Quote from: TheZooker on January 17, 2005, 06:59:50 PMI'm very surprised that you guys are so anti-Clarence Thomas. Is it solely his stance on AA that you are so strongly in disagreement with, or with his appointment as a whole (barring his AA ideologies)?My problem is actually with his entire judicial philosphy - which, though it appears he attempts to be a Scalia copycat, is actually consistent but far too libertarian for my tastes.My problem with him on the issue of affirmative action is no different from my problem with Rehnquist, Scalia, and Kennedy. It's just that White people love to tote him out and use him as evidence that AA really is screwed up - as if because some token Black person says something, it must be true for everyone else.But anyway, Zooker I can't find that article you linked to earlier (all the threads have my head spinning! Do you want to post that link again? I'd appreciate it.
I'm very surprised that you guys are so anti-Clarence Thomas. Is it solely his stance on AA that you are so strongly in disagreement with, or with his appointment as a whole (barring his AA ideologies)?
1) Then what is a "token black"?A "token black" is the one black representative to a board, in an organization, or other places where White folks feel the need for "diversity", but don't want to really interrupt the status quo. In Thomas' case, he is the token Black for the Supreme Court.2) What makes Thomas a "token black"?See above. Tokenizing someone is making her/him a representative of his/her ethnic group. Thomas was clearly serving this role when he was appointed. Bush needed to insert a Black person, not for his diverse perspective or his particular expertise, but just to fill a quota.3) How has he annointed himself the spokesperson for all Black people?President Bush did when he selected him as a conservative to fill the "Black seat" on the SCOTUS bench (despite his issues with womanizing.) Thomas has tried all his life to avoid pigeonholing, but he has been tokenized anyway. Of course, when I mentioned "spokespeople" I was referencing the people you mentioned in your previous post, such as Jesse Jackson, who often claim to speak for Black people even though every Black person I know criticizes him on the regular.4) What makes you say he has been "co-opted"?He hasn't, as far as I can tell. Again, I was referencing other that you mentioned as Black leaders, who are less as interested in advancing Black-American concerns and more interested in advancing themselves through their civil rights credentials (in the case of White liberals) or their amazing conservatism (for White conservatives - see Alan Keyes and Armstrong Williams as examples.)Again, I disagree with Thomas' judicial philosophy as do most progressives of all ethnicities who believe in a strong court. It is not him personally, but the way White people tokenize him, that is abhorrent.
But here's the question. When and how does the Black conservative not become a token.
2) What makes Thomas a "token black"?Tokenizing someone is making her/him a representative of his/her ethnic group.
It's after 3 AM here and I'm hitting the sack, though I'd love to continue this argument. I promised myself that on MLK Day I could spend time defending AA policy on LSD...but starting tomorrow I need to get cracking on my thesis. With the exception of Zooker and the Sander article, I'm done for now with AA and will post about law school stuff and on BLSD from here on out. Let's save this for law school when we can do it in person.
Quote from: VinnyMyCousin on January 17, 2005, 09:40:04 PMQuote from: mobell195 on January 17, 2005, 08:49:41 PM2) What makes Thomas a "token black"?Tokenizing someone is making her/him a representative of his/her ethnic group. Here you've made what I think is the best articulation of an anti-AA argument yet on this board, whether you realize it or not. Admitting a black, hispanic, or American Indian via the implementation of AA in the name of "diversity" automatically makes the black/hispanic/american indian admittee the representative of his/her ethno-racial grouping. Measuring "diversity" by the mixture of skin tones and ethnic backgrounds makes everyone a subunit of their respective category. The idea that the "diversity" of a mostly white classroom or workplace will be enhanced as a direct result of taking on a black or hispanic applicant (chosen by virtue of their race/ethnicity) only makes sense if that "black" or "hispanic" applicant represents a "black" or "hispanic" perspective. So, mobell, if making someone a "representative of his/her ethnic group is 'tokenizing'", then AA makes "tokens" of us all. (Note: If you're responding to this post, I ask you to please refrain from bringing up the "need to right past wrongs" argument, as 2003's SCOTUS decision regarding the Univ. of Michigan case made that justification illegal, ruling that affirmative action was no longer justified as a way of redressing past oppression and injustice, but rather that it promoted a "compelling state interest" in diversity. For all practical purposes, there is no need to harp on a justification that has been ruled illegal.) ROFL. Thank you for preempting an argument that I was not planning to make. I am quite familiar with the court's reasoning in Grutter, which pokes holes all over your argument.By definition, creation of a critical mass of a minority group is permitted by AA. The policy does not look at the effects of admitting a single Black or Hispanic or Vietnamese person, but rather admitting such a number so that the interests of diversity are served. One of the pedagogical interests of classroom diversity is so that people have exposure to different ethnicities in a meaningful sense - not just one person of an ethnic group. This is the problem with tokenizing. It presumes that one person is able to represent a whole group. AA, however, ensures that there is a large enough group of people for a "representative sample", so to speak. Try again.
Quote from: mobell195 on January 17, 2005, 08:49:41 PM2) What makes Thomas a "token black"?Tokenizing someone is making her/him a representative of his/her ethnic group. Here you've made what I think is the best articulation of an anti-AA argument yet on this board, whether you realize it or not. Admitting a black, hispanic, or American Indian via the implementation of AA in the name of "diversity" automatically makes the black/hispanic/american indian admittee the representative of his/her ethno-racial grouping. Measuring "diversity" by the mixture of skin tones and ethnic backgrounds makes everyone a subunit of their respective category. The idea that the "diversity" of a mostly white classroom or workplace will be enhanced as a direct result of taking on a black or hispanic applicant (chosen by virtue of their race/ethnicity) only makes sense if that "black" or "hispanic" applicant represents a "black" or "hispanic" perspective. So, mobell, if making someone a "representative of his/her ethnic group is 'tokenizing'", then AA makes "tokens" of us all. (Note: If you're responding to this post, I ask you to please refrain from bringing up the "need to right past wrongs" argument, as 2003's SCOTUS decision regarding the Univ. of Michigan case made that justification illegal, ruling that affirmative action was no longer justified as a way of redressing past oppression and injustice, but rather that it promoted a "compelling state interest" in diversity. For all practical purposes, there is no need to harp on a justification that has been ruled illegal.)