J842P
Veteran Member
Rhea, I'm going to ask you a direct question. Should Asians be racially discriminated against, even poor ones, to the advantage of Hispanics. If so, why? Keep in mind when you frame your responses that saying "you don't understand the plight of Hispanics" doesn't really apply in my case.
This is a meaty question, a good one. My answer will be full of nuance and shades and subtlety. Can you handle that? Some folks here can't, which is why people may not be answering this question. There are several levels of discourse going on here, and some of the levels damage other levels beyond comprehension. So a question that addresses the nuances may be regrettably passed up because of the expected sledge-hammer reaction that it is sure to elicit from some of the commenters here.
But I'll step in with some of my thoughts. Never perfect, of course, just an opinion. Always open to new information and different angles if they make sense.
One question is whether the university has anything to gain in "creating a diverse atmosphere." Whether something is at play that they are trying to create that goes beyond a collection of the most likely to score high. If the university can foster a better academic atmosphere (in their opinion) by having a wide variety of approaches, of personalities, of ideas all present on campus; if that academic atmosphere becomes more rich and hence makes a bigger mark on the world through its graduates; if that academic atmosphere binds the students together in a way that is unusual or special or, well, again, marketable.
If the university feels this is better for fostering their product, they will feel that discriminating against high-scoring but perhaps monochromatic populations will be a "should do".
Do _I_ think that? Yeah, I think I do. I have spent meetings in rooms full of high white foreheads and it is _weird_ and creepy. Plus they all think alike. I _love_ working with diverse populations, they have different ways of looking at things, they have a fun and colorful (not to them because it's normal to them, to me it's colorful) effect on a team. I would love to see more hispanic people in my workplace, just as I would like to see a few more southerners and Scandinavians and natives. It makes the whole team more vibrant - and more productive and inventive, IMHO.
So do I think some cultures should have to answer for more than their test scores to get on my team? I think it would make my team better, yes.
I'm sorry Rhea. I'm not trying to be confrontational with you. Honestly. But this isn't a nuanced response. This is a dodge. You didn't answer my question.
OK. To be fair, I'm giving you the benefit of the doubt that you didn't answer it with "it's OK to discriminate against Asians because they are monochromatic," as your post could reasonably be interpreted as saying.
It's amazing to me that the answer isn't a resounding "No." That is the only morally acceptable answer, in my opinion. Seriously, take a step back and look at what you are arguing!