XPost: or.politics, alt.politics.democrats.d, alt.politics.republicans
XPost: talk.politics.misc, alt.society.liberalism
The Supreme Court could take up a case that challenges the use of
racial balancing practices at selective high schools following its
ruling against race-based admission policies at universities, experts
told the Daily Caller News Foundation.
The Supreme Court sided in June with Students for Fair Admissions,
ruling that Harvard University and the University of North Carolina�s
use of affirmative action admissions policies was unconstitutional and
halting the practice across higher education institutions. The Supreme
Court could take up Coalition for TJ [Thomas Jefferson High School for
Science and Technology] v. Fairfax County School Board, a case that
challenges the use of �holistic� admissions policies over merit-based
policies, and strike down the use of such practices among K-12 schools
by pointing to its June ruling, legal experts told the DCNF.
�While the Supreme Court�s recent ruling on affirmative action struck
down the use racial preferences in higher education admissions, it
signals that this court has little patience for institutions that
engage in racial balancing, as well as penalizing certain racial
groups (Asian Americans and whites) in order to confer benefits on
others (blacks and Hispanics),� Renu Mukherjee, a Manhattan Institute
policy analyst who focuses on affirmative action, told the DCNF. �And
the fact pattern of the case concerning Thomas Jefferson High School
for Science and Technology demonstrates that the Fairfax County School
Board was doing exactly that with its �holistic admissions� policy.�
https://dailycallernewsfoundation.org/2023/07/16/supreme-court-could-end-race-based-admissions-at-elite-us-high-schools-experts-say/
Parents either pay high school taxes or tuition in order to keep their
children away from the negro element. Separate but equal worked well
once; it'll work again.
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)