BY JESSE JACKSON
August 8, 2017
August 8, 2017
The Justice Department headquarters building in Washington. | (AP Photo/J. David Ake, File)
Campaigning for the presidency, Donald Trump argued that blacks
and other people of color should vote for him. Given their current conditions, he argued, “What the hell do you have to
lose?” Since winning election, however, Trump seems intent on proving over and
over again just how much African-Americans and other minorities have to lose.
Under Trump’s attorney general, former Alabama Sen. Jefferson
Beauregard Sessions, the Justice Department has been turned into a Department
of Injustice. Sessions, once rejected by a Republican-majority Senate for
racially biased actions and statements when nominated to the federal bench by
Ronald Reagan, has set about implanting Dixiecrat justice on the nation’s
minorities.
He has directed federal prosecutors to seek the harshest
sentences possible for nonviolent drug offenses, ensuring the continued
incarceration of a disproportionate number of African Americans. The Justice
Department has retreated from what was an emerging bipartisan consensus on
sensible police reform. It has changed positions to support state laws that
suppress minority voting rights. It has extended the federal government’s power
to seize the property of innocent Americans.
Now, as reported in the New York Times, the
Department is seeking political attorneys to investigate and sue universities
“over affirmative action policies that are deemed to discriminate against white
applicants.” The assault on affirmative action is classic dog whistle racial
politics.
In fact, as former University of Michigan president Lee
Bollinger has shown, affirmative action has helped to
expand opportunity. Campuses across the country have become more representative
of the American people. This has not only helped counter centuries of
discrimination; it also allows students to learn with and from people of
different backgrounds. This helps prepare the future leaders and citizens of
the country.
The Supreme Court has ruled repeatedly that a diverse student
body is an educational benefit and a boon to the country that justifies
affirmative action.
Those who oppose it often assume that university admissions are
based upon one objective scale: grade point and standardized test results. This
is, in a word, nonsense. University admissions offices labor intensely to
create a diverse body of students capable of doing the work necessary to
succeed. Grades and standardized tests count, as does the quality of prior
educational experience. So does the luck of having an alum as a parent, or
wealthy relations who can add to the university endowment, or special athletic
or musical or dramatic skills, coming from underrepresented rural communities
or from abroad, and more.
Some of these categories — say having parents who are alumni or
are wealthy — discriminate disproportionately against people of color, since
African-Americans were forbidden to build fortunes under slavery and were often
excluded from college admissions until the civil rights movement’s reforms.
Affirmative action helps to level the playing field.
Another lie propagated by its opponents is that affirmative
action policies make it significantly harder for white students to get into
selective colleges. In fact, as Derek Bok, former Harvard president, and
William Bowen, former president of Princeton, reported, if selective
universities had a completely race-blind admissions policy, the probability of
being admitted for a white student would rise from 25 percent to 26.2 percent.
A final myth is that race no longer matters. The right-wing gang
of five justices in the Supreme Court argued this in gutting provisions of the
Voting Rights Act. States across the country then proved them wrong by enacting
new voting restrictions — a revival of Jim Crow voter suppression schemes — that
were designed to make it harder for African-Americans and students to vote.
America is more segregated than it was at the time of the civil rights
movement. Our public schools are too often separate and unequal. Race still
matters in this country, big-time.
What do we have to lose with Trump? Equal opportunity, voting
rights, police reform, sentencing reform, university admission. People of color
are learning that when Trump trumpets America First, he doesn’t include them in
his America.
Keep up with Rev. Jackson and the work of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition at www.rainbowpush.org.
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