Posted 2018-January-26, 08:27
Quarrels about affirmative action have been going on for a good part of my adult life so i doubt that anything I say here will be new.
Basically, I think there are better approaches which would get broader support and be more effective. Here in Maryland, and I think pretty much everywhere else, public education varies drastically based on where you live. This is especially true at the high school level. Certainly there are white students who go to lousy schools but the disparity in quality is tied to economics and is especially tough on minorities. The disparity is far greater than it was when I was growing up in Minnesota in the 40s and 50s.
People of differing political views could, many of them, agree that it would be good for us all if young people attended schools where they would have a good chance of growing up to become responsible self-supporting citizens. Of course that would require solid planning, cash and commitment. It's difficult. But it would have a pay-off.
Some forms of affirmative action are no doubt helpful. Mostly I am thinking of programs that expand a person's knowledge of possibilities. Expanding choice is good, but respecting choice is also good. I have known quite a few people who would take a dim view of any government program that was designed to turn them into mathematicians. My father, for example. But programs that enable youngsters to see options beyond what they see when they look around their immediate neighborhood, and then encourage them to choose whether one option or another is best for them, and then help then along their chosen path, now we are getting somewhere.
Much of what is thought of as Affirmative Action would in fact be illegal and thus does not much happen, at least not exactly. If two people apply for the same job you cannot, or at least I think you cannot, say I will hire this person rather than that person because s/he is African-American or because she is female. But you can hassle employers for not hiring women or minorities in numbers that are deemed suitable, and so things start to get unclear. Unclear to everyone. I was giving a young female colleague a ride home from some meeting, I forget the details, but we were having a reasonable frank discussion. She felt that she had been hired because she was female. I said "No, we don't do that here". She wasn't convinced. People like to be hired for their abilities. When it becomes unclear how much of a hiring decision is based on ability and how much is based on Affirmative Action I think everyone, including the person being hired, loses. This young woman wanted to work where she would be appreciated for her ability, not for making the numbers look good.
Summary: I support efforts at inclusion. I am a good deal more wary of efforts to make numbers look good.
Ken