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Tuesday, July 07, 2009
Thomas Sowell :: Townhall.com Columnist
A Tangled Web
by Thomas Sowell
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While the recent Supreme Court decision in the New Haven firefighters' case will be welcome news to those who don't think that a gross injustice is O.K. when those on the receiving end are white, the reasoning behind the 5 to 4 decision is a painful reminder that the law is still tangled in a web of assumptions, evasions and contradictions when it comes to racial issues.

Nor have these problems been clarified with the passage of time. On the contrary, the growing complexity and murkiness of civil rights law over the years recalls the painful saying: "Oh, what a tangled web we weave when first we practice to deceive."

The original Civil Rights Act of 1964 was very straightforward in forbidding discrimination. But, even before that Act was passed, there were already people demanding more than equality of treatment. Some wanted equality of end results, some wanted restitution for past wrongs, and some just wanted as much as they could get.

Opponents of the Civil Rights Act said that it would lead to racial quotas and reverse discrimination. Advocates of the Act not only denied this, they wrote the language of the law in a way designed to explicitly prevent such things. But judges, over the years, have "interpreted" the Civil Rights Act to mean what its opponents said it would mean, rather than what its advocates put into the plain language of the legislation.

A key notion that has created unending mischief, from its introduction by the Supreme Court in 1971 to the current firefighters' case, is that of "disparate impact." Any employment requirement that one racial or ethnic group meets far more often than another is said to have a "disparate impact" and is considered to be evidence of racial discrimination.

In other words, if group X doesn't pass a test nearly as often as group Y, then there is something wrong with the test, according to this reasoning or lack of reasoning. This implicitly assumes that there cannot be any great difference between the two groups in the skills, talents or efforts required.

That notion is the grand dogma of our time-- an idea for which no evidence is asked or given, and an idea that no amount of contradictory evidence can change in the minds of the true believers, or in the rhetoric of ideologues and opportunists. Continued...

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About The Author
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of The Housing Boom and Bust.
 
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Ali in Africa
Remember when Ali fought Foreman in Zaire, the "Rumble in the Jungle"? Ali was asked about being in Africa and he responded that he was "glad his Granddaddy got on the boat". Even Ali was glad that he was an American and not African anymore than I'm a Romanian or Irish because of my family background. Read what Teddy Roosevelt said about hyphenated Americans.

Mike in TX

I'm not from Africa, have never been there and I don't personally no anyone from there. My grandparents grandparents were born in America so that make me an American by birthright.

The very idea of hyphenated Americans is racist in and of itself. I'm a man first, an American second, a Christian third and a Conservative fourth. Every other label is just unintelligible background noise to my ears.

I don't own nor do I even like Cadillacs and I would never buy a GM product. I drive a Ford Sports-Trac and my wife drives a Lexus.

I'm a US Navy veteran and the only tribe I belong to is called America.

Lastly, I prefer to think rather than feel.
If people spent more time thinking rather than feeling, Obama wouldn't be President and our country wouldn't be in the mess that it's in.

I know Mario's type very well. In my view, there's not a nickels' worth of difference between him and a member of the KKK.
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