So all that means is that the reason you are applauding this decision is because of racist motives.
Yes, yes because determining admission based on skin color is not racist but ignoring race when determining admission is racist. The difference between Kendi & MLK.
[insert relevant 1984 prophetic quote here]
In the US, AA lightly benefits one race (black) by crushing the accomplishments of another race (Asians). Yet everyone forgets that.
But yet, it's not really all about race is it? It's also about changing the game to make sure the 'right' people still get in.
The original concept in pursuit of diversity was vital and righteous. The way it was practiced was hard to defend.
www.newyorker.com
"Asian Americans, the group whom the suit
was supposedly about,
have been oddly absent from the conversations that have followed the ruling. The repetitiveness of the affirmative-action debate has come about, in large part, because both the courts and the media have mostly ignored the Asian American plaintiffs and chosen, instead, to relitigate the same arguments about merit, white supremacy, and privilege. During the five years I spent covering this case, the commentators defending affirmative action almost never disproved the central claim that discrimination was taking place against Asian Americans, even as they dismissed the plaintiffs as pawns who had been duped by a conservative legal activist.
Affirmative action, in my view, was doomed from that moment forward
because it had been stripped of its moral force. It is one thing to argue that slavery, lynchings, Jim Crow laws, mass incarceration, and centuries of theft demand an educational system that factors
in the effects of those atrocities. If that principle were to express itself in, say, a Black student who was descended from slaves and had grown up in poverty in an American inner city receiving a bump on his application w
hen compared with a rich private-school kid from the suburbs, so be it. But that is not, in fact, how affirmative action usually plays out at élite schools. Most reporting on the subject—including my own, as well as a story in the
Harvard Crimson—shows that descendants of slaves are relatively underrepresented among Black students at Harvard,
compared with students from upwardly mobile Black immigrant families. It is easy and perhaps virtuous to defend the reparative version of affirmative action; it is harder to defend the system as it has
actually been used.
Powell’s decision gave schools like Harvard—where, according to a study published in 2017,
only four and a half per cent of the student body came from the bottom twenty per cent of the nation’s income earners and f
ifteen per cent of students came from families who make more than six hundred and thirty thousand dollars a year—the leeway to corrupt the original spirit of affirmative action
and turn it into a counting game for rich kids."