Bush Appointee to Commission on Civil Rights says "Affirmative Action is No Longer Needed'
Friday, April 22, 2005 at 09:39PM
TheSpook
Students got a professional perspective
on modern civil rights issues Tuesday night from a presidential
appointee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Peter Kirsanow spoke
to students about ending what he called an outdated model of civil
rights at an event sponsored by the Committee for a Better Carolina and
College Republicans. Kirsanow said the grievance-victim model, a theory
that says minorities deserve concessions to succeed in societies, did
more harm than good by stigmatizing minorities as victims and
encouraging conformity. “It has been credibly said that we are in a
post-civil rights era,” he said. “Virtually all the civil rights
legislation that can be passed has already been passed.” Kirsanow
addressed concerns that eliminating affirmative action would “turn back
the clock” for minorities and that it’s no longer needed. “They
continue and repeatedly fight battles that have already been won with
the same antiquated weapons and tactics,” he said. “You can’t move
ahead if you’re always looking in the rear-view mirror.” He said that
affirmative action is not fair to any of those involved. The system
makes it seven times more likely for a black student to be admitted to
most schools than a white student, and Asian students are not included
in affirmative action, he said. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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