGE*)
Each applicant is considered as a whole person, and race
is considered “in conjunction with an applicant’s demonstrated sense of
cultural awareness,” not in isolation.
(*ROLLING MY EYES*)
Take that, Justice Kennedy!
We dare you to strictly scrutinize the use of race in
what Texas boasts is this “holistic and modest way in which race is
considered.”
Indeed, Texas goes so far as to claim that “it is
impossible to tell whether an applicant’s race was a tipping factor for any
given admit.”
* WHICH MEANS IT MIGHT BE! THEREFORE... (*BUZZ*)
If Texas itself doesn’t know how much weight it gives
race (that’s a big “if”), how can any judge say it gave race too much weight?
Nor does the brief explain how admissions officials determine whether applicants
have demonstrated a “sense of cultural awareness.”
(*SNORT*)
And yet — holy holistic! — year after year this “factor
of a factor of a factor of a factor” always produces a substantial number of
minority applicants who presumably would not have been admitted but for their
race or ethnicity.
Even more mysterious, despite all the ink that this
octopus of an admissions office has squirted over its Rube Goldberg process, it
emerges that Texas somehow does know how heavy its thumb is on the racial
scale. Otherwise, how could it confidently assert that of “the 728
African-Americans offered admission to the 2008 class, 146 — or 20% — were
admitted through full-file review” (that is, outside the top–10% policy)? (Or
that the figure for Hispanic applicants was 15%?)
If most, or even many, of the minority students admitted
outside the top–10% policy — who constitute 20% of black and 15% of Hispanic
admittances — would have been admitted without considering their race or
ethnicity, why did Texas spend so much money creating and defending this
intricate charade?
(*SMIRK*)
Texas, in short, attempts to walk a tightrope,
precariously balanced between two conflicting arguments — that considering race
is essential to producing “diversity” and that the admissions office, though it
can’t be sure how much it considers race, knows that it doesn’t consider race
very much.
With Justice Kennedy’s dissent in Grutter clearly in
mind, the Texas brief insists repeatedly (I count about 15 times) that its
system for assessing applicants falls outside Kennedy’s definition of
unacceptably race-based admissions policies, noting at one point that “UT’s
policy lacks the features that Justice Kennedy found disqualifying in Grutter:
it is undisputed that UT has not established any race-based target; race is not
assigned any automatic value; and the racial or ethnic composition of admits is
not monitored during the admissions cycle.”
Texas strongly implies that the absence of a quota,
numerical goal, or “race-based target” combined with its sincere devotion to
“diversity” gives it license to consider race however it chooses.
(I’ve never understood what is wrong with quotas that is
not also wrong with any policy that rewards some people and burdens others
because of their race or ethnicity. Indeed, reading Texas’s repeated touting
that it eschews goals and targets made me think for the first time that quotas
would actually be preferable to the “holistic” malarkey defended here and
elsewhere. Quotas at least exert some downward pressure on the consideration of
race, whereas what Texas seeks here is freedom from any limits on consideration
of race as “one of many factors.”)
Noting that “African-American and Hispanic students were
nearly non-existent in thousands of classes,” Texas describes that situation as
“a red flag that UT had not yet fully realized its constitutional interest in
diversity.”
In 2003, the Austin campus was still afflicted “with a
“stark racial isolation in classrooms” even though the pool of Hispanic
applicants since 1996 had been large. (This apparent desire to bring
“diversity” to every classroom suggests a virtually insatiable appetite for
race-conscious admissions extending into the indefinite future.)
(*NOD*)
Readers of the brief could be excused for believing that
the primary academic mission of the University of Texas is to combat racial and
ethnic stereotypes — stereotypes that it believes its top–10% plan actually
reinforces!
"The African-American or Hispanic child of
successful professionals in Dallas who has strong SAT scores and has
demonstrated leadership ability in extracurricular activities but falls in the
second decile of his or her high school class (or attends an elite private
school that does not rank) cannot be admitted under the top 10% law.
Petitioner’s position would forbid UT from considering such a student’s race in
holistic review as well, even though the admission of such a student could help
dispel stereotypical assumptions (which actually may be reinforced by the top
10% plan) by increasing diversity within diversity. That is not to say that a
minority applicant with a less disadvantaged socioeconomic background is
preferred."
No? What then does it say?
* I HAVE NO FRIGGIN' IDEA! THEY'VE LOST ME WITH THAT ONE!
(*SNORT*)
* NEAREST I CAN FIGURE, THEY'RE SAYING, "IF YOU'RE BLACK
OR HISPANIC AND GRADUATED WITHIN THE TOP 10% OF YOUR CLASS WE WANT YOU... AND
IF YOU DIDN'T GRADUATE WITHIN THE TOP 10% OF YOUR CLASS... WELL... AS LONG AS
YOU'RE BLACK OR HISPANIC YOU MAY GET PREFERENCE OVER WHITE KIDS WITH SIMILAR
APPLICATION RECORDS."
Is Texas similarly concerned to dispel stereotypes of
Asian grinds by giving preferential treatment to, say, Chinese - or Japanese - American
football players whose SATs are below average?
(*SNORT*) (*RUEFUL CHUCKLE*)
Texas’s preferential treatment of blacks and Hispanics
reinforces the most invidious stereotype of all — that they are unable to
succeed unless they receive special treatment.
(*NOD*)
Ironically, some of the most cogent criticisms of the
principles underlying the racial-preference policy defended in this brief can
be found in the early writings of one of the UT lawyers who signed it, Douglas
Laycock, a law professor at the University of Virginia. As a professor at the
University of Michigan and, before that, at Texas, Laycock was heavily involved
in defending other race-preference admissions policies. But earlier in his
career he wrote several articles — some with his wife, Teresa Sullivan, the
formerly fired but now rehired president of the University of Virginia —
arguing, as in this influential 1980 law-review article, that “no individual”
should be “treated differently because of his membership” in “a racial, sexual,
religious, or ethnic group.”
* OH, WELL... WHAT'S A LITTLE HYPOCRISY BETWEEN FRIENDS,
RIGHT?!
That article quoted and strongly endorsed Senator Hubert
Humphrey’s insistence during the debate over the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that
“the meaning of racial or religious discrimination is perfectly clear. . . . It
means a distinction in treatment given to different individuals because of
their different race, religion, or national origin.”
In a 1983 law-review article, Laycock disagreed with
those who “use race and sex as cheap proxies for traits with which they are
correlated” and concluded by affirming that “sex and race blindness have been
the civil rights ideal.”
* WELL... (*SIGH*)... OBVIOUSLY THAT WAS THEN... THIS IS
NOW.
Laycock emphasized that civil rights protect individuals,
not groups. In a critical review (1981) of John Hart Ely’s Democracy and
Distrust, Laycock responded to the argument that the colorblindness he then
favored would inhibit racial progress: "It is no answer to say that Ely’s
construction is more likely to produce social and economic equality in the long
run. That statement, which I do not concede, is comprehensible only in terms of
equality for groups. But the constitutional command is equality for
individuals. Moreover, it is the “protection of the laws” that must be equal,
not social and economic statistics."
* OH, WELL... I SUPPOSE HE SIMPLY CHANGED HIS MIND.
(*SNICKER*) (*GRIMACE*)
Like many liberals, however, Laycock later abandoned his
devotion to colorbindness for racial preferences...
(*HEAVY SIGH*)
...and in the Hopwood case he defended the UT law
school’s consideration of race in the admissions process.
Writing about Hopwood several years after it had been
decided (but before it was overruled in Grutter in 2003), Laycock revealed how
far he had moved from his earlier views, arguing that affirmative action didn’t
discriminate against very many people (an argument I’ve addressed here, here,
and here). “With more than 4000 applicants a year,” he wrote, “affirmative
action for a hundred or so of them has little effect on everybody else.”
Perhaps. But for those hundred or so individuals who are
denied admission every year because of their race, affirmative action has an
effect that is negative — and dramatically so. Ask Abigail Fisher.
(*PURSED LIPS*)
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