01-22-2004, 12:55 AM
Recently two of my friends were kicked out of a study lounge on my very college campus because of the color of their skin. They were making no noise, not disturbing anyone, and yet were "asked" to leave anyway. This study lounge is one of the nicest, cleanest, and most accessible lounges on campus, yet only a select few are allowed admittance. The lounge is called something along the lines of "The Minority Lounge" (they have a much longer and more flowery name which have never cared to waste the brain cells remembering). When asked why only pictures of African-Americans grace the walls when there are plenty of other minority heroes (since it is, after all, the "Minority Lounge") the moderators reply, "Just because". When a suggestion is made of numerous other well-respected and heralded minority individuals whose portraits would serve well on the walls, the moderators reply, "I don't think that will ever happen".
These actions are fully endorsed by the University.
Yes, my friends who were kicked out of the lounge based upon their skin color were indeed Caucasian, but that is honestly only a part of the point. When will people in this country learn that reverse discrimination is just as horrible and disgusting as discrimination itself is? What do you think the reaction would be at my University if a "Whites Only" study lounge was created in the most accessible part of campus and it was made one of the cleanest, nicest, and quietest to boot? It would be shot-down and condemned as utterly irreprehensible... and I wholeheartedly agree that it would completely deserve the vitriol that would be directed towards it. Same situation, but different skin color, and now the University is proud of it? Something is wrong here.
You can't tear down discrimination and hatred, exposing them for the evils that they are, by instead merely directing discrimination back upon other individuals. Hate breeds hate.
The University has put forth many excuses as to why it applauds this behavior, but all of them are half-assed fumblings meant to shroud the true issue and spurn forward their suicidal liberal hate train, doomed to eventually careen off the very twisting tracks it has laid itself and come crashing back down to Earth.
Reason Numéro Uno:
"Terrible injustices have been done to them in the past. We must pay for our forefathers' sins."
This excuse has always fallen upon deaf ears with me. Have the minorities of this country and many others been subject to many, many hardships? Yes, of course. I completely agree and really, truly do feel for these people. Many terrible things have been inflicted upon them for the benefit of others in one way or another. But I have done nothing wrong, there is no reason I should have to pay for events that occurred 50+ years ago with which I do not even begin to agree with in the first place. I would have liked to believe that we had moved beyond the Bible-thumping-fear-of-God way of thinking that all human beings are naturally evil. I have no sins to pay for in this issue. Attempting to make me feel guilty for things I never would have, or even could imagine, doing just so you can further your own agenda makes me sick to my stomach.
Did a great man not once say, "An eye for an eye leaves the whole world blind"?
Yes, it is horrible that you had to undergo these trials. No, it does not make things "better" to hurt others in return to give yourself extra benefits. When will this cycle of pain and hatred ever do anything but continue to spiral downwards and downwards and downwards? In an ironic sense, there is the sense that I am standing above the toilet that is what this issue has become waving "... and ducky go down the hooooole" as yet another thing that was once great is flushed down until the entire situation is bound to overflow and explode, like the classic Donald Duck cartoon.
The classic example of this inherently flawed way of thinking? Affirmative Action. The common party line for AA is actually that its intent is to give economically-challenged minorities the opportunities to succeed in the new American workplace. A very laudable cause, to say the least, but it approaches it totally wrong. Any suggestion that AA instead be changed to extra points for economically disadvantaged instead of an across-the-border free pass into a situation of which you may not be totally prepared (up to a year ago at my University, the bonus awarded for being African American was equal to a combined 3.8 high school GPA, perfect essay, and 1500 SAT) is met with questionable excuses of how it "wouldn't work" and that a blanket policy based upon race is better in the long run. How are blankte, stereotypical policies based upon poor knowledge of the true situation ever any good in the long run? AA fails utterly in its purpose, and instead just furthers the very stereotypes it is fumbling in the dark to magically abra-cadabra away. Some of the first in-depth studies on AA are coming out and they are showing that minorities who get into colleges due a large part to AA "benefits" have an astronomically high drop-out rate compared to those individuals who get in without the need of the free points. I fully support the idea of diversifying the workplace and providing benefit to underprivileged people, but when you lie about who you're actually providing the benefit to (I know this is a crazy concept to some, but there are Caucasian poor people too and not even all minorities are covered by AA policies!) and then those that you do force in are, unfortunately, failing in droves I cannot help but wonder at what the true motives beyond your disgustingly flawed view of the world can possible be.
How do you fix the situation? Get rid of this AA crap. Instead, start pouring more money into inner-city and other low-income schools. Then fix the administration of these funds. Currently, funding for non-private schools is horribly managed because good people who would actually care about the children they are responsible for the future of are discouraged from assuming the role of managing funds due to the politics of the position. Cut the crap. Get the good, qualified, and resourceful individuals into the positions they need to be in. Stop putting out bills with flashy names ("No Child Left Behind") meant to get oooh's and aaah's and instead get to the heart of the matter. Easier said that done, to be sure, but necessary nonetheless.
Once you get schools in poor areas are given the tools they need to compete with the more affluent areas of the nation, then there is no more need for any of the AA/"Eye for an eye" bull#$%&. Everyone gets the equal opportunity these deserve and you don't have to institute horrible hypocritical blanket plans in order to pull the covers over the public's eyes as to what is really wrong.
I love my country, but there are a disgusting number of band-aid fixes that are secretly rotting and turning gangrenous beneath its shroud. For too long the public has been content to live out their lives, happy merely in the fact that they just don't have to see the festering wound - not caring to make any effort to fix it since to fix it one would have to admit that it exists in the first place.
It's time to take the band-aid off. It's time to take the cover off our eyes.
Perhaps the most insidious effect of AA is how it also subtly undermines much of the minority community while claiming to be doing just the opposite. There was a letter in the 'Letters to the Editor' section of the campus newspaper recently in which the writer described himself as a "strong, well-versed black man proud of his heritage". Yet, he went on to describe how because of AA he wakes up every single morning unsure whether he really deserves to be at the University, or if he instead just received a "free ride" based upon the color of his skin. He tells how he wanted to be accepted based upon his academic merit and never, ever desired to be handed anything for free in life. To be given something for free is not to truly appreciate all that it entails. It saddens me to a great extent how AA shook the confidence of unnamed man.
Discrimination is discrimination is discrimination. One cannot interpose flowery words and empty ideas in an attempt to cover up the ugliness that discrimination is. One cannot look me in the eye and tell me that giving advantages to others based solely upon the color of their skin is discrimination. Discrimination is ugly in any form. Reversing it doesn't make it any prettier.
It's time to drop the notion that the past is anything but the past. Let the past be the past. If we are to move on as a society, a nation, and perhaps even as a species we must look towards the future. Drop the vitriol towards those perceived slights that occurred between the fathers of the fathers of the fathers of the fathers. Drop the hate. Drop the flawed idea that anything is "owed" to you. The world owes you nothing. The world owes me nothing. The world owes no one anything. Just drop it all.
How are we to grow as a people if we are doing nothing but living in the past, hung up on who did who wrong?
These actions are fully endorsed by the University.
Yes, my friends who were kicked out of the lounge based upon their skin color were indeed Caucasian, but that is honestly only a part of the point. When will people in this country learn that reverse discrimination is just as horrible and disgusting as discrimination itself is? What do you think the reaction would be at my University if a "Whites Only" study lounge was created in the most accessible part of campus and it was made one of the cleanest, nicest, and quietest to boot? It would be shot-down and condemned as utterly irreprehensible... and I wholeheartedly agree that it would completely deserve the vitriol that would be directed towards it. Same situation, but different skin color, and now the University is proud of it? Something is wrong here.
You can't tear down discrimination and hatred, exposing them for the evils that they are, by instead merely directing discrimination back upon other individuals. Hate breeds hate.
The University has put forth many excuses as to why it applauds this behavior, but all of them are half-assed fumblings meant to shroud the true issue and spurn forward their suicidal liberal hate train, doomed to eventually careen off the very twisting tracks it has laid itself and come crashing back down to Earth.
Reason Numéro Uno:
"Terrible injustices have been done to them in the past. We must pay for our forefathers' sins."
This excuse has always fallen upon deaf ears with me. Have the minorities of this country and many others been subject to many, many hardships? Yes, of course. I completely agree and really, truly do feel for these people. Many terrible things have been inflicted upon them for the benefit of others in one way or another. But I have done nothing wrong, there is no reason I should have to pay for events that occurred 50+ years ago with which I do not even begin to agree with in the first place. I would have liked to believe that we had moved beyond the Bible-thumping-fear-of-God way of thinking that all human beings are naturally evil. I have no sins to pay for in this issue. Attempting to make me feel guilty for things I never would have, or even could imagine, doing just so you can further your own agenda makes me sick to my stomach.
Did a great man not once say, "An eye for an eye leaves the whole world blind"?
Yes, it is horrible that you had to undergo these trials. No, it does not make things "better" to hurt others in return to give yourself extra benefits. When will this cycle of pain and hatred ever do anything but continue to spiral downwards and downwards and downwards? In an ironic sense, there is the sense that I am standing above the toilet that is what this issue has become waving "... and ducky go down the hooooole" as yet another thing that was once great is flushed down until the entire situation is bound to overflow and explode, like the classic Donald Duck cartoon.
The classic example of this inherently flawed way of thinking? Affirmative Action. The common party line for AA is actually that its intent is to give economically-challenged minorities the opportunities to succeed in the new American workplace. A very laudable cause, to say the least, but it approaches it totally wrong. Any suggestion that AA instead be changed to extra points for economically disadvantaged instead of an across-the-border free pass into a situation of which you may not be totally prepared (up to a year ago at my University, the bonus awarded for being African American was equal to a combined 3.8 high school GPA, perfect essay, and 1500 SAT) is met with questionable excuses of how it "wouldn't work" and that a blanket policy based upon race is better in the long run. How are blankte, stereotypical policies based upon poor knowledge of the true situation ever any good in the long run? AA fails utterly in its purpose, and instead just furthers the very stereotypes it is fumbling in the dark to magically abra-cadabra away. Some of the first in-depth studies on AA are coming out and they are showing that minorities who get into colleges due a large part to AA "benefits" have an astronomically high drop-out rate compared to those individuals who get in without the need of the free points. I fully support the idea of diversifying the workplace and providing benefit to underprivileged people, but when you lie about who you're actually providing the benefit to (I know this is a crazy concept to some, but there are Caucasian poor people too and not even all minorities are covered by AA policies!) and then those that you do force in are, unfortunately, failing in droves I cannot help but wonder at what the true motives beyond your disgustingly flawed view of the world can possible be.
How do you fix the situation? Get rid of this AA crap. Instead, start pouring more money into inner-city and other low-income schools. Then fix the administration of these funds. Currently, funding for non-private schools is horribly managed because good people who would actually care about the children they are responsible for the future of are discouraged from assuming the role of managing funds due to the politics of the position. Cut the crap. Get the good, qualified, and resourceful individuals into the positions they need to be in. Stop putting out bills with flashy names ("No Child Left Behind") meant to get oooh's and aaah's and instead get to the heart of the matter. Easier said that done, to be sure, but necessary nonetheless.
Once you get schools in poor areas are given the tools they need to compete with the more affluent areas of the nation, then there is no more need for any of the AA/"Eye for an eye" bull#$%&. Everyone gets the equal opportunity these deserve and you don't have to institute horrible hypocritical blanket plans in order to pull the covers over the public's eyes as to what is really wrong.
I love my country, but there are a disgusting number of band-aid fixes that are secretly rotting and turning gangrenous beneath its shroud. For too long the public has been content to live out their lives, happy merely in the fact that they just don't have to see the festering wound - not caring to make any effort to fix it since to fix it one would have to admit that it exists in the first place.
It's time to take the band-aid off. It's time to take the cover off our eyes.
Perhaps the most insidious effect of AA is how it also subtly undermines much of the minority community while claiming to be doing just the opposite. There was a letter in the 'Letters to the Editor' section of the campus newspaper recently in which the writer described himself as a "strong, well-versed black man proud of his heritage". Yet, he went on to describe how because of AA he wakes up every single morning unsure whether he really deserves to be at the University, or if he instead just received a "free ride" based upon the color of his skin. He tells how he wanted to be accepted based upon his academic merit and never, ever desired to be handed anything for free in life. To be given something for free is not to truly appreciate all that it entails. It saddens me to a great extent how AA shook the confidence of unnamed man.
Discrimination is discrimination is discrimination. One cannot interpose flowery words and empty ideas in an attempt to cover up the ugliness that discrimination is. One cannot look me in the eye and tell me that giving advantages to others based solely upon the color of their skin is discrimination. Discrimination is ugly in any form. Reversing it doesn't make it any prettier.
It's time to drop the notion that the past is anything but the past. Let the past be the past. If we are to move on as a society, a nation, and perhaps even as a species we must look towards the future. Drop the vitriol towards those perceived slights that occurred between the fathers of the fathers of the fathers of the fathers. Drop the hate. Drop the flawed idea that anything is "owed" to you. The world owes you nothing. The world owes me nothing. The world owes no one anything. Just drop it all.
How are we to grow as a people if we are doing nothing but living in the past, hung up on who did who wrong?
--Mith
I would rather be ashes than dust! I would rather that my spark should burn out in a brilliant blaze than it should be stifled by dry rot. I would rather be a superb meteor, every atom of me in magnificent glow, than a sleepy and permanent planet. The proper function of man is to live, not to exist. I shall not waste my days in trying to prolong them. I shall use my time.
Jack London
I would rather be ashes than dust! I would rather that my spark should burn out in a brilliant blaze than it should be stifled by dry rot. I would rather be a superb meteor, every atom of me in magnificent glow, than a sleepy and permanent planet. The proper function of man is to live, not to exist. I shall not waste my days in trying to prolong them. I shall use my time.
Jack London