Law The US supreme court upheld race-conscious voting protections. Affirmative action could be next - "State legislature’s “colorblind” approach to redistricting, which resulted in[...]one majority-Black district.Now[...]the state’s[...]map[...][make two of the state’s seven[...]districts majority-Black, which could help Democrats."



Case

The court’s decision this week served as an affirmation that race-conscious protections such as these can and should exist in US law

When the US supreme court abolished women’s access to abortion last year, civil-rights advocates saw the future of affirmative action and other longstanding precedents as similarly bleak. So on Thursday, after the court, which has a conservative supermajority, ruled that Alabama discriminated against Black voters by redrawing its congressional districts, those advocates saw a brief glint of hope.

For some of the legal experts I spoke to, this week’s surprise ruling, which reinforced the Voting Rights Act’s power to protect voters from racial discrimination, represented a promising omen for the preservation of race consciousness in other arenas. Of particular note is the court’s upcoming decision on whether to end race-related affirmative action in colleges and universities. Thursday’s decision, for many, served as an affirmation from the court that protections such as these can and should exist in American law.

The Alabama case focused on the state legislature’s “colorblind” approach to redistricting, which resulted in just one majority-Black district in a state where 27% of the population is Black. Now, as a result of this ruling, the state’s newly redrawn map could make two of the state’s seven congressional districts majority-Black, which could help Democrats.

In the majority opinion, the conservative chief justice, John Roberts, acknowledged concerns that the Voting Rights Act “may impermissibly elevate race in the allocation of political power”. Yet that was not enough for Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who broke with the conservative majority, to justify overturning decades of previous court rulings. Roberts wrote, “... the Court simply holds that a faithful application of precedent and a fair reading of the record do not bear those concerns out here”.

Some legal experts argue that Roberts’ reliance on precedent and trial record in this case could bode well for the court’s ruling on race-consciousness in college admissions, which is expected sometime this month. Similar to the protections enacted under the Voting Rights Act, colleges and universities have taken race into account during their intake processes. The practice has helped generations of Black and brown students gain access to institutions of higher education. Of policies like these, Damon Hewitt, the executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, told me over email: “[The Alabama decision] validated what we in the civil-rights community have been saying all along: race matters.”

Affirmative action in higher education met its first major challenge in 1978, in a case involving Allan Bakke, a white man who was denied admission to the University of California at Davis medical school. Bakke argued that he was twice denied entry to the medical program, which reserved 16 slots each year for “qualified” applicants of color, because he was white. In a 5-4 decision, the court concluded that race could be factored in the admissions process but stopped colleges from setting racial quotas. That laid the groundwork for future efforts by white applicants to object to race-conscious admissions.

But in a precedent-setting case in 2003, Grutter v Bollinger, the court ruled that higher education institutions can factor in race as a means of achieving diversity at colleges and universities because it represented a “compelling governmental interest.” Now the Grutter case is under attack thanks in part to a yearslong campaign by the conservative activist Edward Blum and by legal groups focused on curtailing race-specific civil rights protections in American society.

Blum has been successful in his efforts before: in 2013, for instance, he sponsored a case that overturned a key provision of the Voting Rights Act. Roberts wrote the majority opinion, effectively killing the federal government’s ability to stop states and other jurisdictions with a sordid history of racial discrimination from imposing changes to voting laws without their permission.

But the Alabama case indicates that, when it comes to race-consciousness, the perceived fixed conservative supermajority may be flexible. Deborah Archer, the co-faculty director of New York University’s Center on Race, Inequality and the Law, told me that she had noticed a “shift, where it felt like the government was going to lose all of its ability to be responsive to deep racial inequalities that have persisted”.

Thursday’s majority opinion, though, “was really kind of a push back to the sense that we have to have a colorblind, race-neutral approach in everything that the government does”. Archer, who is also the president of the American Civil Liberties Union, added the court upheld the validity of the “effects test”, which is used to determine how much of a discriminatory impact a policy has on communities of color – a practice, she said, that “you always feel is on the chopping block”.

Still, it was difficult for legal experts to unpack what changed in the last decade for Roberts between the two cases in Alabama – the 2013 Shelby county ruling and today – let alone for his fellow conservative Kavanaugh. In 2021, Roberts and Kavanaugh joined the conservative majority in upholding voting restrictions in Arizona in Brnovich v Democratic National Committee.

And in 2022, during the midterms, Roberts and Kavanaugh sided with conservative justices in allowing an election map in Louisiana that lower courts also found to be illegally gerrymandered. Archer pointed to a possible influencing factor: Kavanaugh’s history of hiring Black law clerks. “Having a diverse group of clerks influences discussions in the way that it does in the classroom and the workplace – just having a more diverse group of people who bring different lived experiences to these questions will be helpful,” Archer said. “He would hopefully then be able to argue that it is possible to be conscious of diversity and value diversity without engaging in unfair practices, to value diversity without discriminating against any other applicant.”

She was cautious, however. Kavanaugh’s legal record before this week’s ruling indicates that he is more likely to embrace race-neutrality. “It would be a mistake to assume that [Kavanaugh] will be a vote who will regularly support affirmative action or diversity programs,” Shaw said. Still, she added, based on Thursday’s decision, his vote may be “gettable”.

Roberts’s and Kavanaugh’s voting histories show that any prediction about the impending affirmative action decision is difficult to make. And even though Roberts’s majority opinion was incisive, and Kavanaugh’s support was stunning, experts believe they should be considered cautiously. Having largely rejected race-conscious policies until this week, these two justices hold ideas about the practice that remain uncertain.
 
Did anyone seriously believe the Supreme Court would rule against the racial grievance industry? Most Americans worship blacks more aggressively and with more reverence than most Christians worship Jesus.

I fully expect them to not only uphold affirmative action but rule that our current system of race based gibs does not go far enough and they need more.
 
"race-consciousness"

Racism. You mean racism.

The case they're hearing was brought by an Asian kid who had a near-perfect SAT score and a 4.65 GPA and was denied admission by MIT, CalTech, Princeton, Harvard, Carnegie Mellon, and UC Berkley. They wouldn't admit him, but they'll take niggers with far lower credentials, because their admissions policies are all explicitly racist.
 
When the US supreme court abolished women’s access to abortion last year
No they fucking didn't. They threw it back to the individual states. The Molech worshippers in San Franshitsco can still vacuum their cunts as much as they want. And wow, big surprise. Racial grievancemongering has way more pull than haunted vaginas
 
Did anyone seriously believe the Supreme Court would rule against the racial grievance industry? Most Americans worship blacks more aggressively and with more reverence than most Christians worship Jesus.

I fully expect them to not only uphold affirmative action but rule that our current system of race based gibs does not go far enough and they need more.
leftists aren't american, I don't know how many times I have to tell you people, leftists are the only ones who worship niggers, you trying to blame every american is just being ignorant of the problem. But regardless the only reason why this decision was made was because the judges were blackmailed or paid off to make this decision.
 
leftists aren't american, I don't know how many times I have to tell you people, leftists are the only ones who worship niggers, you trying to blame every american is just being ignorant of the problem. But regardless the only reason why this decision was made was because the judges were blackmailed or paid off to make this decision.
Who would have thought Trump was a leftist? I remember all those handouts, da platinum plan and the other dumb shit he did to try to win the black vote in 2020.
 
Most Americans worship blacks more aggressively and with more reverence than most Christians worship Jesus.
This is as retarded as saying that most americans are progressive. You only see the people who do that shit because speaking out against it with a name and address attached is a fast way to lose your job, your social standing, and possibly worse in modern-day america.
Who would have thought Trump was a leftist? I remember all those handouts, da platinum plan and the other dumb shit he did to try to win the black vote in 2020.
It's one of a few reasons why I've gone on record in the past as saying I wouldn't vote for him again, and an actual criticism that holds water. He and his team came to the same asinine conclusion that most people in america are nigger worshippers rather than the correct conclusion that we live in a system full of true believers and the cowards who keep their head down en masse that actively and severely punishes dissent.

I'll remind people that the entire purpose of a massively biased false consensus is to make dissenters feel as if though they are in the minority when they are in fact not.

All of that said expecting the USSC to peel back any race-based shit right now is fucking hilarious. They have a vested interest in appearing to be "bipartisan" and after the Roe V Wade ruling they're looking to pull a "balancing the scales" act. Don't expect any actual victories from the robed dipshits for a while on anything that actually matters.

And if I really have to spell it out for those in the nosebleeds, abortion is both the #1 killer of blacks in america whilst also keeping the repopulation rate down otherwise. There's a real-ass panic going on right now for the folks in government about the lack of people actually having kids and it would seem it's due to the realization that immigration just isn't going to cut the mustard, without accelerating it to a point that it would result in radicalizing a shitload of people as well as imploding various services and sectors of the american socio-economic machine. TL;DR: The RvW ruling was a hollow bone thrown to conservatives filled with arsenic that can be pointed at to claim the USSC is being 'fair" when in actuality it's still helpful to the establishment.
 
Lol remember when everyone on here was simping for the Supreme Court when they undid Roe v Wade?
This is as retarded as saying that most americans are progressive. You only see the people who do that shit because speaking out against it with a name and address attached is a fast way to lose your job, your social standing, and possibly worse in modern-day america.
Most Americans who matter are progressive, yes.
 
Who would have thought Trump was a leftist? I remember all those handouts, da platinum plan and the other dumb shit he did to try to win the black vote in 2020.
and here we go with the "But what about Drumpf" stuff. The platinum plan was never going to be implemented and I don't know where you got the handouts shit from. A lot of what you read about it is from The MSM who's entire purpose is to demoralize the opposition by claiming all sorts of shit and hope that people believe it.
It's one of a few reasons why I've gone on record in the past as saying I wouldn't vote for him again, and an actual criticism that holds water. He and his team came to the same asinine conclusion that most people in america are nigger worshippers rather than the correct conclusion that we live in a system full of true believers and the cowards who keep their head down en masse that actively and severely punishes dissent.
That's what the MSM wants you to believe. The MSM pushes all sorts of narratives in order to keep their opposition demoralized, it's why nobody believes them anymore and for good reason, but I don't know why you would still believe them.
And if I really have to spell it out for those in the nosebleeds, abortion is both the #1 killer of blacks in america whilst also keeping the repopulation rate down otherwise. There's a real-ass panic going on right now for the folks in government about the lack of people actually having kids and it would seem it's due to the realization that immigration just isn't going to cut the mustard, without accelerating it to a point that it would result in radicalizing a shitload of people as well as imploding various services and sectors of the american socio-economic machine. TL;DR: The RvW ruling was a hollow bone thrown to conservatives filled with arsenic that can be pointed at to claim the USSC is being 'fair" when in actuality it's still helpful to the establishment.
The Pro-Choice movement and Abortion in general as a whole is a movement filled with fucked up people, many of whom are jewish go figure. For example Orlando's first abortionist killed a woman by accident during an abortion. He fled to Michigan to do the same exact stuff but then got caught sexually assaulting a six year old and had his license revoked. And this is just the tip of the iceberg. Anyone who thinks abortion is "based" because "It kills Niggers" is a complete idiot. It hasn't helped the demographics at all either, because when Abortion was legalized this country was 85% White. Did it keep the percentage 85%?
https;//www.liveaction.org/news/florida-abortionists-predatory-histories/
 
and here we go with the "But what about Drumpf" stuff. The platinum plan was never going to be implemented and I don't know where you got the handouts shit from. A lot of what you read about it is from The MSM who's entire purpose is to demoralize the opposition by claiming all sorts of shit and hope that people believe it.
Oh yeah, I forgot he also screwed his base by pardoning Kwame fucking Kilpatrick in January 2021. All of Trump's dumb-ass moves to court the black vote did nothing but cost him the election. He did worse in 2020 among blacks than he did in 2016!

Also, what do you call those $1,200 stimmies other than a handout? That was the stupidest policy decision made in a long time, it drove inflation out of control and ended up costing everyone multiple times what those checks were worth.
 
Oh yeah, I forgot he also screwed his base by pardoning Kwame fucking Kilpatrick in January 2021. All of Trump's dumb-ass moves to court the black vote did nothing but cost him the election. He did worse in 2020 among blacks than he did in 2016!

Also, what do you call those $1,200 stimmies other than a handout? That was the stupidest policy decision made in a long time, it drove inflation out of control and ended up costing everyone multiple times what those checks were worth.
The stimulus checks were stuff that congress wanted, it's like you deny that the legislative branch even exists. Also what cost him the 2020 election was the rigging, as he performed better vote wise among all groups than how he did in 2016. Also he had no control over who he pardoned, his cabinet overrode him and chose who they want to pardon.
 
Does it matter? Do blacks even vote?
Yes, multiple times. Some blacks have been voting Democrat for over 100 years.
Anyone who thinks abortion is "based" because "It kills Niggers" is a complete idiot. It hasn't helped the demographics at all either, because when Abortion was legalized this country was 85% White. Did it keep the percentage 85%?
Ever wonder why the percentage of blacks has barely grown since the 70s despite the fecundity of that race? Thank abortion for that. Without abortion they'd probably be at like 20-25% of the population, just like where Hispanics will be in a few years. Like actually think about the facts here, don't be a mental nigger.
 
Ever wonder why the percentage of blacks has barely grown since the 70s despite the fecundity of that race? Thank abortion for that. Without abortion they'd probably be at like 20-25% of the population, just like where Hispanics will be in a few years. Like actually think about the facts here, don't be a mental nigger.
The reason why it has barely grown is because they keep killing each other over stupid and petty squabbles. The black population from what i've seen, but I could be wrong here, has stayed at 13% since 1865. So if abortion really did have any effect why didn't the black population grow for 100 years?
 
Ever wonder why the percentage of blacks has barely grown since the 70s despite the fecundity of that race? Thank abortion for that. Without abortion they'd probably be at like 20-25% of the population, just like where Hispanics will be in a few years. Like actually think about the facts here, don't be a mental nigger.
You're assuming blacks have the personal responsibility to get aborted instead of just crapping out yet another welfare check.
The reason why it has barely grown is because they keep killing each other over stupid and petty squabbles. The black population from what i've seen, but I could be wrong here, has stayed at 13% since 1865. So if abortion really did have any effect why didn't the black population grow for 100 years?
I'll need to double check but I think it was at 15% at one point.
 
Did anyone seriously believe the Supreme Court would rule against the racial grievance industry? Most Americans worship blacks more aggressively and with more reverence than most Christians worship Jesus.

More than just Americans.

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