sure he did
Quote from: Captain Longshot on March 19, 2007, 11:50:06 PMQuote from: MCB on March 19, 2007, 07:14:04 PMsure he did MCB disagrees with meI just deleted a pretty long response I was going to post. Frankly, it doesn't matter. All I really care about is if I get into a school or not, at this point, and I don't really care who my classmates are. I'm not interested in being the bad guy in this thread.I'm staying out of AA threads from now on. Damn, and I was all ready to jump in with my (lower upper class) racial burden, namely that, until you've been spit on, denied service, or various other sundry indignities based on your race, it might behoove you not to presume how much prejudice money can or can't buy off in our fine nation.
Quote from: MCB on March 19, 2007, 07:14:04 PMsure he did MCB disagrees with meI just deleted a pretty long response I was going to post. Frankly, it doesn't matter. All I really care about is if I get into a school or not, at this point, and I don't really care who my classmates are. I'm not interested in being the bad guy in this thread.I'm staying out of AA threads from now on.
Quote from: Captain Longshot on March 19, 2007, 05:10:41 PMEven so, a middle class black kid from NJ who went to a prep school isn't making your school more diverse. He had basically the same experience as I did... Now, the kid from inner city Newark had a VERY different experience.With all due respect, Captain Longshot --I do take issue with the bolded statements, particularly the latter. Being black in this country IS in itself an experience. It would be incorrect of you to assume that a middle class black kid attending a prep school is (a) receiving similar benefits and opportunities in both home, school, and society as white kids from the same social class or is (b) somehow immune from facing some of the same obstacles, discrimination, and barriers to opportunity as do blacks of a lower social status. I find it difficult to believe that the student you referenced (and the family he hails from) is simply living a "chocolate-covered" version of your life, as your second statement seems to imply. This seems to be a conception of "race" that a non-minority would likely hold. I would venture to guess that you may simply not know this student well enough, or be made privy to enough of his family's business, to genuinely know whether "he had basically the same experience [you] did." In fact, I wouldn't be surprised at all to find that he may have a "VERY different experience" than *YOU*, while at the same time share a wealth of common experiences with that black kid from Newark.
Even so, a middle class black kid from NJ who went to a prep school isn't making your school more diverse. He had basically the same experience as I did... Now, the kid from inner city Newark had a VERY different experience.
I am skeptical that the system can be changed at all in the near future. It's become too ingrained and in the short term would lead to a severe drop in URMs at the top schools, law firms, etc. The public owuldn't stand for this, which is why the system would need to be phased out or revised VERY gradually to make progress without hurting those who it had initially intended to help.
I think it's problematic that you think there is something dublicitous about middle class blacks. Where does this opinon come from?In any case, let me say for full disclosure that i'm working class and come from a single parent home. According to Opoto, I've done the "come up" I don't think middle class blacks defend AA for some ulterior or covert reason. They defend it bc, despite the problematics behind it (like i personally think it's really sh*tty that a poor rural white kid can't get the same bumbs). However, it seems to me that you are saying that middle class blks shouldn't get AA and it should solely go to the poorer ones. But this begs the question--just who is applying to law school in huge amounts? If it's the middle class ones, should we just forget about them and admit the 5 poorer blks? And if it's the poorer blks that apply in larger #s, they will probably get looked at with even more attention than the middle class blacks anyway (especially if they cannot tell a compelling story).
subtle goalie baff
Saw dashrashi's LSN site. Since she seems to use profanity, one could say that HYP does not necessarily mean class or refinement.