Justice Dept. to Take On Affirmative Action in WHITE College Admissions

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Justice Dept. to Take On Affirmative Action in WHITE College Admissions



President Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions have helped tilt the Justice Department to the right on civil rights issues.


DOUG MILLS / THE NEW YORK TIMES
By CHARLIE SAVAGE
AUGUST 1, 2017


WASHINGTON — The Trump administration is preparing to redirect resources of the Justice Department’s civil rights division toward investigating and suing universities over affirmative action admissions policies deemed to discriminate against white applicants, according to a document obtained by The New York Times.

The document, an internal announcement to the civil rights division, seeks current lawyers interested in working for a new project on “investigations and possible litigation related to intentional race-based discrimination in college and university admissions.”

The announcement suggests that the project will be run out of the division’s front office, where the Trump administration’s political appointees work, rather than its Educational Opportunities Section, which is run by career civil servants and normally handles work involving schools and universities.

The document does not explicitly identify whom the Justice Department considers at risk of discrimination because of affirmative action admissions policies. But the phrasing it uses, “intentional race-based discrimination,” cuts to the heart of programs designed to bring more minority students to university campuses.

Supporters and critics of the project said it was clearly targeting admissions programs that can give members of generally disadvantaged groups, like black and Latino students, an edge over other applicants with comparable or higher test scores.


The project is another sign that the civil rights division is taking on a conservative tilt under President Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions. It follows other changes in Justice Department policy on voting rights, gay rights and police reforms.

Roger Clegg, a former top official in the civil rights division during the Reagan administration and the first Bush administration who is now the president of the conservative Center for Equal Opportunity, called the project a “welcome” and “long overdue” development as the United States becomes increasingly multiracial.

“The civil rights laws were deliberately written to protect everyone from discrimination, and it is frequently the case that not only are whites discriminated against now, but frequently Asian-Americans are as well,” he said.

But Kristen Clarke, the president of the liberal Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, criticized the affirmative action project as “misaligned with the division’s longstanding priorities.” She noted that the civil rights division was “created and launched to deal with the unique problem of discrimination faced by our nation’s most oppressed minority groups,” performing work that often no one else has the resources or expertise to do.

“This is deeply disturbing,” she said. “It would be a dog whistle that could invite a lot of chaos and unnecessarily create hysteria among colleges and universities who may fear that the government may come down on them for their efforts to maintain diversity on their campuses.”


The Justice Department declined to provide more details about its plans or to make the acting head of the civil rights division, John Gore, available for an interview.

“The Department of Justice does not discuss personnel matters, so we’ll decline comment,” said Devin O’Malley, a department spokesman.


The Supreme Court has ruled that the educational benefits that flow from having a diverse student body can justify using race as one factor among many in a “holistic” evaluation, while rejecting blunt racial quotas or race-based point systems. But what that permits in actual practice by universities — public ones as well as private ones that receive federal funding — is often murky.

Mr. Clegg said he would expect the project to focus on investigating complaints the civil rights division received about any university admissions programs.

He also suggested that the project would look for stark gaps in test scores and dropout rates among different racial cohorts within student bodies, which he said would be evidence suggesting that admissions offices were putting too great an emphasis on applicants’ race and crossing the line the Supreme Court has drawn.

Some of that data, he added, could be available through the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights, which did not respond to a request for comment.
The Supreme Court most recently addressed affirmative action admissions policies in a 2016 case, voting 4 to 3 to uphold a race-conscious program at the University of Texas at Austin. But there are several pending lawsuits challenging such practices at other high-profile institutions, including Harvard University and the University of North Carolina. The Justice Department has not taken a position in those cases.

The pending start of the affirmative action project — division lawyers who want to work on it must submit their résumés by Aug. 9, the announcement said — joins a series of changes involving civil rights law since Mr. Trump’s inauguration.


In a lawsuit challenging Texas’ strict voter identification law, the Justice Department switched its position, dropping the claim that the law was intentionally discriminatory and later declaring that the law had been fixed. Mr. Sessions has also made clear he is not interested in using consent decrees to impose reforms on troubled police departments and has initiated a sweeping review of existing agreements.


Last week, the Justice Department, without being asked, filed a brief in a private employment discrimination lawsuit. It urged an appeals court not to interpret the ban on sex-based discrimination in the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as covering sexual orientation. The Obama administration had shied from taking a stand on that question.

Vanita Gupta, who ran the civil rights division in the Obama administration’s second term and is now president of the liberal Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, noted that the briefs in the Texas voter identification and gay-rights cases were signed only by Trump administration political appointees, not career officials, just as the affirmative action project will apparently be run directly by the division’s front office.


“The fact that the position is in the political front office, and not in the career section that enforces antidiscrimination laws for education, suggests that this person will be carrying out an agenda aimed at undermining diversity in higher education without needing to say it,” Ms. Gupta said.

The civil rights division has been a recurring culture-war battleground as it passed between Democratic and Republican administrations.

During the administration of George W. Bush, its overseers violated Civil Service hiring laws, an inspector general found, by filling its career ranks with conservatives who often had scant experience in civil rights law. At the same time, it brought fewer cases alleging systematic discrimination against minorities and more alleging reverse discrimination against whites, like a 2006 lawsuit forcing Southern Illinois University to stop reserving certain fellowship programs for women or members of underrepresented racial groups.

In 2009, the Obama administration
vowed to revitalize the agency and hired career officials who brought in many new lawyers with experience working for traditional, liberal-leaning civil-rights organizations.

Follow Charlie Savage on Twitter @charlie_savage.


https://mobile.nytimes.com/2017/08/...rsities.html?referer=https://news.google.com/


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Justice Dept. to Take On Affirmative Action in WHITE College Admissions



President Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions have helped tilt the Justice Department to the right on civil rights issues.
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THIS subject line and THIS picture reminds me how much these two bastards could never really fall out with each other.

Somebody please play Alicia Keys, "In Common" . . .


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Why the Justice Department Is Targeting Affirmative Action


Jeff Sessions follows in the risky footsteps of George W. Bush’s Justice Department.


August 2 at 6:20 p.m.

You can tell a lot about an administration by what cases the civil-rights division of its Justice Department pursues. In the Obama administration, for example, the division made police reform a priority, reaching more than twice as many consent decrees to force police departments to change their practices as any previous administration.

According to a document first reported by The New York Times, the Trump Justice Department has decided to focus on investigating and suing universities with affirmative-action programs that the department deems to have discriminated against white students. The document uses bland language, saying a new project will focus on “intentional race-based discrimination,” which obscures the magnitude of the shift involved.

The Justice Department said the stories were much ado about nothing, saying a job posting “sought volunteers to investigate one administrative complaint filed by a coalition of 64 Asian-American associations in May 2015 that the prior Administration left unresolved.” A spokeswoman added, “The Department of Justice is committed to protecting all Americans from all forms of illegal race-based discrimination.”

The Justice Department pursues cases of intentional race-based discrimination all the time, but those cases are almost entirely cases where minorities are the subjects of discrimination. While laws are, as former Republican DOJ staffer Roger Clegg noted to the Times, race-neutral in language, the laws were written to protect minorities, for the obvious reason that, as data show, systems from voting to schools to law enforcement have long privileged whites over minorities.

But some conservatives view that language neutrality as a mechanism for pushing back on what they see as undue efforts to aid minorities. This has been especially true in higher education, where a pair of lawsuits by Abigail Fisher argued that she had unfairly been denied admission to the University of Texas at Austin because of its affirmative-action policy—a claim rejected by the Supreme Court. Statistics don’t suggest discrimination against white students; in fact, at top-tier schools, black representation has actually fallen in recent years. (Discrimination logically only comes into play at selective schools.)

But the Trump administration came to office with a message that catered directly to white grievances on cultural and economic issues. Trump spoke directly to white working-class concerns, used frequent dog-whistle language about minorities, and did little to court voters of color. He drew significant public support from avowed white nationalists. In a post-election poll, almost half of Trump voters said they thought whites faced “a lot of discrimination,” more than voters that said blacks, Hispanics, Jews, or Muslims did—a result that’s widely divergent from the populace overall, which deemed whites least likely to suffer from serious discrimination. A PRRI/The Atlantic poll in November asked white working-class voters whether “efforts to increase diversity almost always come at the expense of whites.” Only 16 percent of Clinton voters, but 49 percent of Trump voters, agreed. (This might also explain the recent turn among Republicans against colleges.)

So even if there isn’t really much discrimination against whites, it feels to Trump voters like there is, making initiatives like this one an effective means of satisfying Trump’s core supporters. They also play interestingly into Trump’s troubled relationship with Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

Why would Sessions stay in the job even as Trump publicly rips him? Sessions has long been skeptical of affirmative action and other attempts to expand civil-rights protections, and now that he has control of the Justice Department, he is using it to forward many of his pet causes, including tough-on-crime policies, harsh sentencing for low-level drug offenses, and voter-ID laws. Even if the president is criticizing Sessions, he’s still giving him a forum to do things like the anti-affirmative-action push../.


Although the Trump administration is unusual for its embrace of white grievance and white nationalism, the Justice Department’s policy initiative against affirmative action has some precedent. The Justice Department during the administration of George W. Bush also radically reoriented the civil-rights division, including using laws historically used to protect minorities in novel ways to police discrimination against whites. (These are sometimes referred to under the infelicitous and illogical rubric of “reverse discrimination.”) Some veteran civil-rights attorneys were assigned to work on immigration and deportation cases. But those efforts ended in an attorney general’s resignation, a devastating Inspector General’s report, and a broken civil-rights division.

While every administration brings a new agenda—particularly when party control switches—Justice staffers and outside observers were surprised by how far Bush shifted matters. For example, Justice cut down the number of voter-discrimination cases that it brought. It also brought the first case of a voter-discrimination suit that alleged discrimination against white voters, in Noxubuee County, Mississippi. (A court ruled in favor of the government in that particular, egregious case, while voicing hesitation in general about using laws to fight for “the voting rights of historically privileged white voters who as a group do not suffer the effects of past discrimination” in general.) One of the leading lawyers on that case was J. Christian Adams, who is now a member of Trump’s voter-integrity project, which critics have described as an excuse to make it harder for minorities to vote.

The department also aggressively sought out cases of voter fraud. (The parallels between the two administrations continue.) Yet despite years of searching, the department was unable to find any significant organized fraud. What’s more, the effort to find fraud eventually led to the Justice Department improperly firing several U.S. attorneys who were unwilling to follow its political agenda. That scandal forced Attorney General Alberto Gonzales to resign.

Such “reverse-discrimination” cases served a dual purpose. They not only fit with the immediate ideological commitments of conservative activists in the department, but they also helped to push out career staff who objected. The Washington Post reported in 2005 that “Nearly 20 percent of the division's lawyers left in fiscal 2005, in part because of a buyout program that some lawyers believe was aimed at pushing out those who did not share the administration's conservative views on civil rights laws,” adding that career lawyers complained about being left out of major hiring and policy matters.

When reluctant lawyers didn’t quit on their own terms, they were sometimes removed. A 2009 Justice Department Inspector General’s report found that Bradley Schlozman, an assistant attorney general in charge of hiring for the civil-rights division, had violated both department policy and federal civil-rights law in his hiring choices by improperly politicizing the process. The report also found he had lied to Congress. (The inspector general also blamed current Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta for failing to intervene.)

Schlozman didn’t just seek to hire ideologically conservative attorneys; he also worked to force the existing ones out: “Schlozman frequently criticized the attorney staff in the Appellate Section and talked of his plan, when he ‘came into power,’ to move certain attorneys from the section to make room for ‘real Americans.’ Based on our interviews and our review of numerous e-mails, we found that Schlozman used the term ‘real Americans’ to refer to individuals with conservative political views.”

Bringing the heft of the civil-rights division to bear on policing alleged discrimination against white students is likely to alienate career attorneys and push them out, whether that is by design or not. Meanwhile, the travails of the Bush-era Justice Department offer some warnings for Sessions and Trump. The voter-fraud push produced little, and the attempts to politicize the department ended disastrously. But the prospect of being able to weaken or defeat affirmative-action laws that conservatives have long detested make the temptation hard to resist.


source: https://www.theatlantic.com/politic...e-department-embraces-white-grievance/535683/



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rich connected cacs have the most

elaborate form of affirmative action cac supremacy Monopoly Capitalism

ever witnessed by man!!

Harvard University incoming Class of 2021
41% Legacy admissions
(Legacy admissions are the progeny of Harvard alumnus)
Legacy Admissions are 90% whites.
http://www.businessinsider.com/harvard-incoming-freshmen-class-2017-9

Harvard is just one example. The other elite schools have similar demographics.
When these "connected" Cacs graduate they stick-together. They do business and work together as a "tribe"
http://www.economist.com/node/21543487

The Chinese work together and operate as a "tribe"
The Koreans work together and operate as a "tribe"
The Indians (Asians) work together and operate as a "tribe"

Black Americas?? NO-SO-MUCH
Black millionaires & a few billionaires are all DISCONNECTED and operate individually on their own islands — NO "tribe"

Black people are afraid to use the term "Black Power" which Stokely Carmichael brought to prominence in October 1966
http://voicesofdemocracy.umd.edu/carmichael-black-power-speech-text/

If I said Chinese Power or Indian Power or Russian Power Or Italian Power or Korean Power, NO ONE would even blink.....BUT
If I say Black Power or Black Lives Matter, people react as though I pulled the pin out of a grenade and tossed that grenade at them.
Why???
It's 2017 & Black Americans; especially the Black elite and so-called leadership class are still chasing honorary white status in AmeriKKKa.....NOT....Black Power.

As Benjamin Franklin said in 1776 when an elite group of white men, most of them slave holders, gathered to make the decision to go against British Empire Imperialism and form a separate Nation — Franklin said:

"We must, indeed, all hang together or, most assuredly, we shall all hang separately."

The Black elite and the Black leadership class haven't woken up to Franklin's reality.

 
Harvard University incoming Class of 2021
41% Legacy admissions
(Legacy admissions are the progeny of Harvard alumnus)
Legacy Admissions are 90% whites.
http://www.businessinsider.com/harvard-incoming-freshmen-class-2017-9

Harvard is just one example. The other elite schools have similar demographics.
When these "connected" Cacs graduate they stick-together. They do business and work together as a "tribe"
http://www.economist.com/node/21543487

The Chinese work together and operate as a "tribe"
The Koreans work together and operate as a "tribe"
The Indians (Asians) work together and operate as a "tribe"

Black Americas?? NO-SO-MUCH
Black millionaires & a few billionaires are all DISCONNECTED and operate individually on their own islands — NO "tribe"

Black people are afraid to use the term "Black Power" which Stokely Carmichael brought to prominence in October 1966
http://voicesofdemocracy.umd.edu/carmichael-black-power-speech-text/

If I said Chinese Power or Indian Power or Russian Power Or Italian Power or Korean Power, NO ONE would even blink.....BUT
If I say Black Power or Black Lives Matter, people react as though I pulled the pin out of a grenade and tossed that grenade at them.
Why???
It's 2017 & Black Americans; especially the Black elite and so-called leadership class are still chasing honorary white status in AmeriKKKa.....NOT....Black Power.

As Benjamin Franklin said in 1776 when an elite group of white men, most of them slave holders, gathered to make the decision to go against British Empire Imperialism and form a separate Nation — Franklin said:

"We must, indeed, all hang together or, most assuredly, we shall all hang separately."

The Black elite and the Black leadership class haven't woken up to Franklin's reality.



oh mos def feel what you are stating,

I just said it in simple form... you were more elaborate and specific...

even though I think its time we stop using the term 'supremacy" there is nothing supreme about needing

an uneven playin field to compete...

but you are a hunid thousand correct in your assessment.

but one thing tho, a lot of those folks especially asians have no problem shittin on their "lower classes'

and all those groups have organized crime families that are allowed to flourish and eventually morph into society...

our organized families get infiltrated and crushed the moment they get noticed.

jews, italians, chinese, irish, japanese, koreans etc all have an organized crime base.

and if anyone thinks that doesnt mean anything, they have zero idea how the current world we live in functions...

there is a concrete effort made by this govt to ensure we dont develop any type of organziation...

cointel is still in full effect...
 
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