I don't believe in hipocrisy, irony, or contradiction. It's simply a way to muddle causation and historical responsibility and to make everything a wash.
Think of Einstein's theory of relativity. When 2 spaceships are traveling at near speed of light parallel to each other, and one of them fires a laser to the other, then would the laser travel faster than speed of light (as per pythagorem's theorem) or maintain its speed at speed of light (since speed cannot surpass c)? The correct answer is the latter, and, yes, it's contradictory, but should you get frustrated or obsessive about it? Why care about beyond recognizing this as a mathematically sound phenomenon (given that speed = or < c)?
The statistical irony is this (yes I don't believe in irony, so the irony of my using irony doesn't apply). The white kids who are better off and attend elite private schools and colleges are less likely to be prejudiced than their middle to lower class white peers. (I don't have a book with me right now, so I'm going to extrapolate from my own experience and informal knowledge.) The latter group will be more likely to be prejudiced due to their perceived competition with the minorities, in terms of jobs and opportunities as well as outsourcing of jobs to poorer nations. But I think their prejudice is mostly caused by their lack of education and inability to think critically. Think for example of the loss of manufacturing jobs in the States. Are China and India really to blame ... for being China and India (being poor)? Or should we blame the corporate boards, short-term investors, and the stubborn ideological bent against labor movements in the US? Because really jobs don't really have to move overseas... if the decision isn't made to move them. But outsourcing of jobs is a good counter against labor unions because it frames the labor debate from what was "we're being overworked and not being paid sufficiently" to "how can we keep our jobs" and "how does US reduce job loss by becoming more competitive?" The job loss is described as some sort of a natural phenomenon rooted in the West's decline and the shift to a multipolar world, although it has very little to do with national competitiveness, and capitalism is not in fact immune to nationalism. Lower and middle class whites also feel immigrants are stealing their jobs on their home soil, even though they would be unwilling to work the same jobs if offered to them. Then they look to white collar jobs and college education and cry foul and blame all of their failures and mediocrity in life to affirmative action and other relics of this country's racist past.
Even though the racial situation has been getting better in the US, racism structurally exists in terms of residential segregation. Overwhelming number of statistics after statistics have been produced and thrown en masse into the academic debate, proving systemic discrimination in the housing market and the disadvantageous socioeconomic effects of living in worse neighborhoods (resulting from
"white flight"). This is why even though inner city blacks and whites live in the same country, they speak different tongues, which is known as
"language shift." Then the inner city blacks who are so
culturally isolated and demoralized by the dominant white consumer culture and media are blamed and
discriminated for not speaking and thinking like their white peers, which is systematically perpetuated in the social norms and institutions such as the workplace, the schools, and the SAT among other things.
This is where affirmative action comes in.
Let me tell you this about affirmative action. AA can only help. It doesn't hurt. Why? Because if a disadvantaged inner city black does above average, s/he has done phenomenally by proving his/her potential to overcome obstacles. Because even if Asian kids under the spell of their hypercompetitive parents get into Ivy League schools, they will end up dropping out if they can't keep up with the schoolwork after having put on the best show of their life in high school. Even if one were to graduate, without good grades, s/he can't get into grad school. Just graduating college doesn't help minorities in many cases if they have hard time fitting into the mainstream culture and lack the necessary social skills to survive the competition, and so a lot of them end up going back home and working at their parents' cleaner shops or gas stations. Also, for certain minorities the competition is much more difficult because they have to compete among themselves. Competitive applicants of certain nationality or ethnicity are so numerous that some colleges no longer consider them as disadvantaged and set the bar to allow rooms for other minorities. Plus there are so many great colleges in the US,
it's so much easier to get into one, no matter what your situation or excuse is, compared to other countries in Europe or East Asia that are hypercompetitive.
Don't blame others for your mediocrity. Even from a state school one can transfer to or apply for grad at ivy schools or med school with good grades. All this points to this.
Not getting into an elite university is not a chance lost. And people who got in did not get something they didn't deserve. It's simply who they are. The very obsession with getting into a good college is a very
artificialand
unnecessary question. If you are a good student, you don't need to commit yourself to get into a good schoo because the process is quite natural. A lot of people in my high school class hated studying, but they breezed through their SAT's and ACT's with 33s and 2200s. My little brother played 5 hours of games the night before his SAT, and he never studied, but he got 2300+, near perfect score, and his IQ is 160+. Unless you are someone like him, you are going to suck and fail out, or take all english lit and psychology classes and waste all tuition money, if you got into a good school. You are going to be staring at your calculus and physics problems blankly like you'd into a wall for hours on without being able to figure out absolutely anything. Ok sure, if you're lucky you might manage to graduate with mediocre grades and a bachelor's in chemical engineering.
But if you can't go beyond what you were challenged in high chool and college, and you can't move onto the next level in grad school or your workplace, there's no point in having put on the best show of your life and forcibly producing superficial results.
Post has been edited 1 time(s), last time on Mar 19 2011, 4:49 am by SiberianTiger.
None.