August 15, 2023

Ever since the end of June, Americans in the media have been chattering about the implications of the Supreme Court ruling in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard.  This case, in which several Asian-American students sued the university for racial discrimination, ended with the court ruling for the plaintiffs and banning race-based preferences in college admissions.

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Already people have had time to argue every question under the sun — is what happened good or bad?  More important than most people think, or less important?  How aggressively will lower courts enforce it?  And so forth.

Yet the result itself was unsurprising; most people expected that the five solid originalists on the Court would rule that the U.S. Constitution and the Civil Rights Act do in fact forbid discrimination on the basis of race.  (The Court’s final split was 6-3; Chief Justice Roberts joined the conservatives in the majority, leaving only Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson to dissent).

The decision is unlikely to be overturned in the future, or even to generate the sort of electoral backlash among Democrats that Dobbs v. Jackson did last year, since race-based preferences are just too unpopular.

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First off, consider the fact that the proponents of race-based admissions feel the need to use euphemisms like “affirmative action.”  Generally speaking, political factions that rally around a euphemism are doing so because they don’t actually feel good about the thing they’re defending.  Just think of how Southerners before the Civil War often talked about the sanctity of their “domestic institutions” without naming the “institution” they were defending, or the way that pro-abortion people today talk about “a woman’s right to choose” without saying what it is that the woman should be able to choose to do.

But of all these content-free labels, “affirmative action” takes the cake.  What is being “affirmed”?  What “action” is being taken?  If you didn’t already know the answer, a hundred guesses would not suffice.

And race-baiting liberals need to talk around what they’re doing, because (according to a recent Washington Post poll) 63 percent of Americans oppose race-based preferences, and even among black people (the most likely race to support them), the fraction opposed is 47 percent.

Just about the only people who support race-based admissions are (1) the one half or so of U.S. blacks who have bought in to victimhood culture and (2) ivory-tower liberals like the famous law professor Laurence Tribe, who, a few days after the decision, gushingly tweeted that “Justice Jackson’s dissents will someday be the law.”

Let’s take a moment to unpack that sentiment.  If Jackson’s faction is ever in control of the Court again, it will be at least 20 or 30 years in the future.  When this happens, affirmative action is going to come up again only if black people still need to be held to lower standards in order to get into top universities at the same rate as other races.  Not only does Tribe unthinkingly assume that this will happen, he seems to be looking forward to it — indeed, to him, it is the most natural thing in the world that blacks will always and only be victims, always a downtrodden class in need of special treatment from people like himself.

What a miserable worldview to hold!  What a useless ally for black people who actually want to make the most of their potential and compete in academic and professional life by the same standards as other Americans!