2B - The Michigan Daily - New Student Edition - Fall 2003 4 Diversity! Where? HUSSAIN RAHIM N ACOLEPTIC INSOMNIA I'm not really sur- prised. There are a few more people against affirmative action than for it, and then there are a select few who either don't know, don't care or are too scared to say. Then we have one study that says diversity as a result of affirmative action is good and another that says it is bad. When you hear about something repeatedly,, no matter how germane the topic, it gets boring. But it's here and pret- ty soon it'll be all over, but I still have a feeling of resignation towards it all. The U.S. Supreme Court will soon decide on the chimera of whether diversity in higher education is a compelling state interest. However noble that argument may be, it is tantamount to a smokescreen because diversity is not the goal here. Diversity doesn't matter, it wasn't the pur- pose of affirmative action nor should it ever be. JFK didn't authorize affirmative action in 1961 because he wanted a social identity mixer. Affirmative action, regardless of its beneficiary, has always been about oppor- tunity, availability and righting institution- al discrimination. What is desired is a solution to a problem that exists in our society, this being that certain groups of people are disproportionately excluded from benefits and privileges that others have unlimited access to. The way the Uni- versity sees as best to rectify the disparity between the opportunities of lower educa- tion is to offer an admission policy where certain social identities afford you benefits in the process. It worked well enough for women to bring them to a level of equality in higher education where they no longer need it. Diversity, openness, inclusiveness are all political terms to appease the Constitu- tion wavers but they are not feasible goals within a university setting. A few scattered percentages of assorted minorities do not constitute diversity. While there are those that argue diversity may. provide inherent educational benefits in a classroom and university setting, I say these benefits are only benevolent side effects. If diversity is improperly recreated as the basis of affir- mative action, - and it seems to have been - when diversity is not found to be of interest to the state, those who changed its purpose must not be confused. Diversity is a faulty goal because it has no real definition or effect in the personal realm. Since the implementation of affir- mative action and the subsequent decades of active pursuit of minorities in higher education, college campuses appear more diverse than ever, but that in no way is a sign of actual connection of students across racial identities. If you have the for- tune of experiencing diversity in your classroom, I guarantee it's not going much further than that. Even in the classroom, the effects are negative - and at best intangible - because many times students ba h n m +, ono«, o, :v '- ing. The worst case being a campus where the racial tension is palpable, and the stu- dent population fragments into ethnic or interest groups. This school is not too hard to imagine. At best there will be a class where the material is purely empirical and personal experiences will have no weight. In biolo- gy it doesn't matter who you are, just as long as you know how many cells are in an electron (four I think). I doubt anyone has walked into a class and said, "One, two, uh, three black people, and a Latino! Sweet dude, I'm staying in this discus- sion!" Why is this? Because people don't care. With the exception of maybe five kids in East Quad, no one associates with people too far from his comfort zone. The way affirmative action is applied, diversity brings in more minorities so that once they are in school everyone can splinter off into their respective groups and meet at class or dance shows. Possibly it is the University's responsibility to try to get students to reach out, or maybe it is the students' duty. I don't know. I do know that the country is falling to the right - made evident by Republican control and that things do not look good. In the sum- mer, when the white man, led by Clarence Thomas, shuts down affirmative action (I'm calling 5-4), the backlash will be immeasura- ble. When the minority population disap- pears, no one will even notice. The Moment of truth 4 Supreme Court should rule in University's favor "You do not take a person who for years has been hobbled by chains and liberate him, bring him to the starting line of the race and then say, 'You're free to compete with all the others,' and still justly believe that you have been completely fair. Thus, it is not enough just to open the gates of opportunity. All our citizens must have the ability to walk through those gates ... we seek not just equality as a right and a theory but also equality as a fact and equality as a result." - President Lyndon Johnson delivering the commencement speech at Howard Uni- versity in 1965. fter six years of legal wrangling and heated debate, the University's affir- mative action lawsuits have reached their judicial terminus. Today, teams of attor- neys for the University and the Center for Individual Rights will have 30 minutes apiece to make their oral arguments before the U.S. Supreme Court. It is clear that it is the duty of the court, in order to continue to repair the nation's historic racial inequality, to uphold the University's admissions policy. can oecom their entir present ani leaving lit charging th den to edu VIEWPOINT Court makes first step,' BY STEPHEN MACGUIDWIN Congratulations to the University of Michigan under- graduate class of 2008! Though you do not yet even know who you are, the U.S. Supreme Court has recently guaran- teed you the right to equal treatment, regardless of your race. It now falls on the shoulders of the key decisionmakers at the University to make sure that the University's admissions policies comply with the ruling of the court to stop discrimi- nation on the basis of race. Such a policy will be easy to implement for the University; there is already a rubric for admittance in effect. The court was clear in its decision. The 20 points must go. The racial imbalance that has plagued both the work- force and higher education since the 1960s is not one for the University to solve. Despite the noble efforts of the University, a disparity between the races remains. How- ever, the justices of the Supreme Court have recognized that it is not the responsibility of higher education to provide a remedy to problems that manifest before an applicant even submits his application. We as a society must work to supplement the education of those trapped in underperforming school systems, regardless of the students' races. The correct avenue to remedy the socie- tal disparity is for the University to participate in changes to elementary education and work to strengthen the family. When we provide the youth of America with a strong elementary education, universities will not need to elevate the status of students to find qualified appli- cants of all races. By the time that students are ready to apply to college, a student's work ethic will have already been established. Reinforced values and a high quality education will benefit the youth of America much more than a handout at the post-secondary level. The court's decision in both cases ruled that diversity is a compelling state interest for discrimination. There is not an American that will argue that diversity promotes a positive learning environment. However, diversity is more than skin deep. The University must make a better effort to explore the avenues of a colorblind admissions policy and work to create diversity based on the experiences and cultures of different individuals, rather than skin tone. Being of a certain race does not qualify a person to all of the characteristics or stereotypes that such race-based policies seek to create. Plans have been introduced within the last five years in Texas, Florida and California to guarantee admission to stu- dents in the top percentiles of their graduating classes. The results of these experiments show that minority enrollment has remained the same, and the advantage is that such diver- sity is founded upon the principles of a united student body bound by the common bonds of high academic achievement. The advantage to these policies, besides having admissions policies consistent with the 14th Amendment, is that they all require state cooperation. Our governor, Jennifer Granholm, has expressed herself to be a proponent of diversity, and undoubtedly she should play an integral role in implement- ing such a program. When implemented in the state of Michigan, public education will be guaranteed to the most promising and intelligent - paramount of the public educa- tion model. The court's decision also strives to break down stereo- types created by race-based admissions. Under the current system, the rationale is that diversity is achieved through ne the sole representative for dichotomy between belief and reality will be ur nation's history of racial inequality e identity, creating pressure to shown. Do you support diversity? Sure. But - both state sanctioned and de facto idealized view to the class, and who do you hang out with? Indeed. - has stained nearly all aspects of tle room for individualism and American political, economic and social life. hem with the unnecessary bur- Rahim can be reached at In studying our history, it is apparent that the cate when they should be learn- hrahim@umich.edu. mere acts of ending slavery and legal segre- gation did not end the problems created by inequality. In 1954, Brown v. Board of Educa- tion ended legal school segregation. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 reached further, guaran- teeing that no American could legally be dis- U must fOllOW throughiminated against because of her race or Uhnicity. But the promise of integration held outby these actions has not yet been racial preferences because different races have different acsieved. Public schools remain highly segre- experiences. However, these same methods that seektclas "g ed, as do residential patterns. Minorities sify the socio-economic status of an applicant by ,ake, only are consistently paid less than their white further perpetuate stereotypes assigned to different race, counterparts and receive worse educational Experiences and true diversity istining. Much of this is a result of white comprised of a combination of resistance and habit engendered over years of different economic classes, overt discrimination. It is also the product of geographical areas and politi- government's failure to enforce its own man- cal affiliations. If we are to dates and ideals. learn anything from the civil True remedies require constant reevalua- rights era, it is that all men tion and reform and policies that challenge are created equal. racism and encourage people of different My generation backgrounds to live among one another. believes in the Today, affirmative action is necessary virtues of racial tol- erance, cultural sensitivity and/ . because it continues moving society toward that end. resident Bush and his allies have twist- ed legal language to label the Universi- ty's policies as quotas in order to argue that the University's brand of affirmative action is unconstitutional. However, the American Bar Association and the deans of many of the country's best law schools have publicly stated the contrary. A group of mili- tary officers have called for the need for affirmative action, citing that even though minorities are far from underrepresented in the armed forces, the high-ranking leadership is for the most part white. Dozens of Fortune 500 companies filed amicus briefs in the University's favor, realizing that diversity in education is paramount for a dynamic society and work force. Labor unions and many civil rights organizations agree. An unlikely coali- tion has been formed; the leaders in the worlds of law, academia, the military, corpo- rate America and labor present a clear and convincing argument against the president's dogmatic objection to the University's admis- sions policies. A ffirmative action's critics offer no viable alternative. Bush touts Texas' 10-percent plan, sometimes known as "affirmative access," under which the top 10 percent of the state's graduating class is guar-, anteed admission to a state college. This plan, however, has proven inadequate. One drastic result has been underrepresented minorities confined to under-funded institutions, while the prestigious universities are often reserved for those that benefited from a segregated school system. Moreover, the plan depends on public schools remaining highly segregated. The phenomenon of racial segregation in education is not restricted to one or a few regions. Disproportionate funding of public schools is an endemic reality that is starkly obvious in Metro Detroit, and riddles urban centers across the country. The result is an underrepresented minority population in higher education, cutting off black and Latino communities from career opportunities. Affirmative action benefits entire commu nities because minorities are more likely than other college graduates to return to and become involved in their communities. The court addressed thisas a compelling state interest in Bakke v. Regents of the University of California. A ffirmative action exists solely because there is a need for the pro- gram. Shocking disparities still exist between whites and blacks, the wealthy and the poor. Affirmative action serves as a mechanism that can help chip away at those inequities, even as we continue to address America's racial problem at its foundation. Today, as the court hears the University's oral arguments that center on the educational benefits of diversity, we should also bear in mind the words of Lyndon Johnson. A level playing field is indeed an end worth fighting for. But the years of racism and inequality both of the institutional and personal nature - ensure that many minorities enter that playing field ill-equipped to compete with their more privileged counterparts. The Uni- versity's affirmative action policies directly attack this unevenness by allowing underrep- resented minorities access to the same bene- fits and opportunities as the rest of society. Affirmative action is not an end unto itself, but it helps to ensure that the day will come when it is not necessary. 4 an awareness of different beliefs: We never experi- enced white- o n 1 y restaurants or segregated washrooms. Myk education was the product of teachers from all different reli- gions, sexes, ages and races. I agree with Justice Antonin Scalia's dissent in the Law School case, in that "cross racial understanding ... is a lesson of life rather than law." I believe that the diverse public education that I received as a result of the civil rights movement has molded the person that I am today and has molded my generation into one of egalitarian beliefs. Students of the Law School do not judge their classmates on the color of their skin, but rather on the basis of their opinions. A "critical mass" of minority opinions is not only desirable but necessary to fos- ter debate among the University community. However, I do not mean a minority opinion in the sense of the opinion of a racial minority, but rather of one whose ideas differ from the rest of the community. Such a system would create an intel- lectual diversity rather than a physical diversity. The University is a world leader not because of the racial makeup of the incoming freshman class, but because of its collective aspiration to greatness. I encourage the University to strike the race category from each college's application. Evaluate each applicant as a person, and by what they have done, rather than by something so trivial as the color of their skin. We're all Wolverines, and underneath our skin, we all bleed maize and blue. V ~Ji~;Pl on affirmative. action,. lawsuits The triumph of the smug ZAC PESKOWITZ THE LoWER REQUENCIES "I am proud of the role of the Univer- sity of Michigan in this important debate." - University President Mary Sue Coleman in yesterday's e-mail sent to all members of the Universi- ty community. Stephen MacGuidwin is the vice president o exter- nal affairs of the College Republicans. SAM BUTLER CLASSIC SOAPBOX 4 t f,£ '.u?. ***'"*."WASHINGTON - sst. I have a secret for just you and me. Mary Sue Coleman and the University never wanted the Supreme Court to hear Grutter v. Bollinger and Gratz v. Bollinger. Not that you would know that from the strutting and preening that accompanied the court's land- mark decision. An Associated Press photographer caught Coleman bounding about the steps of the Supreme Court, sporting a catfish grin and basking in the vibrant blue skies of a perfect Washington morning. The tropes most likely to appear in today's papers if Coleman's publicists get their way: Coleman as a mod- ern-day Moses, the University as the New Colossus and Michigan as land of hope and glory. All well and good, but Coleman's pose is an intellec- tually dishonest one. Back in September, when the for- mer president of the University of Iowa was just starting her tenure in Ann Arbor, when Maureen Mahoney, legal counsel brought in from Latham and Watkins, made the surprise announcement that the University would not seek to appeal its case to the nation's highest court. "We will ask the court to deny the appeal and not to hear the case," she blithely stated at a Sept. 18 University forum supremes, but both parties' advances were rebuffed. Academia was forced to size up the remaining field of contenders and Grutter and Gratz were unanimously viewed as the heavyweights with the best chances of upholding affirmative action at the Supreme Court. Georgia simply dropped its appeal and deferred to the University. With the circuit courts reaching irreconcil- able conclusions on the constitutionality of affirmative action, the scene at the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals became nothing more than pre-fight sparring before the ultimate battle in Washington. If the University did not appeal, then a good portion of the country (not to men- tion that this portion, the South, is where the need for affirmative action is even more acute than Michigan) would have been left in limbo. Even as Coleman was stating that "the whole country has a stake in these cases," the University had somehow hypnotized itself into believing that it could simply walk away from the appeals process. In the weeks that followed the announcement, Cole- man and her comrades in the Fleming Administration Building continued to support this policy - until the court's Dec. 2 decision to grant certiorari made all this moot. But the University still incomprehensibly clings to the logic of its choice. When asked yesterday if the Uni- versity had any regrets over this ill-conceived policy, University spokeswoman Julie Peterson responded that it continues to stand by its logic. Yesterday was a proud day for the University. We were vindicated. All those fancy law firms and all that hard work. Students going sleepless nights riding on busses to Detroit, Cincinnati and, eventually, Washington. It all I