Posted on 07/10/2009 9:08:47 PM PDT by neverdem
The Supreme Court tweaked the edges of discrimination law in its New Haven firefighters decision last week, but otherwise left the evasions and euphemisms of that hoary edifice largely intact. This is probably as it should be. It is not for the Court to deconstruct our official legal discourse about race unless it is explicitly asked to do so. But the political branches need not be so constrained. Judge Sonia Sotomayors upcoming confirmation hearings are the perfect occasion to question the assumptions that underlie the race industry, since Sotomayor, with her history of launching racism accusations, has been, and promises to remain, an active participant in it.
The main function of the race industry today is to repackage problems of black underachievement as instances of white racism. For decades, the vast majority of alleged discrimination violations have been manifestations of the black-white performance gap, whether in academic achievement, crime rates, or poverty-producing behaviors like illegitimacy and dropping out of school. The race industry cloaks such problems in the language of rights and racismpushing the achievement gap offstage, keeping alive the phantom of ubiquitous white bias, and generating jobs in the race industry. Thus, employment and educational standards that no one would otherwise think twice about are suddenly viewed as legally suspicious, without any reason to think them flawed except that blacks do not meet them at equal rates.
The New Haven firefighters case, Ricci v. DeStefano, provides a perfect example of how the race industry converts innocuous job practices into markers of hidden bias. As is well known by now, New Haven canceled the results of a 2003 promotional exam for its fire department after no black firefighters scored high enough to be promoted. The successful candidates, 17 whites and one Hispanic, sued the city, claiming that it had discriminated against them on the basis of race. New Haven argued in court that had it promoted the high-scorers, it would probably have been sued by the black test takers for discriminating against them with an apparently biased test. Thus, it was justified in nullifying the entire process to avoid liability for discriminating against blacks, the city maintained.
Ricci raises questions about the use of race in decision-makingespecially in government decision-makingthat have simmered within discrimination law for years. Does a race-conscious remedy for alleged discrimination against one group, for example, discriminate against another? Does the effort to craft a selection method that produces a racially proportionate result constitute impermissible discrimination? When does the effort to avoid allegedly discriminating against one group become discrimination against another?
Such questions occupy constitutional-law theorists endlessly, and for good reason, since they implicate the core constitutional value of color-blind equal protection before the law. In Ricci, the majority predictably finessed them with the familiar judicial tactic of crafting an evidentiary standard, holding that an employer could take a race-conscious action that discriminates against one groupin this case, the successful candidates for fire department promotiononly if it finds a strong basis in evidence to believe that it would face liability from another group if it failed to take that action. But the Court avoided the more basic question raised by the case: Why was the exam being discussed in terms of race and discrimination at all? The New York Timess Supreme Court reporter, Linda Greenhouse, wrote in an op-ed that the exam appeared to favor white test-takers. It did nothing of the sort. It merely favored those who had studied hard and prepared themselves to become captains and lieutenants. But we have been conditioned by the decades-long reign of disparate-impact theory, which the black firefighters would have used in a potential suit against New Haven, to discuss neutral employment practices in racial terms and to entertain the idea that the expectation of moderate cognitive performance is an unfair imposition on blacks.
Arguments offered by New Haven against its own promotional testembraced, disturbingly, by nearly half of the Supreme Courtdemonstrate how desperate the search for bias has become. New Haven pointed out that the exam asked test takers to show how they would address a particular problem [by] verbally saying it or identifying the correct option on a written test, in the words of a rival test developer; the citys implication was that any expectation that someone be able to use language to express ideas would be unfair to blacks. New Haven also objected that the tests final results were based on a 6040 weighting of a written and an oral exam, a formula that the department had used for two decades. This objection is purely ad hoc; had the weighting been 4060, the race advocates would have been just as adamant that it was unfair. Nothing in the record suggests that a different weighting would have changed the pass rate. New Havens general counsel further complained that the exam tested the ability to memorize textbooks but not necessarily to identify solutions to real problems on the fire ground. But memorizing information is a key mechanism of learning, without which little knowledge is possible. To the extent that the lieutenant and captains jobs require the acquisition of additional knowledge, conveying and testing that knowledge in written form is perfectly reasonable. None of these features of the exam would have been considered the least bit problematic if blacks had not performed poorly.
The final charge against the exam is the most desperate of all. Janet Helms, a professor of clinical psychology at Boston College and author of such works as A Race Is a Nice Thing to Have: A Guide to Being A White Person or Understanding the White Persons in Your Life speculated to the citys civil-service board that black firefighters in New Haven may have developed their own unique, black way of fighting fires in response to unequal opportunity on the job. The portrait of firefighting that the test developer used in drawing up the test might have been biased toward the white way of firefighting in New Haven, Helms continued, since two-thirds of the firefighters who submitted analyses of their jobs to the test developer were white. Helms had no knowledge of firefighting, had refused to review the promotional exam, and had sought no exposure to the New Haven Fire Department. She provided not one shred of evidence to support any plank of her theorywhich makes her superlatively representative of the race industry.
In light of such fantastical speculations, it is worth reviewing New Havens efforts to ensure that the test measured the requisite supervisory skills and did not contain any possible hypothetical bias. The test developer interviewed and rode alone with the departments chiefs, lieutenants, and captains to identify the knowledge and abilities essential for the positions of captain and lieutenant. At every point, the test developer oversampled minority firefighters while building his portrait of the job. The 100 questions on the written exam were pitched below a tenth-grade reading level. Each of the three-man assessment panels for the oral exam was composed of one white, one black, and one Hispanic firefighter. Third-party reviewers confirmed that the oral exam accurately tested the real-world situations confronting supervisors.
Perhaps in implicit recognition that the case for bias in the New Haven exam was laughably weak, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg pulled out the usual race-industry trump card in her dissent: historical discrimination. The majority opinion, she said, leaves out important parts of the storyto wit, that firefighting is a profession in which the legacy of racial discrimination casts an especially long shadow. Its no surprise that Ginsburg never bothered explicating her metaphor, because she provided no evidence, apart from the allegedly biased test itself, of how the long shadow affects the New Haven Fire Department today. We are just supposed to assume that because firefighting was inhospitable to blacks four decades ago, it remains so now, and that such inhospitality prevents blacks from succeeding on promotional exams. (Past discrimination against Jews by the Ivy Leagues may also be said to cast an especially long shadow, yet it has had no noticeable effect on their performance today.)
The Courts majority and minority opinions are assiduously silent about the only reason why anyone views the New Haven firefighters exam through the lens of race at all: the gap in cognitive attainment between blacks and whites. As Stuart Taylor pointed out in his National Journal blog, the average black high school senior possesses the academic skills and knowledge of an average white eighth-grader. For decades, blacks have scored 200 points below whites and Asians on the verbal and math SATs. This skills gap means that it is virtually impossible to devise any job test that measures mastery of a body of knowledge and cognitive expertise that will not have a disparate racial result. To discuss black underperformance on any given task without mentioning the skills deficit is like having a discussion about rain and drought without mentioning cloud formation. As long as black underachievement remains unacknowledged, the old standbyracismwill always rush into the vacuum as an explanation for disparate impact.
This ongoing taboo, in judicial discourse and elsewhere, suggests certain questions for Sotomayor during her confirmation hearings. Does she believe that it is unfair to expect minorities to display knowledge through the use of language, and if so, why? In light of the black-white achievement gap, why should disparate results on a cognitive test create any presumption of bias? What kinds of exams would be fair to blacks? Does it lie within the power of minorities to start achieving at higher rates by staying in school, studying harder, and paying more attention in class? We have heard repeatedly about the studying marathon engaged in by the lead plaintiff in the firefighters case, Frank Ricci. None of the many advocates charging bias in the New Haven firefighters exam has produced any examples of black firefighters expending anywhere near Riccis eight to 13 hours a day of preparation. Presumably, if such cases existed, we would have heard about them by now. Is it possible that if more black firefighters had devoted as much effort to studying as the successful candidates did, they would have done better on the exam?
It will take more than one judicial confirmation hearing to overcome our evasions about todays most pressing racial problems. But those problems wont get solved until we break the monopoly on explanations for black underperformance that the race industry currently enjoys.
Heather Mac Donald is a contributing editor of City Journal and the John M. Olin Fellow at the Manhattan Institute.
.....a main cornerstone of the anglo-european/judeo-christian culture is it’s reverence for education...not all cultures share that trait.
When the Asian young college students do better than their white counterparts, one doesn't hear DISCRIMINATION because we know that their culture values education and strives to learn. Again, what's the deal here?
Are these people saying that blacks can't learn? or black’s have an entitlement feeling, and won't learn.... this isn't a generalization... only this particular group of firefighters.... let's all a spade a spade for a change... instead of dumbing down everything to the lowest demonimator of a third world country so everyone can feel equal in being stupid.
I’ve dealt with many of the race hustlers, and they don’t give a flip whether anyone can actually perform a job duty. They operate on the premise that the job will get done regardless of the qualifications of the individuals performing it.
From what I understand, they're discriminated against more than just about anyone, as most of the orientals have never gotten into the race baiting industry. If some of the stats I've read are accurate, they would compose about 70% of the graduate students in the hard sciences in California colleges if the colleges didn't discriminate against them.
That is so true. And so sad. I have been to homes of white meth heads and addicts and people who have chickens running thru the trailer, and there is still pride when little junior brings home an A. Some black homes? An aversion to it. Things are changing as more and more blacks hit middle class status, but IMHO, blacks have to address this “acting white” thing that too many black kids do to the other black kids that are trying to get ahead. This is not something white America can fix. Bill Cosby says about the same thing, FWIW.
parsy, who calls it like he sees it.
I worked with a young Spanish kid once who had graduated from High School and could not read. I asked him how he passed all the test and he said his teacher read all the questions to him and he answered them verbally.
This is not a true statement. A majority of the large public schools are predominantly black. Many of the major cities in the Midwest and northeast are almost exclusively black or at least black and Hispanic. In many of these systems the amount of white students is less than 10%.
The whites have generally abandoned the inner cities or at least the inner city schools. The blacks also have the largest amount of out of wedlock births at 70% +, this is more than twice the rate of white out of wedlock births. These are problems in the Black society. This leads to a massive amount of under performance in all aspects of the Black society. The problem is self inflicted. But it is a problem none the less.
Wow! I’m impressed. The University of Texas agreed to let me in if I promised not to tell anyone.
I read a paper a while back about the success of a program to increase the number of black doctors. The basic conclusion was that individuals who had scored at least 900 on the SAT were more likely to make it through medical school than those who had not.
I ask you, WTH is any medical school doing admitting students with SAT scores well below the national average???
I realize the med school doesn’t see the SAT but I know enough about this business to tell you that the chance of someone with a 900 or less SAT having good MCAT scores is slim to none.
Powerful article.
Hey, if you genuinely care to know what accounts for these differences, consult the Reverend Jeremiah Wright. The illustrious preacher has a sound (!) thesis on this subject.
Were you able to find the Stats on Obama’s grades? Oh, that is right, nobody has.
Speaking from personal experience here: when you don’t have good grades in college, this means you haven’t mastered the material, and if you haven’t mastered the material you can’t possibly have a basis with which to learn the far more difficult material offered in med school. You need that basis or you aren’t going to absorb the subject matter that physicians need to know! How people with no background can successfully sit for their exams, I don’t know. It’s very troubling. Do they flunk out, or are they passed along? Do state boards and specialty boards pass them, too?
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