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Tuesday, November 14, 2006
La Shawn Barber :: Townhall.com Columnist
Race preferences defeated in Michigan
by La Shawn Barber
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If you thought the turbulent Civil Rights Movement – culminating in the Civil Rights Act of 1964 – ended skin color discrimination, you were mistaken.

Half a century ago, America faced a moral and legal struggle to end government-mandated preferential treatment based on race. Half a century later, America faces a moral and legal struggle to end government-mandated preferential treatment based on race.

Our government still treats people differently based on the color of their skin. This time around, minorities (Asians excluded) benefit from unconstitutional race-based programs. So-called equal opportunity policies in federal, state, and local agencies across the country are nothing more than thinly veiled race preferences.

In the last 10 years, however, at least three states have done away with discriminatory programs. In 1996, Californians voted YES on Proposition 209, which amended the state constitution to bar public institutions from discriminating on the basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin by 54 percent. In 1998, voters in Washington State passed a similar measure by 58 percent.

On November 7, 2006, 58 percent of voters in Michigan said YES to Proposal 2, which bars the state from treating its citizens differently based on race, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin.

Groups like the hilariously named Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, Integration and Immigrant Rights and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary (BAMN) tried to defeat the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative (MCRI) every step of the way.

Two years ago, BAMN and other groups challenged the legality of the petition to get MCRI on the ballot. A Michigan circuit court ruled that the petition language was misleading and should not have been approved, but a Court of Appeals panel disagreed, unanimously affirming the legality of the petition language. The case went to the Michigan Supreme Court, which declined to hear it. As a result, MCRI appeared on the ballot as Proposal 2, and the people of Michigan decided that government-backed discrimination had seen its final days.

Some were shocked, of course, including University of Michigan president Mary Sue Coleman. In a meandering post-election speech, she expressed disappointment that voters rejected the government’s use of race preferences and vowed not to allow California’s “failed experiment that has dramatically weakened the diversity of the state’s most selective universities” to “take seed here at Michigan.” Continued...

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About The Author
Freelance writer La Shawn Barber blogs at the American Civil Rights Institute blog.
Not volunteering your time
I was just going by what you said, that you refused to help him. Now you are saying you did at first, so I'm not sure what you did; it's your anecdote.

If you didn't want to help him, no big deal, because it's not everyone's thing to do that, but he picked up on how you obviously felt about him, and it would have been better for you not to do it all.

You know, people wash out of their first major or college all the time, often only to finish a different degree or at a college elsewhere. The thing I worry about is that you take your anecdotal evidence of a negative circumstance and presume to apply it to all the black students. Most black students are well adjusted, understand the backlash, and shake it off, but it damages many others, who turn around and become the worst kind of critics of other blacks. Very counterproductive.

Oldschoolskills . . .
posted, "race is only one of numerous determining factors."

Yes, one of the factors. If a white guy said, "I used race as one of the numerous determining factors in hiring this employee," and the employee was white, you'd be screaming, "White racism!"

Years from now, historians will note the blatant hypocrisy that government has demanded of the private sector.

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