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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 11:59 am 
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ZephMarshack wrote:
WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
You think writers and thinkers are not products of the times they are writing in? That's what you are saying in your initial response. I would say the culture of the places where professors work has a huge influence on their outlooks. Do you think writers in the 30s weren't influenced by the news and politics of their times?
This heuristic applies equally then to the historians that Baptist, Beckert, and Rothman are responding to as well though (who you seem to have no problem with). If you want to say they're too influenced by PC politics and thus overstate the significance of the Civil War on the impact of the entire US economy, one can just as well respond that earlier historians were too devoted to patriotism and focused on downplaying the centrality of slavery and the contradictions it entails for our nice narratives of American history centered on liberty. At which point, the debate becomes about evidence, rather than just insulting actual scholar for being too influenced by present day politics just because they happen to disagree with your priors.

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As for the rest it's largely semantics. Of course the economies were interlinked in some respects, but what it the purpose of that insight? I don't think you can say that without cotton from the slave South there is no modern United States economy. It's speculative at best. What is undeniable is that American capitalism excelled in non-Slave states after the Civil War.
It's also undeniable that the North benefited from the raw materials extracted by slave labor prior to the Civil War, and it's highly speculative as well whether the economy in those states follows the same trajectory it did without the easy access of cotton from the South. There's also of course the immigrant laborer ltg has been referred to multiple times in the course of this discussion, as well as the influx of cheap labor to those non-slave states brought on by the Souther Diaspora in the early 20th century. The point is you can't just find a hard cutoff and declare that this is the point where we can declare slavery suddenly becomes insignificant, most especially because of the continued oppression of slaves and descendants post-Civil War.

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To try to find ties in the modern economy back to slavery serves what purpose? Capitalism relied on a lot of low pay or no pay workers. I don't think the burden of being at the bottom at one time should eternally lie at the feet of just black people. And if we are going to correct for slavery now where do we go next? Correct for generations of workers who had almost zero rights?
Well it serves the purpose of correcting for histories that try to downplay its effect on the shape of America in comparison to squishy narratives about the triumph of liberalism and American exceptionalism.

And empirically they've basically never not been on the bottom for more than short spurts. No one argues about slavery in isolation being responsible for 21st century outcomes, but as a pattern of continuous oppression that carries over into the present day. It's not a surprise that being unable to even reckon with the reality of slavery in the 19th century may be correlated with myopically focusing on anything but racism that's occurring in the present.

And if you want to correct for other things, I'd say yes, we should definitely do a lot more for the Native Americans we've been mistreating for as long or longer as well.
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The last part is a totally separate argument. People wanted to forget about slavery in the 19th Century is not a significant factor in looking at 21st Century outcomes. It's anecdotal at best. I don't believe it serves anyone's interest to say your people have been wronged in the past, so we can't expect you to compete with other students. I think this is dangerous thinking, and not serving this and future generations well. It would be a lot better to deemphasize racial identity. Rather than say you the living embodiment of hundreds of years of mistreatment. What other group has to live like that?
You seem a helluva lot more concerned by black people possibly having perverse incentives more than any other group having to correct for their own existing perverse incentives to, for instance, downplay or deny the existence and effects of actual racism. One way to avoid having to say "you are the living embodiment of hundreds of years of mistreatment" is to actually stop the mistreatment and also make far more robust welfare benefits available than the comparatively paltry means-tested programs we have in the US.


It's a pain to respond to you because of the way you use quotes, and the glare from my computer. I don't know how much clearer can it be on this last point: I don't care about the benefits blacks receive. I am more concerned with the unintended effects of those benefits, and the impression that those benefits have created that become ingrained into the culture. You can deny those or take the usual tactic of saying it's racially motivated. That serves no purpose.

As for the histories: of course every era has it's biases. I question if the numbers are even close to accurate on records from that time. So it' s going to be a lot of speculation, and a narrative that will be well received by the current audience. Professors want to sell books too. My question is how can we definitively say the economy took off because of slave labor? I don't think that question can be answered, and it's something that I find generally annoying about writing about history. Trying to reduce the end results to a single point. Had it not been for this the the following would have never happened can be fun speculation, but we have no idea how it would have played out.

As for historical corrections- why does it only have to be minority groups? Can't we do a general uplifting rather than say it's only by your racial identity that we care about fixing the past.

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For instance they were never taught that Columbus was a slave owner.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 12:05 pm 
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leashyourkids wrote:
Likewise, most of the Mexican people I know are against illegal immigration. In fact, some find it insulting that others think they would automatically be in favor of illegal immigration. They worked hard to get here and think everyone should have to do the same. I was just talking to a first generation Mexican the other night who was fully in favor of a wall and thought that the media's portrayal of Trump was sickening.
I had a great time hanging out with you and "first generation Mexican" the other night talking about Donald Trump!


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 12:17 pm 
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leashyourkids wrote:
Likewise, most of the Mexican people I know are against illegal immigration. In fact, some find it insulting that others think they would automatically be in favor of illegal immigration. They worked hard to get here and think everyone should have to do the same. I was just talking to a first generation Mexican the other night who was fully in favor of a wall and thought that the media's portrayal of Trump was sickening.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 12:19 pm 
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WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
Asians are out competing the white majority by excelling in academic pursuits. I bet if blacks had a similar scholastic performance they would be having similar academic outcomes. If you want to tell me that blacks can't do that because of racism, then I ask what laws do you want to change to fix that?
Can you give me the numbers of a few Asians? I have some questions for them on how to compete with the white majority.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 12:23 pm 
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WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:

It's a pain to respond to you because of the way you use quotes, and the glare from my computer. I don't know how much clearer can it be on this last point: I don't care about the benefits blacks receive. I am more concerned with the unintended effects of those benefits, and the impression that those benefits have created that become ingrained into the culture. You can deny those or take the usual tactic of saying it's racially motivated. That serves no purpose.
If you're concerned about the effects of benefits, you're concerned about the benefits themselves.

Again I must ask, why are you so much more concerned about the "unintended effects" of those benefits than for instance the "unintended effects" of believing our society as currently constituted is any kind of meritocracy in the first place? The "unintended effects" of for instance teaching students that slaves were just "workers" who came to the West as a land of opportunity?

You seem to be treating the mere existence of possible perverse incentives from something as irrelevant to the majority of the population as affirmative action for top universities as having strong explanatory power for the current state of black culture. Quite frankly I think there's a shitton more work to do to actually identify any significant causal relationship there, and we can find potentially perverse incentives lurking behind practically every aspect of American life.

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As for the histories: of course every era has it's biases. I question if the numbers are even close to accurate on records from that time. So it' s going to be a lot of speculation, and a narrative that will be well received by the current audience
Interesting, this speculative and possibly agnostic take on history appeared to be missing from your initial confident assertions about the impact of slavery in your response to denis.
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Professors want to sell books too.
Hey here's that audience complaint once again. And once again directed only at people you disagree with rather than people you agree with.

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As for historical corrections- why does it only have to be minority groups? Can't we do a general uplifting rather than say it's only by your racial identity that we care about fixing the past.
Hey I tend to prefer more universal programs that allow for greater solidarity too. As I said when you quoted Rogers though, that tactical preference has absolutely nothing to do with accepting the ahistorical rubbish about the Civil War or just chalking all the problems up to culture or genes.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 12:33 pm 
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long time guy wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
long time guy wrote:
To suggest that Affirmative Action is an admission that "blacks cannot compete with whites" is for a lack of a better term stupid.


But there are people- including black people- who feel that way.

Justices Thomas and Sotomayor have become very close on a personal level despite their deep philosophical and ideological differences. It would be fascinating to hear the two of them debate the merits of Affirmative Action.



Yes but as i recall Clarence Thomas was himself the beneficiary of Affirmative Action programs. Been awhile since i've engaged on this but if i remember right he was himself the beneficiary of Affirmative Action..He is being hypocritical (black Conservatives are ripe for that sort of thing) by decrying the ills of a system that he directly benefitted from.



Yep bingo.

http://community.seattletimes.nwsource. ... ug=2128294

https://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/3412953

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Last edited by long time guy on Tue Jul 31, 2018 12:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 12:35 pm 
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No one is chalking up all problems to one factor unless you are in it’s all racism camp and to say otherwise is racist. This is far more complicated than we can get into here. It would be an interesting podcast. I would not have been as flippant if we were going to get into it this way, and I think that shaded the conversation into the wrong place. But honestly that’s pretty much the tone of the message board, people typically do not answer thoughtfully.

I would like to write more, but I have a work retreat this afternoon. So I’m offline for awhile. It’s been enjoyable for the most part.

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Why are only 14 percent of black CPS 11th-graders proficient in English?

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For instance they were never taught that Columbus was a slave owner.


Last edited by WaitingforRuffcorn on Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 12:54 pm 
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These discussions are so overly simplistic that it is hilarious. Just taking into account the size and scope of this country and its massive population should make this clear.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 12:57 pm 
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pittmike wrote:
These discussions are so overly simplistic that it is hilarious. Just taking into account the size and scope of this country and its massive population should make this clear.



At some point hopefully you will hopefully distance yourself from being cynical and actually add to them. If its not your thing then its not your thing but does every single post have to pertain to it being "not your thing"?

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:00 pm 
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long time guy wrote:
pittmike wrote:
These discussions are so overly simplistic that it is hilarious. Just taking into account the size and scope of this country and its massive population should make this clear.



At some point hopefully you will hopefully distance yourself from being cynical and actually add to them. If its not your thing then its not your thing but does every single post have to pertain to it being "not your thing"?


It should be everybody's thing. We are all personally invested in a better more harmonious country.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:00 pm 
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As was alluded to earlier the philosophy behind "legacy preference in admissions" appears to be a larger problem and one that critics of Affirmative Action and hypocrites have long ignored.

Ironically it is the minority students (ostensibly the Affirmative Action admits) that are challenging the practice.

https://www.theatlantic.com/education/a ... hy/553313/

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Last edited by long time guy on Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:09 pm, edited 2 times in total.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:00 pm 
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pittmike wrote:
These discussions are so overly simplistic that it is hilarious. Just taking into account the size and scope of this country and its massive population should make this clear.
True. Maybe we can sit down and have a beer together and I can tell you what minorities really think and those things just happen to match up with the world view you have.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:02 pm 
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long time guy wrote:
As was alluded to earlier the notion behind "legacy preference in admissions" appears to be a larger problem and one that critics of Affirmative Action critics and hypocrites have long overlooked.

Ironically it is the minority students ostensibly the Affirmative Action admits that are challenging the practice.

https://www.theatlantic.com/education/a ... hy/553313/
The answer seems clear. Befriend enough rich white people to get ahead and if that fails then befriend above average Asians.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:07 pm 
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Non-White Friend wrote:
pittmike wrote:
These discussions are so overly simplistic that it is hilarious. Just taking into account the size and scope of this country and its massive population should make this clear.
True. Maybe we can sit down and have a beer together and I can tell you what minorities really think and those things just happen to match up with the world view you have.


Many things would match. It would also be interesting to match your views with all the other non white people I have encountered in my life.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:13 pm 
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long time guy wrote:
As was alluded to earlier the notion behind "legacy preference in admissions" appears to be a larger problem and one that critics of Affirmative Action and hypocrites have long overlooked.

Ironically it is the minority students ostensibly the Affirmative Action admits that are challenging the practice.

https://www.theatlantic.com/education/a ... hy/553313/


I have never argued the point for legacy admissions. I think they are generally bullshit and have to do with money and influence ala Thornton Mellon. I think you do find some white people complain about college affirmative action is because they are more likely to be closer to the benefactors than the legacies.

What I mean by this is the pipe fitter or insurance salesman in Chicago complaining his kid had a 4.0 and could not get into Michigan over a minority with a 3.0 has nothing even remotely to do with Bush, Trump and so many other legacy admissions. Moreover, do you think Collin Powell or Condi Rice's hypothetical kids and grand kids are not going where they want due to color?

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:15 pm 
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Non-White Friend wrote:
long time guy wrote:
As was alluded to earlier the notion behind "legacy preference in admissions" appears to be a larger problem and one that critics of Affirmative Action critics and hypocrites have long overlooked.

Ironically it is the minority students ostensibly the Affirmative Action admits that are challenging the practice.

https://www.theatlantic.com/education/a ... hy/553313/
The answer seems clear. Befriend enough rich white people to get ahead and if that fails then befriend above average Asians.


It is funny but might as well. I think what is partly misunderstood is actually how little this ultra white WASP legacy community is. It is called the 1% for a reason and they are even more scarce.

Our children are fighting to get into great schools with each other across town than any Bush brat.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:17 pm 
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Anyway, as you can see LTG and your friend, I do care and can engage in some sensible manner. I just really don't see the point getting my rocks off arguing the details of the pre and post civil war economies with regard to slavery.

I prefer to be here and now. No offence.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:22 pm 
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pittmike wrote:
It is funny but might as well. I think what is partly misunderstood is actually how little this ultra white WASP legacy community is. It is called the 1% for a reason and they are even more scarce.

Our children are fighting to get into great schools with each other across town than any Bush brat.
MLK couldn't have said it better.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:23 pm 
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pittmike wrote:
long time guy wrote:
As was alluded to earlier the notion behind "legacy preference in admissions" appears to be a larger problem and one that critics of Affirmative Action and hypocrites have long overlooked.

Ironically it is the minority students ostensibly the Affirmative Action admits that are challenging the practice.

https://www.theatlantic.com/education/a ... hy/553313/


I have never argued the point for legacy admissions. I think they are generally bullshit and have to do with money and influence ala Thornton Mellon. I think you do find some white people complain about college affirmative action is because they are more likely to be closer to the benefactors than the legacies.

What I mean by this is the pipe fitter or insurance salesman in Chicago complaining his kid had a 4.0 and could not get into Michigan over a minority with a 3.0 has nothing even remotely to do with Bush, Trump and so many other legacy admissions. Moreover, do you think Collin Powell or Condi Rice's hypothetical kids and grand kids are not going where they want due to color?


But you cannot target one and not the other. Affirmative Action policies and legacy admissions are not mutually exclusive. They are essentially one and the same with one being frowned upon while the other is not.

I really wonder how many unqualified African Americans are actually denying people seats. Are blacks being admitted with ACT scores that are 160 points (SAT) lower than the avg ACT scores of the other students at their University? In the article it stated how studies have shown this to be true of legacy admits. For all we know the person responsible for denying the pipefitter's kid a seat may have been the person admitted because of legacy preferences and not Affirmative Action.


Also don't you find it ironic that it is the "babies" of Affirmative Action that are bringing the suit? Shouldn't they be the ones ducking for cover?

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:27 pm 
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pittmike wrote:
Anyway, as you can see LTG and your friend, I do care and can engage in some sensible manner. I just really don't see the point getting my rocks off arguing the details of the pre and post civil war economies with regard to slavery.

I prefer to be here and now. No offence.


YEah but the "legacy admissions" stuff is directly related to the pre and post Civil War economies of this country. Blacks didn't just wake up one day and say we wanted to be broke and uneducated. There were specific policies put in place which helped to facilitate things. Affirmative Action is a direct result of that "legacy". You can ignore it (conveniently because it doesn't fit your worldview) but I can't.

History matters whether you believe that it does or not.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:47 pm 
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long time guy wrote:
pittmike wrote:
Anyway, as you can see LTG and your friend, I do care and can engage in some sensible manner. I just really don't see the point getting my rocks off arguing the details of the pre and post civil war economies with regard to slavery.

I prefer to be here and now. No offence.


YEah but the "legacy admissions" stuff is directly related to the pre and post Civil War economies of this country. Blacks didn't just wake up one day and say we wanted to be broke and uneducated. There were specific policies put in place which helped to facilitate things. Affirmative Action is a direct result of that "legacy". You can ignore it (conveniently because it doesn't fit your worldview) but I can't.

History matters whether you believe that it does or not.


Of course history matters. I just have a little trouble drawing bright directly straight lines from point a to point b. This is especially true when you go back 100 plus years. I tend to think of more of a spider web not really being crystal clear.

I am not the one to defend legacies especially since I had no one to follow but it did make a memory come up in my head. Maybe you can answer me? I was in basic training with this one African American guy. He was a reservist or NG guy so he was going to school soon. Was pretty cool had lots of stories and dreams like many 18 year olds.

His one story had to do with Morehouse. He claimed he had an aunt or other close relative that had him all but in. No question at all. We all know the great old black universities that exist and the stories behind them for the most part. So even if it is not the Ivy thing we are discussing here exactly are there such legacy policies in the south?

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:55 pm 
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pittmike wrote:
long time guy wrote:
pittmike wrote:
Anyway, as you can see LTG and your friend, I do care and can engage in some sensible manner. I just really don't see the point getting my rocks off arguing the details of the pre and post civil war economies with regard to slavery.

I prefer to be here and now. No offence.


YEah but the "legacy admissions" stuff is directly related to the pre and post Civil War economies of this country. Blacks didn't just wake up one day and say we wanted to be broke and uneducated. There were specific policies put in place which helped to facilitate things. Affirmative Action is a direct result of that "legacy". You can ignore it (conveniently because it doesn't fit your worldview) but I can't.

History matters whether you believe that it does or not.


Of course history matters. I just have a little trouble drawing bright directly straight lines from point a to point b. This is especially true when you go back 100 plus years. I tend to think of more of a spider web not really being crystal clear.

I am not the one to defend legacies especially since I had no one to follow but it did make a memory come up in my head. Maybe you can answer me? I was in basic training with this one African American guy. He was a reservist or NG guy so he was going to school soon. Was pretty cool had lots of stories and dreams like many 18 year olds.

His one story had to do with Morehouse. He claimed he had an aunt or other close relative that had him all but in. No question at all. We all know the great old black universities that exist and the stories behind them for the most part. So even if it is not the Ivy thing we are discussing here exactly are there such legacy policies in the south?



Might be but those Universities aren't really denying seats to whites since the avg white person doesn't want to attend them anyway. They may be denying a seat to a more deserving black person. Private universities may have that policy in place but I'm not sure. I don't think that public universities have it.

My point is that why isn't there nor has there been any legislation which seeks to outlaw "legacy preference"? If it is about "merit" and not race then why haven't all of the "merit" advocates taken issue with the practice of "legacy preference"? Ironically the reason that Affirmative Action was implemented in the first place was as a response to this particular practice. Affirmative Action was created in part because non deserving whites were admitted to colleges that more deserving blacks sought to attend but couldn't because of racism and discrimination.

IT wasn't designed to deny whites that qualified a seat but in some cases this has undoubtedly happened.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:58 pm 
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long time guy wrote:
pittmike wrote:
long time guy wrote:
pittmike wrote:
Anyway, as you can see LTG and your friend, I do care and can engage in some sensible manner. I just really don't see the point getting my rocks off arguing the details of the pre and post civil war economies with regard to slavery.

I prefer to be here and now. No offence.


YEah but the "legacy admissions" stuff is directly related to the pre and post Civil War economies of this country. Blacks didn't just wake up one day and say we wanted to be broke and uneducated. There were specific policies put in place which helped to facilitate things. Affirmative Action is a direct result of that "legacy". You can ignore it (conveniently because it doesn't fit your worldview) but I can't.

History matters whether you believe that it does or not.


Of course history matters. I just have a little trouble drawing bright directly straight lines from point a to point b. This is especially true when you go back 100 plus years. I tend to think of more of a spider web not really being crystal clear.

I am not the one to defend legacies especially since I had no one to follow but it did make a memory come up in my head. Maybe you can answer me? I was in basic training with this one African American guy. He was a reservist or NG guy so he was going to school soon. Was pretty cool had lots of stories and dreams like many 18 year olds.

His one story had to do with Morehouse. He claimed he had an aunt or other close relative that had him all but in. No question at all. We all know the great old black universities that exist and the stories behind them for the most part. So even if it is not the Ivy thing we are discussing here exactly are there such legacy policies in the south?



Might be but those Universities aren't really denying seats to whites since the avg white person doesn't want to attend them anyway. They may be denying a seat to a more deserving black person. Private universities may have that policy in place but I'm not sure. I don't think that public universities have it.


Okay. Didn't they make a movie about a white kid going there for football or something. At the time it was probably considered funny. :lol:

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 2:06 pm 
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This has got to be Kasper's favorite thread to read during his road-game morning constitutional at the hotel.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 2:09 pm 
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Don Tiny wrote:
This has got to be Kasper's favorite thread to read during his road-game morning constitutional at the hotel.


OUTTA HERE!

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 2:27 pm 
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pittmike wrote:
These discussions are so overly simplistic that it is hilarious. Just taking into account the size and scope of this country and its massive population should make this clear.


The history of the United States is infinitely fascinating to me. The Constitution is a document akin to the Magna Carta in its importance. Our civilization will probably be studied the way folks study the Roman and British Empire. We have made vast contributions to technology, space exploration, and democracy. And yet, our Founders and the Constitution are such a contradiction. The framers owned slaves, and women did not have equal writes.

And while some troll and joke in this thread, it is nice to see that a lot CFMB members care passionately about these things.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 3:15 pm 
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Terry's Peeps wrote:
Don Tiny wrote:
This has got to be Kasper's favorite thread to read during his road-game morning constitutional at the hotel.


OUTTA HERE!

:lol:

Whoa Baby!! <splash>

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 5:28 pm 
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long time guy wrote:
The Hawk wrote:
long time guy wrote:
leashyourkids wrote:
long time guy wrote:
leashyourkids wrote:
How am I in any way telling blacks or anyone else who to vote for? I'm arguing the exact opposite of that. I'm condemning people who assume certain groups should vote a certain way.



I specifically listed Sowell Loury and Elder. They have been telling blacks that they are stupid for voting Democrat. How is this any different?

Well you should be condemning those three also among other Black Conservatives.

Actually you are more likely to hear this partucular argument from the Black Conservative crowd. That is another way they ingratiate


If any of them say "_____ should vote Republican," I would disagree with them because individuals have different situations and values. But context matters here. You know as well as I do that there is an assumption that minorities should all vote Democrat, and that belief has existed for as long as I have been alive. Sowell and Elder are trying to fight against that myth, but they are in a very small minority. It would be different if black people already primarily voted Republican and Elder and Sowell were saying the same things they say now.



May be assumed i dont know but the reason that blacks vote Democrat is because the Democrats have promoted policies that are advantageous for blacks. Republicans don't and haven't for at least 60 years.

Reader and I have tried to point this out on numerous occasions and it always falls on deaf ears.

When blacks see that Republican are attempting to roll back Affirmative Action programs which benefit blacks, change mininum sentence laws, institute voter id legislation which prevents blacks from voting, then why would they want to vote Republican?

The problem with guys like Sowell is that they never provide a reason for blacks to vote Republican either. It always comes back to "vote Republican because the Democrats have failed you". Nothing is a panacea but i can point to a number of ways in which they haven't "failed us". I can point to specific policies which were designed to benefit blacks.

I can't say that about Republicans and the last Republican president to implement policies to designed to help blacks was Nixon.


THe fact that you bring up rolling back affirmative action programs and also demand to see the implementation of policies to "help blacks" seems to me that you want some crutches to help navigate the big bad world out there. I say those days and crutches are not needed anymore. People have to go way beyond this false notion that US is a racist country where minorities are persecuted. How about stepping up and challenging oneself not insisting on crutches and handouts? That is the only way any person gets ahead in this world, no matter what the color of his skin is.



No one receives more handouts than rich wealthy white men. Let me count the ways. The notion that they don't receive handouts is simply fallacious. If you bothered to read the article that i linked you will see how prevalent racism still happens to be in America.

Also for years Conservatives have argued (falsely) that Affirmative Action is destroying the black community. If that is the case then why is there a need to "roll it back"?



Remember this?

https://amp.businessinsider.com/trump-c ... gal-2018-7

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 5:32 pm 
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America certainly can move the meter

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 5:45 pm 
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Management wrote:
America wrote:
Before I get started I want to make one thing abundantly clear:

Since I was banned I made ZERO effort to reach out to any of the admins to be reinstated. If they ever say I did it is a lie. I simply heard that TM has been reinstated and decided to give this login a try. It was unbanned.

I will never grovel before those three. From last week on I have absolutely no respect for any of them and never will.

alright with that out of the way

I have nothing but love for black people, but I am truly appalled by their behavior in the USA. Whether I'm getting older and less tolerant of that type of behavior, or that type of behavior is becoming more prevalent or the charged political atmosphere of the country is rubbing off on me...whatever. I see the decrepit state of black culture and am two parts disgusted, two parts demoralized. Its a shame because there's nothing inherently wrong with black people, nothing inherently good either. Like everyone else on the planet they just are. But their societal carrots and sticks have culminated in this movement where they feel anyone who doesn't kneel before black power is an enemy. I wont abide that. Nor should anyone. If that frustration boils over at times so be it. I'm not neutering the things I have to say to fit Nas, Seacrest and JORR's agenda. I dont care if the CFMB is a safe space for Len Kasper. If they ban me again then they ban me again. Dont care.

I am not sorry for any post I have made.

This will not be good enough for some of you, but I dont care. I know whats in my heart better than any of you and I can tell you I have no hatred for anyone because of who or what they born as. But some of what you are is a choice, and I wont stop holding the bad choices people make against them.

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tl;dr mods r gay lol



Love is deeds, not sweet words.


Be Best.

Sincerely,
Management




lol



There’s a ‘Management’ gimmick on this board?

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