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mainestream's avatar

The outcomes cited by Mr. Creswell are well-established and under-appreciated. Furthermore, they make logical sense. Similar findings have been discovered when women pursue STEM at women’s colleges rather than coed institutions, although for different reasons.

We would be happier all around if we sought human flourishing in a variety of forms, rather than obsessing about numeric representations in each racial, gender, and socioeconomic group. For every Black denied admission to an Ivy League university, there are 6-8 times as many Whites who also get that thin envelope as HS seniors.

Human beings pursue in-group racial preferences starting with marriage rates (>85%) and only change over long sweeps of time as individuals know and trust each other. Coercing outcomes is a temporary high with longer term shortcomings.

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D. Malcolm Carson's avatar

Mostly accurate, but I do fear that in some ways this could end up being even worse. The SCOTUS left open a loophole, which is that it's fine for a black student to talk about their race in their essay, and for the school to take that into account. Whereas previously, a black student might've not thought about race in their lives at all, but just "checked the box", now the same black student might think that they should foreground the role of race in their lives, as that's what will be, or was, front and center in the application essay. Paradoxically, we travel down a path of even more focus on racial identity . . .

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