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How Ruling Against Affirmative Action Does Black, Hispanic Students a Huge Favor

Opponents of affirmative action with the Asian American Coalition for Education protest outside the Supreme Court on June 29. That same day, in a 6-to-3 vote, Supreme Court justices ruled that race-conscious admissions programs at Harvard and the University of North Carolina are unconstitutional. (Photo: Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

The Left has panicked since America’s top tribunal decided last month, 6-to-3, that racial preferences in college admissions are unconstitutional.

“The Supreme Court ruling has put a giant roadblock in our country’s march toward racial justice,” complained Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

Former first lady Michelle Obama moaned: “Today, my heart breaks for any young person out there who’s wondering what their [sic] future holds—and what kinds of chances will be open to them.”

Such condescension is, itself, racist.

Assuming that minority children need racial preferences declares being black or Hispanic a handicap. Many minority applicants can enter universities, elite and otherwise, on their merits. To dispute this is to say that their skin color alone reflects insufficient brains to gain race-neutral acceptance to college.

Thinking so little of black and brown kids is racist.

That said, the Left’s “systemic racism” scarecrow does not target millions of minority children. Rather, these kids endure systemic ignorance; namely, government schools that leave their minds empty while incinerating tax dollars. 

Given their massive disservice to black and brown boys and girls, these “schools” might as well be run by David Duke and the Ku Klux Klan. In reality, these kids are oppressed in disproportionally black, Democrat-run cities. Bull Connor only could fantasize about the devastation that these Leftists heap on their own people:

In Chicago, you spend more. But remember: You get less.

If black and brown kids—who previously would have reached college via their melanin—now must rely on their merits, then America darn well better ready them. The Supreme Court’s decision boosts the urgency for school choice, educational excellence, and high expectations, and was a rejection of mediocrity and its advocates; namely, teachers-union parasites.

Parents, students, and voters must demand that per-pupil taxpayer dollars follow students to the best schools available—public, private, secular, parochial, and at home. K-12 schools should compete for those dollars, just as universities wrestle for parental savings and students’ Pell Grants and college loans. 

Radical teachers must abandon their evil obsession with stoking racial division and stirring students’ sexual feelings. Instead, the entire focus must be on reading, writing, and computing in service to postsecondary readiness. And students uninterested in college should prime themselves for vocational school, in which there is much promise and no dishonor.

Tutors, mentors, and after-school programs should help. Consider the Harlem Educational Activities Fund. This model nonprofit spurns excuses. Its motto: “Every child can learn.” Among the low-income, minority students who join this college-preparatory and cultural-enrichment initiative, 100% graduate high school, and 83% earn baccalaureates within six years versus an average 42% for Hispanics and 37% for blacks nationwide.

Also, some black kids denounce as race traitors other blacks who do their homework, participate in class, and speak proper English. This “Acting White Syndrome” must be excised from black culture like a brain tumor. These children don’t act white. They act right.

The Supreme Court did black and Hispanic students a massive favor by forcing them to rely on how they think, not how they look.

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