4A - Wednesday, October 16, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4A - Wednesday, October16, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom C4C Michinan4:3allp l Rock, Paper, Scissors Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com MELANIE KRUVELIS and ADRIENNE ROBERTS MATT SLOVIN EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR ANDREW WEINER EDITOR IN CHIEF Unsigned editorials reflect the official position oftthe Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. crF T O [ [1 E&AIL Closing channels, adding burdens The U.S. Supreme Court should favor invlusive governance This week, the U.S. Supreme Court is hearing arguments on Michi- gan's Proposal 2, a ballot initiative passed in 2006 that outlawed race and sex as a decision factor in public university admissions and public-sector hiring. Since then, minority representation has plum- meted at the University, and the law has been overturned in federal court. Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette, a staunch opponent of affirma- tive action, is now appealing to the U.S. Supreme Court. This case, Schuette v. Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, differs from the 2003 case Grutter v. Bollinger, in which the Court upheld the University's use of race as a factor in admissions decision. In part as a result of that ruling, Proposal 2 was put on the ballot for Michigan voters a few years later..Instead, the argument in Schuette is over the ballot ini- tiative itself and whether voters can eliminate policies that are ruled constitutional. Supporters of -affirmative-action argue that Proposal 2 violates equal protection as it places undue burden on minorities. Typically, protests against policies like those regarding affirmative action, legacy preference or other "special con- siderations" for admission are brought before a university's governing body, like the University's Board of Regents. The ballot initiative is unfair because those wishing to challenge it cannot go to theBoard of Regents - the democratic institu- tion set up particularly for this purpose. Instead, they instead must amend the state constitution - a difficult task by design. It would require a two- thirds majority in both chambers of the state legislature, another ballot initiative or a special constitutional convention for an amendment to pass. This places minorities at an unfair advan- tage to change the policy, denying them their equal treatment underthe law. Other groups like veterans, parents or legacy students don't have to go through this difficult process. Furthermore, ballot initiatives were not originally part of the democratic repertoire. The Progressive party added the mechanism in the twentieth century as a way to get ordi- nary citizens more involved in directly chang- ing and influencing government and to make government more responsive. Recently, how- ever, the mega-wealthy and special interest groups have ,used referendums to influence policy to their liking. Additionally, people who voted for Proposal 2 - also called the "Michi- gan Civil Rights Initiative" - may have been misled by the title that appeared on the bal- lot. The wording of the ballot initiative took advantage of inadequately informed voters who support civil rights - a dogma not fur- thered by abolishing affirmative action. Proposal 2 closes avenues to democratic change to minorities. According to Judge R. Guy Cole Jr. - the author of the opinion from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit - "the majority may not manipulate the chan- nels of change so as to place unique burdens on issues of importance to them." For that reason, the U.S. Supreme Court should strike down this amendment. If any real solution is to be found, minorities and marginalized communi- ties must be free to represent their own inter- ests in a waythat is equal and fair. W ASHINGTON, D.C. - "What's strongest? The rock, the paper or the scissors?" A group of about 40 kids, eachnoolderthan 12, stood across the street from the U.S. Supreme Court listening to their tour guide JAMES -a stocky, gray- BRENNAN haired man with BRE__A__ a short beard. "None of them, right? Well, that's just like Washington." In theory, this analogy is quite apt. Each branch of government is assigned no more power than any of the others, able to overrule deci- sions through checks and balances. But as we all know, government is hardly this balanced or simple. The courts often overpower all other branches, while some presidents expand executive power beyond constitutional limitations. Like our system of governance, affirmative action is far more complex than we'd like it to be. Both sides of the debate over Michigan's 2006 bal- lot proposalthat banned most formsof race and gender-conscious admissions argued in front ofthe strongest branch of government Tuesday. It was made clear that neither the Court nor affir- mative action are as easy to under- stand as rock, paper, scissors. "This is about the political process" After speaking with Mike Stein- berg, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan, it was made abundantly clear that the usual debate about the merits of race-conscious admissions wouldn't be on the table. What was at stake, according to Steinberg, was the right of minorities to be treated equally in the political process. Proposal 2 did not sinply outlaw an unpopular policy by referendum, but it created a separate and unequal process for minorities to lobby for their interests. The state has made it so any minority group that wants to request the Uni- versity Board of Regents to consider race has to gather thousands of sig- natures, run an entire statewide cam- paign and overturn a ballot proposal. Citing precedent in a similar case that involved busing, Seattle v. Washington, Steinberg believes that Proposal 2 cre- ates two separate and unequal playing fieldsbased on race. Caroline Wong, national organizer of By Any Means Necessary, gave me similar arguments, asserting that Pro- posal 2 is reminiscent of Jim Crow Laws.Whenchallengedonthelegality ofoverturningaballot proposal demo- cratically decided on by an entire state, Wong cited an amicus brief by dozens ofhistory professors drawing parallels' to state laws designed to disenfran- chise minorities. According to Wong, stopping minorities from petitioning universities is just another attempt to subvert people of color without actu- ally codifying racism - a violation of the 14thamendment. General mis- understandings - While Wong Affirmat has demonstrat- ed understanding is a comp of the complex With legal reasoningin the fight against lot of mov Proposal 2, her arguments were - a 'rarity among BAMN protesters outside the court. University students told me they came to fight for race-conscious admissions, greater diversity and equality for people of color. When asked why the Supreme Court should exercise its ultimate power and throw out a popular ballot ini- tiative, they struggled, clinging to simplistic reasons and failing to move beyond a single frame of mind. One University student cited the fact that a majority white state passed the law, only doing so to maintain white privilege. Another University student rattled off facts about dropping minority enroll- ment, but could only explain the need to overturn Proposal'2 as a matter of racial justice and whites outvoting minorities. A Univer- sity of California, Berkeley student admitted she couldn't articulate why Proposal 2 was unconstitution- al, but simply reinstating affirmative action was reason enough for her to come protest. A national organizer, speaking into a megaphone, accused the majority of Supreme Court jus- tices of being racist. This dissonance isn't just on the side of BAMN. Attorney General Bill enlightened after Tuesday. iVe action Maybe I didn't e learn a whole lot ilex policy because affir- cons and a mative action is an issue I vigor- ving parts. ously follow and defend. Maybe I'm unim- pressed because I ran for student government with a BAMN-sponsored party as a fresh- man and worked for the ACLU. Or maybe I'm just frustrated that people still don't understand affirmative action. Since the first time I stood up against my entire high school gov- ernment class to argue in favor of affirmative action, I have rarely seen coherence in interpreting a race-conscious admissions policy. Proponents seem to only defend it because they feel they're supposed to, while opponents are blind to the realities of racism. Affirmative action is a complex policy with pros, cons and a lot of moving parts. It can't be opposed simply because it "sounds" discrimi- natory, and it can't be defended and implemented because "diversity is good" and "we want justice." Affirma- tive action is a complicated, constantly evolving issue - if you decide to take a stance, understand that. While it would be nice if affirmative action were as simple and neat as a game of rock, paper, scissors, it simply is not. -James Brennan can be reached at jmbthree@umich.edu Schuette wrote an op-ed in the Detroit Free Press on Sunday purely attack- ing the merits of affirmative action, never once mentioning Proposal 2 - let alone the issues at hand in the case itself. Some opponents of affir- mative action are also fully ignorant to the state of race-based admissions as a whole. Multiple Black students explained that some white students concluded they were only admitted to Michigan because of affirmative action, a sentiment I'e heard in per- son plenty of times. Apparently, some opponents of affirmative action don't even realize that the University has been barred from using race in admis- sions for the better part of a decade. Confusionistheonlyconstant I don't feel a great deal more I AARICA MARSH I A temporary solution WASHINGTON, D.C. - University President Mary Sue Coleman once said, "Diversity is an old, old wooden ship that was used during the Civil War era." Oh, never mind - Iguess that was Ron Burgundy in Anchorman. Unlike Burgundy, Coleman and University administrators seemingly understand the con- cept and implications of diversity. As soon as stu- dents begin their admissions applications,they're bombarded with the importance of diversity at the University. However, school demographics paint a very different picture. The enrollment of minority students has sig- nificantly dropped since the implementation of Proposal 2 - which banned race and gender- based affirmative action in the state of Michi- gan - in November 2006. Seven years ago, the University was considered a frontrunner in embracing diversity. The class of 2017 - current freshmen - is 7.3 percent African American, 5.6 percent Hispanic and 1.1 percent Native Ameri- can. Unfortunately, undergraduate enrollment for people ofcolor has droppedby approximately one-thirdinsixyears. 2012 statisticsindicatethat African Americans constituted 4.6 percent of the undergraduate population, Hispanics 4.3 percent and Native Americans 0.17 percent. Since Proposal 2 was enacted, the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, Integration and Immigrant Rights By Any Means Neces- sary, the American Civil Liberties Union, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and many University profes- sors and students have worked to overturn the amendment in Michigan. BAMN immediately filed a lawsuit against the ban, citing violation of the 4th amendment. In December 2006, a different case, Cantrgll et. al v. Granholm, was brought forward by the ACLU and NAACP Legal Defense and Education fund on behalf of University students and faculty. The Cantrellsiderelied heavily onthenotionthat Proposal 2 created an unequal political process where people could lobby the University's Board of Regents to admit more students from their interest group - athletes, legacies, students from the Upper Peninsula, etc. - except for interest groups concerned with race. The two cases were consolidated early on due to their similar positions about the constitution- alityofMichigan's banonaffirmative action.Pro- posal 2 was upheld in the district courts in 2008 and then overturned by the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in 2011. The case was then appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court and accepted the jus- tices in March 2013. Oral arguments were heard onOctober15. As the attorneys and justices settled in for their hearing, four police officers lined the steps anticipating protesters who had not yet arrived. Three officers were stationed closer to the Supreme Court doors while five others roamed the perimeter. Loud whistles, chanting and a megaphone announced the arrival of BAMN members and other affirmative action support- ers. They appeared in front of the court steps as 10 more police officers drove up on motorcycles. Chants echoed throughout the area. "They sayJim Crow, we say hell no!" "Integration now, segregation never!" "Black, Latino, Arab, Asian and.White, by any means necessary we will fight!" Several University students stood among the crowd where the majority of protesters were from minority populations. The demographics were drastically different than Michigan class- rooms where oftentimes a minority student may be the only person of their community present. In these situations, the burden of representation becomesvery severe. "It's discouraging. It's frustrating. It makes you doubt yourself. You have to fight and try to work so much harder," noted Education senior Ariam Abraham. Abraham said she many times took the lead ongroup projects becauseshe didn't want to be associated with society-created ste- reotypesofBlackpeople. LSA sophomores Lewis Graham and Chris Ransburg, both Black, affirmed Abraham's experiences. In a chemistry class of over 200, Graham could count on one hand the Black students in his class, creating pressure for him to work harder and be better. Ransburg. felt similarly: "I want to stand out. If I mess up, it's not just me that's messing up." It's indisputable that the University's minority population has been dwindling since 2006. As a result, minority students are forced to represent their entire population creating unfair burdens and obstacles. Diver- sity doesn't just benefit minorities. It benefits everybody through new understandings of people who are different from you. So is affir- mative action the answerto creating diversity among college campuses? It is regularly noted that the basis of the problem lies not in college admissions but in the continuing oppression of minority stu- dents through education, geographic and socio-economic means. "It's the mentality of people that needs to change," added Adelia Davis, anLSA freshman at the protest. Unfortunately, these problems can't be solved overnight. Affirmative action may not be the ideal solution to create a more diverse campus. There are obvious flaws. It often per- petuates the idea that minority students are only accepted due to their race. It ignores the struggles of lower-income students. It doesn't help retain minority students after they are accepted. Affirmative action cannot solve any of these problems. It is a temporary solution for much larger issues. But while these issues are being worked on, it will have to do. Aarica Marsh is an LSA junior. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Kaan Avdan, Sharik Bashir, Barry Belmont, James Brennan, Eli Cahan, Eric Ferguson, Jordyn Kay, Jesse Klein, Melanie Kruvelis, Maura Levine, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Adrienne Roberts, Paul Sherman, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe GARRETT FELBER AND AUSTIN MCCOY I Student protest and aff. action The recent We Are Michigan pro- test and U.S. Supreme Court hearing on affirmative action calls to mind the longhistory ofstudentprotest on cam- pus around racial diversity. Building a more inclusive campus requires an understanding of past anti-racist stu- dent movements. After Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination in 1968, 100 Black stu- dents locked themselves in an admin- istrative building to address low Black enrollment. Their demands included the appointment of Black administra- tors and the establishment of a U-M Martin, Luther King Jr. Scholarship. The lock-in resulted in the establish- ment of the scholarship and the insti- tution of the Center of Afroamerican and African Studies (CAAS, now the departmentofAfroamericanand Afri- can Studies) in 1970. This takeover initiated student movements that mobilized coalitions, articulated explicit demands and uti- lized direct-action protest strategies to create a more inclusive campus for students of color. In 1970, the student- led Black Action Movement organized a massive protest to draw attention to racial disparities on campus. Students fought for a Black Student Center, tuition waivers, additional funding fdr the MLKscholarship, andmostimpor- tantly, a University commitment to a 10-percent goal of Black enrollment within three years. The administra- tion initially agreed to only the enroll- ment goal. BAM responded by taking hundreds of books off the shelves in the library, interrupting classes, pick- eting parking garages and blocking State Street. These disruptive tactics caused LSA attendance to drop by 75 percent. The strikers gained more power by enlisting white students and organized labor. The University agreed to devote more resources to achieving the 10-percent goal by the 1973academicyearandincreasefinan- cial support to CAAS. The multiracial United Coalition Against Racism renewed the fight for minority rights in 1987. Two hundred students blocked, Fleming Hall and issued 12 explicit demands. These focused on the unfulfilled promise of minority enrollment, anti-racist education and low numbers of Black faculty. UCAR also demanded the University close in recognition of MLK Day; the University refused to cancel classes to commemorate the day until six years after it was declared a national holiday. Most significantly, students reasserted the minority enrollment issue broached in 1968. Black students remained a mere 5 percent of the student body. The University drafted the "Michi- gan Mandate" - a comprehensive plan to increase diversity on campus. Last week's demonstration mirrors the Mandate's core ideas: commitment to diversity, representationofminority groups and a pluralistic community. The Mandate aimed for students of color to represent atleast athird ofthe student body by the endof the 1990s. The University glowingly reported a 39 percent increase of students of color. It even assured this growth would lead to 14 percent Black enrollment by 1996, matching the state population at the time. The University's confidence in 1991 contrasts sharply with our current climate. For example, Black and Latina/o enrollment is under 5 percent. A partial explanation to the rollback of minority enrollment is the affirmative action debate of the last decade. In the early 2000s, Michigan nearly reached BAM's original goal of 10 percent Black enrollment. How- ever, Proposal 2 banned consideration of race, sex and religion in University admissions. Since the passage of Pro- posal 2, the Black student population has dropped from 6.5 percent in 2006 to 4.6 percent in 2012. Still, widespread confusion about the meaning and efficacy of affirma- tive action remains. One obscuring argument is that the dismantling of affirmative action led to a more posi- tive climate for students of color. Carl Cohen, a University of Michigan pro- fessor who spearheaded the Proposal 2 initiative, told the Daily in 2011: "When you see Blacks on our campus now, they didn't get here with prefer- ence. You can't look down your nose at minorities at Michigan now... And I think that's a great thing for the minorities. They don't have to excuse themselves." The hostile response to the recent viewpoint by LSA senior Dan Green reveals the fallacy of this argument. Commenters challenged himto reveal his GPA,ACTscore and tuition costs, after he wrote about the discomfort he feels as a Black Detroiter in Ann Arbor. Affirmative action does not cause a hostile cam- pus climate. It is the already-exist- ing negative perceptions about the inferiority of students of color. For some, affirmative action becomes a convenient scapegoat. As the examples of BAM and UCAR demonstrate, grassroots stu- dent activism has driven efforts to create a more diverse and sup- portive campus. These actions have been led by students of color, but have always comprised white allies, faculty/staff and others from the campus community. They relied on a combination of direct-action pro- tests, explicit demands and disrup- tion of normal campus operations. These tactics succeeded in building leverage for students who otherwise had little decision-making power in University policies. However, strug- gling for a more inclusive university should not fall squarely on the shoul- ders of those underrepresented: The University must take more than a "wait and see" stance and facilitate broader dialogue about these issues. Student activists should build on the rich history and lessons of student protest on campus. And all students * must educate themselves about how privilege functions in university life. Only through the combination of strong student protest, education and an active administration can we begin to realize the aspirations of this legacy of activism. Garrett Felber and Austin McCoy are PhD students in the History and American Culture Departments. A