Friday, October 05, 2012

Affirmative Action: Black Journalism Professor in Chronicle of Higher Education: Quotas Today, Quotas Tomorrow, Quotas Forever!

By Nicholas Stix

Immediately below, I present a racist rant that appeared five hours ago in the Chronicle of Higher Education and, except for one postscript which I just added, the rejoinder I attempted to post 20 minutes ago, immediately upon reading the rant.

I wouldn’t hold my breath, waiting to see CHE’s censors post my response.

* * *
Affirmative Action and “Victimized” Whites
By Pamela Newkirk
October 5, 2012, 2:54 p.m.
Chronicle of Higher Education

On Wednesday the U.S. Supreme Court will once again consider the merits of affirmative action and the plight of purportedly victimized whites, ripping the scab from a deep and scarcely healed American wound.

The ever-contentious debate sparked anew by Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin is likely to overshadow recent figures showing the widening household-income gap between non-Hispanic whites and African-Americans and the stubbornly low black and Latino high-school graduation rates that persistently keep higher education out of the reach of millions. A new study from the Schott Foundation for Public Education found that just 52 percent of black and 58 percent of Latino males graduate from high school in four years, compared with 78 percent of non-Latino whites.

In 2011 the median household income of African-Americans was $32,229, compared with $55,412 for non-Hispanic whites. The median black household income dropped from 2010 by 2.7 percent, twice the percentage for non-Hispanic whites. Furthermore, the latest census figures show that 27.6 percent of all blacks lived below the official poverty threshold, nearly three times the rate for non-Hispanic whites. And while the percentage of whites living in poverty slightly declined in 2011, the percentage of blacks slightly increased.

Against this backdrop of pain, inequality, and upheaval, fear of white disenfranchisement seems oddly out of place. The cold numbers do little to illuminate the suffering of many people across the country who have the misfortune of being born into underresourced and woefully neglected school districts. Those districts remain overwhelmingly populated by blacks and Latinos. In my home state of New York, just 37 percent of black and Latino males graduate from high school in four years, a jaw-dropping figure that is rivaled only by the rate in the nation’s capital.

In New York City, the overwhelming majority of black males—72 percent—fail to graduate in four years. Seventy-two percent! Not surprisingly, the city’s school system is rigidly segregated, and as the Schott study shows, the states with the highest black and Latino male-graduation rates are the ones where those students are not relegated to underresourced, mostly black and Latino schools. But then again, the U.S. Supreme Court reached a similar conclusion in 1954, when in Brown v. Board of Education it declared separate but allegedly equal unconstitutional.

“These graduation rates are not indicative of a character flaw in the young men,” says John H. Jackson, president and chief executive of the Schott Foundation, in a press release, “but rather evidence of an unconscionable level of willful neglect, unequal resource allocation by federal, state, and local entities, and the indifference of too many elected and community leaders.”

Still, in the face of gaping inequality, African-Americans and Latinos can once again serve as the convenient scapegoats for individual failings. Had Abigail Noel Fisher finished in the top 10 percent of her high-school class, she would, as a Texas resident, have been automatically admitted to one of the state’s public colleges or universities. Because she did not, she had to compete for one of the remaining open seats. In failing to win one of those, she found an easy target: the growing number of minority students living in the state who were admitted to the university under a plan for the remaining open seats that considers race as one factor among many, including leadership, geography, socioeconomic background, and special talents.

The university’s cohesive approach is endorsed by many of the nation’s leading institutions of higher learning, including Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Duke, Harvard, Johns Hopkins, Princeton, Stanford, Vanderbilt, and Yale Universities, the Universities of Chicago and Pennsylvania, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In a joint amicus brief filed in the case, the institutions supported the consideration of all aspects of an applicant’s background, including, in some instances, race and ethnicity.

“Although amici differ in many ways, they speak with one voice to the profound importance of a diverse student body—including racial diversity—for their educational missions,” the brief states. “In amici’s experience, a diverse student body adds significantly to the rigor and depth of students’ educational experience. Diversity encourages students to question their own assumptions, to test received truths, and to appreciate the spectacular complexity of the modern world.”

In Texas, where more than half of the population is nonwhite and 38 percent are Latino, the state’s diversity plan was beginning to bear fruit. From 2009 to 2010, the percentage of Latino freshmen at the University of Texas at Austin increased from 20.8 percent to 23.1 percent. Still, Latinos remain underrepresented in a state where they compose nearly 40 percent of the population. They were 17 percent of the university’s enrolled undergraduate and graduate students, compared with whites, who compose 45 percent of the state population but were 52 percent of the student body.

Since filing the lawsuit, Fisher has gone on to graduate from Louisiana State University, but perhaps not from a sense that she, as a white American, was entitled to enrollment in the state’s most selective public university. As she garners headlines, the continuing plight of the nameless, faceless black and Latino youths in broken schools will languish in the shadows, as will the collateral damage: the wasted human capital and disproportionate number who will fill the nation’s prisons and unemployment rolls. It’s been nearly six decades since they’ve had their day in court.

Pamela Newkirk is a professor of journalism at New York University.

* * *
You Got “Yes,” but You Still Hate the Answer
By Nicholas Stix

Pamela Newkirk is a “professor” of “journalism” at New York University.

“Against this backdrop of pain, inequality, and upheaval, fear of white disenfranchisement seems oddly out of place. The cold numbers do little to illuminate the suffering of many people across the country who have the misfortune of being born into underresourced and woefully neglected school districts.”

The average black child attends a public school with other black kids, staffed, taught, and run, by racist blacks, that is better funded than its counterpart attended by mostly white children.

Those schools are anything but neglected. They may be violent places where some students constantly disrupt, curse, and batter other kids in class, but that is because the vicious students’ parents teach them to be that way, and their black teachers, staffers, and administrators encourage said misconduct.

I am much more concerned about the millions of white and Asian children whose parents lack the money and connections to rescue their kids, whom the racist blacks' kids daily turn into ATM machines, punching bags, and sex toys.

The great unreported education stories in this country are those of violent black racism towards whites and Asians, the trillions of dollars that have been seized from white net taxpayers for those black kids, and the thousands of once-excellent schools in this country that have been destroyed by “integrating” them with violently racist black students.

Newkirk calls the New York City school system “rigidly segregated.” Does she mean that as a compliment or a criticism? Because most blacks believe in racially segregated schools, as long as they are in charge of them, though they use euphemisms like “community control.” Heck, James Baldwin promoted racially segregated schools for blacks as late as 1979.

Historian Raymond Wolters, and more recently, scholar Jason Richwine, have done yeoman work in chronicling this story. I’ve done my share, as well.

Even if black kids weren’t typically so anti-intellectual, and higher proportions graduated from high school, with an average IQ of 78-85, how much does Pamela Newkirk expect them to earn, vis-à-vis races that have average IQs of 100-105 (whites and East Asians), respectively? (Hispanics have an average IQ of 89.)

[P.S. I neglected to mention blacks’ greater propensity for crime and greater hostility towards work, as also keeping their income down.]

“These graduation rates are not indicative of a character flaw in the young men” (John H. Jackson).

The hell, they aren’t. In the young men, and in their racist parents, “educators,” and champions, like Pamela Newkirk. (And when I dropped out of high school, that was indicative of my own character flaw.)

What will her next racist rant assert? That the black crime rate is “not indicative of a character flaw in the young men”?

“… [Abigail Fisher] found an easy target: the growing number of minority students living in the state who were admitted to the university under a plan for the remaining open seats that considers race as one factor among many, including leadership, geography, socioeconomic background, and special talents.”

The “plan” considers three factors: race, race, and race.

While Abigail Fisher sued on behalf of the merit principle, Pamela Newkirk projected her own sense of racial privilege onto Fisher.

As Mary McCarthy once said of Lillian Hellman, every word in Pamela Newkirk’s racist rant is a lie, including “and” and “the.”


5 comments:

Anonymous said...

It still blows me away that liberals who hold onto their cultural dreams based on lies, distortions, and outright lunacy will not face the facts.

It doesn't matter how many mountains of facts come down to crush their idiotic beliefs they continue on undeterred.

Liberalism is much worse than a kooky new religion, it is a cult of suicide, but the kind that kills all the whites who don't want any part of it first before it reaches the doorsteps of the psychopaths who pushed this agenda of death on us all.

It's exactly like the blacks in South Africa who look back on the days when Apartheid ruled as the good old days compared to as it is now under black rule.

The blacks here are just too stupid and blinded by hate to comprehend what their lives will be like when the hands that feed them now are gone.

Anonymous said...

There is no way around the black IQ differential. Leftists like to emphasis "opportunity" denied blacks because they can't get into college. Thing is, virtually ALL colleges are open admission; what counts if you can do the work. At DePaul University, I've noticed that the tutors in the computer lab seem to be giving aid to blacks almost exclusively. If your IQ is 80-92, the truth is you are not college material, and encouraging blacks to get a BS degree isn't helping them. It's a waste of money and time. Perhaps that's the reason so many blacks get degrees in sociology, it makes you "qualified" for a government job. Don't laugh, a Chicago Tribune article recently said that a DCFS employee that actually meets the "needy" makes on average $72K, MORE than a CPS school teacher!

John Sobieski said...

They get away with making such ridiculous statements, i.e., not indicative of the black race, and noone but you calls them on it. We live in a world of lies, but you know, someday all those lies will fall down and there will be nowhere for the liars to hide.

Anonymous said...

Well after all Pamela Newkirk is a black woman. What would any White person expect from a black woman "journalist"? After all "journalism" isn't exactly a physics subject.

Anonymous said...

Of course there are IQ differences.

Look at Princeton alumnus "Meeshelle" O.

Read her thesis.

It reads like a 15-year-old wrote it.

Not a Princeton senior.

She's an empty suit.