NDgradstudent
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You really need to read up on the Supreme Court decisions on this subject. Diversity is of itself a desirable trait in a place of higher learning.
I'm familiar with the Supreme Court decisions on this subject. I don't regard the Supreme Court as the repository of all justice and wisdom. Their opinions are interesting information and binding interpretations of the law; that does not make them correct legally or morally. It just makes them the law. And as we all know, the law can be an ass.
You don't need to have been discriminated or have grown up poor for you to be a more valuable addition to a college than someone of another race. A Hispanic person is inherently a more valuable addition to the school, not just for themselves but for their peers, because they provide a perspective that is underrepresented in a place of higher learning. Asians and whites are not underrepresented and their cultural viewpoints dominate these places. Hence, they are not as valuable to the school. You can call that being "fashionable" if you want, but that's a pretty big misrepresentation of what's going on here.
Why are Asians not underrepresented, do you suppose? Could it be that they perform better on average on the sort of measures that actually matter for success in college?
I don't believe that a person of a given racial group is "inherently more valuable to the school" because of his race. Race is not a simple proxy for political opinion or wealth. In any case, affirmative action tends to benefit the wealthiest members of a given racial group. Blacks or Hispanics that are not poor should not receive these benefits simply because of their race. Income-based affirmative action is at least defensible; race-based affirmative action is not.
This is where you complain that its not fair, that you deserve a fair shake, and where I tell you you're being an entitled millennial.
I'm not worried about myself, I'm doing just fine. I'm worried about firefighters in New Haven, CT, for example, who were denied promotions because of their race and only saw their rights restored by a 5-4 vote.