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Originally posted by Dark Ghost
One of the most frustrating aspects of this story is the Double Standards. Can you IMAGINE if somebody who was black was turned away from the scholarship because of their race?edit on 29/11/2011 by Dark Ghost because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by ahmonrarh
Originally posted by Dark Ghost
One of the most frustrating aspects of this story is the Double Standards. Can you IMAGINE if somebody who was black was turned away from the scholarship because of their race?edit on 29/11/2011 by Dark Ghost because: (no reason given)
Blacks do and have gotten turned away for that very reason and more. In a society whose history began with the conquest of the indigenous peoples, in the name of "freedom of religion, etc." The stage was already set for this issue. How is it, in todays world, that a mathematical genius in a poor neighborhood, becomes the cities best dope dealer vs the next Neil Degrasse Tyson? Some say due to lowly aspirations/layziness, but, i say it happens(can) through slow and steady conditioning.
If a school system doesnt provide equal education to all in their county, a disparity will and does occur. and those students pay the price. In my own lifetime, I've seen the disparity between being raised in a system that was 70%white/30% other...and move to a Georgia city to finish HS where that percentage was flipped. and it's appalling to say the least. Funny, I got held back 1yr, Not for failing courses, or not having the credit hrs to graduate(i had more than enough), but due to the curriculum differences and i had to retake, that I had taken and passed Freshmen yr back home...and i even got the same books too.
Level the playing field totally and from kindergarten, then a healthy competition based on merits will ensue.
No, that's what the applicant said. The school said it was for fairness.
Originally posted by Equidae
reply to post by UnlimitedSky
I definitely see your point, but I see that as more of an issue in the selection process. It's also one that has been in the news recently. The first that comes to mind is a young (white) man who if I recall correctly BSed his way into Harvard, got kicked out for economic dishonesty, lied about his time at Harvard to get a transfer to Stanford. I think he's facing jail time now. I also remember a few years back a (white) guy lied about service in the Marines (he had only attended a single summer training session as an ROTC cadet) to get into the Army National Guard as a specialist in some sort of security training billet. He also got a good bit of rank, and it took them several months before they figured out he'd never actually served.
There will always be opportunistic liars. The onus is on the company/government/firm to actual verify claims made by applicants. It would be like doing away with worker's compensation because some people lie about disabilities. I was recently hired as a clerk at a local store which is part of a national retail chain. I think a big part of my employment was because of my military service, and while I portrayed myself accurately the only checking the company did was a cursory background search for felonies and talking to my reference. They didn't even ask to see my DD-214 (discharge paperwork.)
Hopefully that woman you work with will get busted soon before somebody gets hurt!
Originally posted by Puck 22
Just curious....if you were about to go in for surgery with a black doctor and discovered that your doctor had graduated from a school famous for holding marks secondary to considerations of race to meet a racial quota amongst it's graduates, would the thought bother you?
Or if both the pilot and copilot of the commercial plane you were flying MIGHT have also been graduated to meet racial quotas, how comfortable would you be?
Originally posted by Puck 22
Just curious....if you were about to go in for surgery with a black doctor and discovered that your doctor had graduated from a school famous for holding marks secondary to considerations of race to meet a racial quota amongst it's graduates, would the thought bother you?
Or if both the pilot and copilot of the commercial plane you were flying MIGHT have also been graduated to meet racial quotas, how comfortable would you be?
It's discriminatory if it's denying her because she was white. But that is not the only reason. The reason is because she took a seat reserved for what they had a quota for. That's simple policy.
Originally posted by Equidae
Please correct me if I'm wrong, but to my knowledge people aren't graduated or graded based on quotas. And the people allowed in based on quotas all meet basic entrance requirements
Not at all. Because it's not doing it in any judgmental fashion. 1 is factor A, 0 is factor B. It's simply like a computer. It's merely one factor amongst others.If that factor is racist, than it's also biased that they have X amount of children of alumni, X amount of people they know will no afford the college, and X amount of people they chose because they think it will give them a good rep.
Schools are a corporation through and through. Their product is education. They hire in a pattern so as to not be identified as an "all rich guy", "all white guy", etc etc. It's their private entity, and their right to rule as they want.