РефератыИностранный языкAfAffirmative Action Essay Research Paper As Nick

Affirmative Action Essay Research Paper As Nick

Affirmative Action Essay, Research Paper


As Nick Catoggio went to his mailbox, he knew that his acceptance letter from


Harvard University had arrived. Although Nick was nervous, he knew that his hard


work in high school had gained him admission into one of the world?s most


prestigious institutions of higher learning. Because of his grade point average


of 4.0 in high school, his numerous extracurricular activities, and a combined


score of 1440 on his SATs, Nick believed that he would almost be guaranteed


admission to Harvard. When he opened the letter however, he was shattered when


he read the words, ?We regret to inform you ?? He immediately called his


friend Richard Sahk, who had also applied, to tell him his news and to see if


Richard had received his letter from Harvard. Richard said, ?Yeah Nick, I got


in!? Nick was astonished. Richard?s GPA was only 3.7, and he receive a


combined score of 1100 on his SATs. After a long pause he replied, ?It?s


because I?m black, Nick,? Richard felt bad for his friend. Both he and Nick


had realized that he was accepted by Harvard because of his race. Nick was mad


because he was qualified and didn?t get in; Richard felt upset because he


wasn?t as qualified as Nick but was admitted because of his race. This is an


anecdotal example of one of the many criticisms of affirmative action. In fact,


the whole controversy over preferences based on race and gender has been debated


ever since the Civil Rights Act was passed in 1964. I believe that Affirmative


action should be discontinued, this program is a new kind of discrimination to


counter the past discrimination and this defeats the whole idea of the program.


Affirmative action is defined, as a program ensuring that a predetermined


proportion of jobs or college admissions go to African Americans and presumably,


other minorities and women as well (Woods 102). Also, James Q. Wilson in the


winter 1996 issue of The New Republic takes affirmative action to mean the


selecting of persons based on their group membership (23). Nicholas Lehman


writes that affirmative action today refers to " stuff that helps black


people." By this, he says that affirmative action today has come to mean


everything from "preferential college admissions to the way news is covered


to what’s hung in museums to corporate promotional practices" (84).


According to Nicholas Lehman, affirmative action started out as Executive Order


10925. Lyndon Johnson, the incoming vice President asked Hobart Taylor Jr., the


lawyer son of one of his friends, to work on a draft of an executive order that


would ban discriminatory hiring by Federal contractors. Taylor later said that


he "was searching for something that would give a sense of positiveness to


performance under executive order, and I was torn between the words ‘positive


action’ and the words ‘affirmative action.? . . . And I took ‘affirmative


action’ because it was alliterative" (40). Even during Johnson’s proposal


of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the issue of racial quotas was controversial.


Said then-Senator James Eastland of Mississippi, "… I know what will


happen if the bill is passed. I know what will happen if there is a choice


between hiring a white man or hiring a Negro both having equal qualifications. I


know who will get the job. It will not be the white man" (Lehman 40). The


people who seek to abolish affirmative action claim that more qualified students


are being displaced by less-qualified students. But there are no more or less


qualified students, only students who can benefit from attending a university


such as Michigan get a chance, and no one knows in advance who they are. The


opinions that accompany the various Supreme Court cases concerning affirmative


action have been perplexing, and, at times, contradictory. Woods Geraldine


referred to the opinions of the justices as pieces of a puzzle that no one,


including the court itself, knows how to solve completely (65). This confusion


is probably the result of disagreement among the justices. Many of the cases


involving affirmative action have been decided by very close votes. Even when


the justices vote the same way, their separate opinions often explain what they


agreed for entirely different reasons. Let?s take the example of the case,


?The Regents of the University of California v. Bakke.? On October 12, 1977,


the Supreme Court was scheduled to hear case no.76-811. Both proponents and


opponents of affirmative action waited to hear arguments about whether a white


male, Allan Bakke, should be admitted to medical school at U.C. Davis. On the


application form, Bakke noticed that there was an item that stated,


"Applicants for economically and educationally disadvantaged backgrounds


are evaluated by a special subcommittee of the admissions committee. If you wish


your application to be considered by this group, please check this space."


A special taskforce had been created by the University to help bring in more


minorities and economically disadvantaged students into the school. This task


force was included in the admissions process and was charged with helping to


evaluate the applications of minorities and economically disadvantaged persons.


After being rejected by Davis several times, Bakke sued the school claiming that


he had been discriminated against because of his race. Bakke believed that some


of the students that had been accepted by Davis were less qualified, looking at


MCAT scores, than himself but were admitted because they were members of


minority groups. The University countered Bakke’s argument by explaining that


all the students at Davis were fully qualified. Because society’s past


discrimination against minorities, the school claimed that it was justified in


considering race as one of the factors in the admissions process. The University


also stated that it trained physicians who were more likely to serve


disadvantaged communities after graduation. In June 1978, after several lower


courts had ruled in favor of Bakke and the subsequent appeals of the University


of California, the court announced its decision. Four justices voted to admit


Bakke to the medical school at U.C. Davis. Another four justices voted in favor


of the University of California. In their view, the school’s admissions program


was constitutional and Bakke’s rights had not been violated. Justice Powell


broke the deadlock. He agreed that Bakke should be admitted because the


admissions process was unfair, but he did not rule against affirmative action.


He said that those types of programs could not assign a particular number of


places to minority candidates, however they could take race or ethnic background


into consideration as a positive factor in their consideration of candidates


(Woods 68). For years, this colleges and universities have interpreted this


ruling as meaning that they could use race, ethnicity, and gender as criteria in


the admissions process. As Lemann put it, "The decision may have been a


statesman like piece of juris prudence, but in admissions office circles, it is


widely viewed as meaning that it’s O.K. to reverse discriminate as long as


you’re not really obvious about it" (85). Proposition 209 is a California


ballot initiative voted on in November, 1996. It will change the constitution of


the state of California. This proposition prohibits discrimination or


preferential treatment based on race, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin


in public employment, education, and contracting. The so-called California Civil


Right’s Initiative, which is neither civil nor righ

t, is really a deceptive


attempt to constitutionalize gender discrimination and slam shut the doors of


opportunity that both women and people of color have fought so hard to open. It


places a hurdle to minorities and women that is not placed to others who seek


legislation to benefit them. he elimination of affirmative action programs for


women and minorities run by the state or local governments in the areas of


public employment, contracting, and education that give ?preferential


treatment? on the basis of sex, race, color, ethnicity, or national origin


would have a devastating affect on the minorities in the society but at the same


time we need to keep in mind that the common person is also existing in this


society to be successful and not to be denied what he/she deserves just because


there were injustices done to the minorities and these injustices should be


reversed. As for a review of surveys and polls regarding affirmative action,


Charlotte Steeh and Maria Krysan have reviewed the major polls and surveys


conducted by major organizations over the past 25 years. Among the polls and


surveys they looked at the following: ? ABC News/Washington Post surveys ?


Associated Press/Media General surveys ? CBS News/New York Times surveys ?


Detroit Area Study ? The Gallup Poll ? General Social Survey ? Harris and


Associates surveys ? Los Angeles Times surveys ? NBC News/ Wall Street Journal


surveys ? National Election Studies ? Princeton Survey Research Associates


surveys ? Times Mirror Center for the People and the Press surveys One of their


discoveries is that there were very few systematic attempts to survey public


attitudes about affirmative action in the first twenty years of affirmative


action. It wasn’t until the mid-1980s that there were systematic attempts to


identify trends in public opinion concerning affirmative action. Despite this


lack of replicated data, the authors were able to come to some conclusions. 1.


Public opinion towards affirmative action is fluid. The deciding factor in


whether people support affirmative action programs or not depends upon the


wording of survey questions. If a question is worded to emphasize the preference


or quota aspect of affirmative action, then people will tend not to support


these types of programs. Also, questions that are worded so that they tap into


the individualistic aspect of what the authors call the "American


creed" tend to be result in lower support for affirmative action. 2. There


is a large difference between the levels of support for affirmative action


programs between blacks and whites. Black support for preferences and economic


aid exceeds 40 percent in all of the surveys and polls studied. White support


for these same types of affirmative action, however, generally is below 20


percent. It should be noted, however, that black support for economic assistance


for blacks and other minorities dropped from about 80 percent at the start of


the 1970s to about 40 percent at the start of the 1980s. 3. More people believe


that reverse discrimination occurs than actually is reported. Between 64 and 80


percent of people believe that reverse discrimination occurs at least


occasionally. This is contrasted to roughly 5 to 20 percent of whites who


reported that they themselves or someone in their families had been denied a job


or promotion (27). Looking at these surveys in more detail, Alpern noted that


women were divided on the issue of affirmative action. Only 49 percent of women


polled thought that a policy that ensures equal opportunities for women should


be continued. Forty-one percent thought that this kind of policy should be


discontinued. Nonwhite women, however, tended to support affirmative action


policies. Roughly 75 percent of nonwhite women favored a policy to ensure equal


opportunities for both women and blacks. On the other hand, Alpern noted that


very few women believed that they themselves had benefited from affirmative


action policies. The Hart-Teeter poll showed that only 9 percent of all women


and 11 percent of working women responded that they had themselves benefited


from such programs. In a Newsweek poll conducted by the Princeton Survey


Research Associates in March of 1995, 27 percent of women thought that their


gender had been helped "a lot" by affirmative action programs (68).


Contrary to previous findings, however, roughly half of respondents in the


Hart-Teeter poll were against requiring employers to seek out qualified minority


and female applicants for jobs. Once again, however, the word


"required" may have affected respondents’ affitudes towards


compensatory type of affirmative action programs. In summary, the results of


surveys and polls regarding approval of affirmative action programs differ


dependingpn how survey questions are worded and also the race, gender, and


political orientaion of respondents. After my examination of the history of


Affirmative Action and the various court cases and surveys, I found Out that


equality of oppurtunity has become a basic economic ideal for United States.


Americans appear in general agreement that merit should be the only criterion


for advancement in life. Yet it is also widely ackhowledged that women and


blacks and also members of various other racial, ethnic, and religious


minorities in this country are seriously handicapped by their sex or origin


rather than merely by any lack of ability when they seek career advancement.


It’s here that affirmative action comes into the scenario. Instead of providing


a path for these minorities and women to get on a level plane with the other so


called "preferred" people these types of programs actually drift them


even further apart. Some women and members of minority may feel insulted by this


preferential treatment or may always find themselves in a position to prove


their worth. On the other hand, the deprived people may increase their prejudice


against them to a further degree because they feel that they lost out, not to a


better suited person, but to a privileged unworthy person. Therefore plans like


these must be done away with because they defeat their very purpose, as they


appear to be just as racist and sexist as the injustices they are designed to


remedy. It’s just another name for discrimination or even reverse


discrimination. Discrimination for a "good" reason is just as terrible


as discrimination for a "bad" reason. Affirmative action denies women


and minorities the right to compete as equals; indeed it actually assumes that


they cannot compete as equals, which is I am sure not its purpose. When


countering the statement that this kind discrimination is necessary to make up


for past it justices, I can all but simply defend my belief by appropriately


saying that "Two wrongs don’t make a right". Or, as the wise saying


goes, "You can’t use alcohol to treat alcoholism.?


Kreitner, Robert, Kinicki, Angelo. Organizational Behavior New York: Bryant


and Dillon published, 1998 Lehman, Nicholas. ?Affirmative Action.? NEW York


Times 18 June.1995: 40-42,84 Steeh, Charlotte. Krysan, Maria. ?Review of


Surveys and Polls? Poll Trends, 1970-1995 1996 Wilson, James Q. ?An


Affirmative Action?.? The New Republic winter. 1996: 102 Woods, Geraldine.


Affirmative Action. New York, London, Sydney : Franklin Watts, 1989. Steeh,


Charlotte. Krysan, Maria. ?Review of Surveys and Polls? Poll Trends,


1970-1995 1996 Argument in Favour of Proposition 209 ,


?Why are we opposed to Proposition 209??. FAQs about California votes no on


209 Feburary 18, 2000

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