Supreme Court’s Anti-Affirmative Action Ruling Now Has Colleges Ditching Race-Based Scholarships
Source: Orlando Sentinel / Getty
Let’s say two children are sitting in a room playing with their toys. The first child has a toy box that is overflowing and spilling toys onto the floor while the second child has only one toy. He had more, once, but they were stolen a long time ago. At some point an adult walks into the room and gives the second child a few extra hand-me-down toys and the child is delighted. But the first child did not receive hand-me-downs. He had the same toys, fresh out of the box. Even still, that he was handed nothing and the other child was handed something, the first child throws a complete temper tantrum, even breaking some of the second child’s used toys. When the adult comes back in the room, the first child screeches at them: “Hey, how come he gets those toys and I don’t?!”
White people are that first child whenever they ask why there isn’t a White History Month, a White Entertainment Television network or white colleges, and they’re also that first child when they fight to end diversity initiatives, including college admissions and scholarships for the second child.
The Anti Civil and Human Rights Movement in Education
According to the Washington Post, the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to end affirmative action in college admissions effectively caused colleges and universities across the country to also cancel scholarships made for students of color, despite the fact that the Supreme Court ruling doesn’t require it (yet). Duke University, the Post further reported, recently discontinued a 45-year-old scholarship that covered tuition, currently about $66,000 a year, and housing costs of some Black undergraduate students.
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