Clearly the Socratic Method isn't working for you.
I'm guessing what you are trying to do is convince people that affirmative action is as harmless as the above, i.e. promotional campaigns targeted at groups who aren't applying as often as the university thinks they should be. It's a red herring argument: not only no-one has raised any complaint about affirmative action in the form of targeted marketing, but your continued insistence on bringing it into the discussion is a distraction from the different AA policy that is the subject of the OP.
It's this simple: some affirmative action policies, such as targeted promotions, are positive as they increase the pool of applicants, and thereby raise the average aptitude of the applicant pool. Other affirmative action policies, such as giving preference to blacks and Hispanics over Asians and whites, are positive as they lower the average aptitude of the successful applicant pool, and are therefore harmful.
The Socratic method is working fine.
If that were true then you would not need to repeat your questions due to a lack of answers.
I am learning all kinds of things about the people who post here. The problem seems to be that they too are learning things about themselves and they don't like what they are seeing.
I don't care about what your mind reading abilities tell you.
And it is not a red herring.
Then demonstrate how this has any relevance to the discussion about the discrepancies in admissions. Those admissions discrepancies cannot be explained by the existence of targeted recruiting encouraging minorities to apply.
It is a simple question. But it is something I doubt some people here have ever thought about. They have no set counter so they run. Tell me, are you running?
It is hihly likely that at least some of the membership have not considered targeted recruiting policies by universities. However, I highly doubt those people are the rightists that you frequently argue with, as they obviously spend plenty of time arguing about affirmative action. Targeted recruiting has been discussed on FRDB before, and I am fairly certain most of the regular participants in he AA threads have established their positions, and therefore have a 'set counter'. With that in mind, it would be foolish to conclude that the lack of responses to you are due to an inability to respond. Instead, as Metaphor's response suggests, people may just think your question is inane.
Let me make it simpler for you. it is 1965, and let's say this same college has never sent recruiters to black schools before. Would it be discrimination then to do so?
You don't need to make it simpler - you should have read and comprehended my last post and seen that my following answer is merely a more detailed version of the point I have already made.
The only fair recruiting policy is one in which he university covers all schools that are reasonably within their feeder area. If the university has previously sent recruiters to other schools but not the black schools, then they were engaging in discrimination. The only way to end the discrimination is to send recruiters to the black schools as well. The university should dedicate extra recruiting efforts into those schools until the university is receiving a quantity of applicants from those schools that is representative of their student body's size and academic performance. And then afterwards, once those targets are met, they should ensure that they never resort to exclusively recruiting from non-black schools again.
That is beneficial affirmative action, as I already stated. It increases the number of students applying to the uni, and therefore increases the number of students who graduate from the university. That is a tangible benefit not only for the black students who were recruited, but for the university and for society who now have a greater number of university-educated professionals in their midst.
Tell me, exactly what do you think the law is with regard to AA?
You know I understand the US laws governing AA, since we have had lengthy discussions about the laws on FRDB. Stop talking down to me and go visit the archives if you think otherwise.