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Ketanji Brown Jackson’s Dissent Is An Argument For Institutional Racism

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  s  •  last year  •  8 comments

Ketanji Brown Jackson’s Dissent Is An Argument For Institutional Racism

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson hardly feigned interest in adjudicating the constitutionality of affirmative action in her   dissent   today. Remember all that talk about Jackson’s “ progressive originalism ?” It’s not a thing.

Instead, Jackson offered more than 9,000 overwrought words of leftist social commentary, “expound[ing] upon the universal benefits of considering race in this context.” Her embrace of identitarianism and defense of Asian-American discrimination is jarring. Jackson believes state-funded institutions should judge Americans by their immutable characteristics and historical sins rather than their individual accomplishments and actions. It’s really that simple.




“With let-them-eat-cake obliviousness, today, the majority pulls the ripcord and announces ‘colorblindness for all’ by legal fiat,” Jackson’s sarcastically noted. I dunno; colorblindness seems like a worthy ambition. But the Supreme Court didn’t institute “colorblindness for all.” It could no more do that than stop justices from mixing their metaphors. What it did was reaffirm colorblindness   as a matter of law . On this topic, the   Fourteenth Amendment   and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 is clear:


No person in the United States shall, on the ground of race, color, or national origin, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.

The Civil Rights Act does not make exceptions for disadvantaged groups, “lived experiences,” or race — quite the opposite. Using Jackson’s logic, any institution could adopt any racial preferences they wanted. As long as there was some emotional argument for it. Though, in fairness, there isn’t much logic to be had in progressive Calvinlaw.

Moreover, as Jackson surely knows, the Supreme Court exists to use “legal fiat” to uphold the Constitution. Every opinion that Jackson has been on the majority has used this approach.

Jackson argues that government-funded policies that are prejudiced against white and   Asian kids   — all of them, no matter how hard they work or what their backgrounds might be — are not only legal but necessary. What she fails to concede is that for every instance of “affirmative” race-based admission to a college, there is corresponding instance of race-based discrimination.


Instead of wrestling with this reality, Jackson creates two hypothetical strawstudents — John and James, one white and one black. Never once does she imagine that a white kid from, say, rural West Virginia might have overcome more societal barriers than a black kid from a middle-class suburb in Los Angeles. In her worldview, a black kid can’t overcome barriers without a lowering of standards. That is an extraordinarily corrosive and demeaning position to take. And it also has nothing to do with the law. (It’s also worth remembering that it’s highly   debatable   whether affirmative action helps minority students.)

The hypothetical couple in Jackson’s dissent   should be   James and the son of immigrants from India or Vietnam. Many Asians come to the United States from crushing generational poverty and racist caste systems. Many of these immigrants, as immigrants   in the past , have proven that, despite all our well-documented imperfections, the United States is, at heart, a meritocracy. It’s why people “of color” flood our borders. That’s a highly inconvenient reality for the left.

Jackson is free to make the case that our history has robbed black Americans of their agency, and so the Fourteenth Amendment should be rewritten. She is free to believe that Asian Americans and whites, and perhaps others, do not deserve equal protection under the law. But those arguments belong in the editorial pages of The Atlantic or The New York Times, not in the Supreme Court.


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Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Sean Treacy    last year

A contrast with Thomas' magisterial concurrence for the ages. 

Jackson assaulted precedent while claiming to preserver it. Pushed  misinformation to make her argument that's opened herself to ridicule  and argued for discrminatinig against Asians in favor of blacks in perpetuity.

As the author notes, her dissent belongs in an op-ed, not a court decision.

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Principal
2  Sparty On    last year

It certainly is and she’s a SC Justice.    

Scary but thank God we dodged the Merrick Garland  bullet.

 
 
 
George
Junior Expert
2.1  George  replied to  Sparty On @2    last year

Makes Mitch McConnel look brilliant for saving the Republic from that incompetent piece of crap.

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
3  seeder  Sean Treacy    last year

The left misses RBG.  Kagan’s supposed to be the intellectual of the group and she didn’t write on this.  Instead you get two emotional op Ed’s that don’t even try to defend the courts AA precedent, and were easily smacked down by roberts.

 
 
 
MrFrost
Professor Guide
3.1  MrFrost  replied to  Sean Treacy @3    last year
The left misses RBG.

(Most on) The right is too stupid to realize that they know nothing about the "left". 

 
 
 
Texan1211
Professor Principal
3.1.1  Texan1211  replied to  MrFrost @3.1    last year

Kind of a silly thing to dispute.

Or was all that sorrow just for show when she passed?

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
4  seeder  Sean Treacy    last year
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Jack_TX
Professor Quiet
5  Jack_TX    last year
In her worldview, a black kid can’t overcome barriers without a lowering of standards.

TBF, that is how public education has worked for decades.

It's appalling, but it's become so ingrained in large parts of American society they don't even realize they're doing it and never stop to think about how racist it actually is.

 
 

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