Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Sonia Sotomayor at Yale

"Dodomayor," and proud of it.
With my academic achievement in high school, I was accepted rather readily at Princeton and equally as fast at Yale, but my test scores were not comparable to that of my classmates,” she said. “And that’s been shown by statistics, there are reasons for that. There are cultural biases built into testing, and that was one of the motivations for the concept of affirmative action to try to balance out those effects. - Sonia Sotomayor, 1994
Sonia Sotomayor at Yale

My Dodomeyor hyperbole aside, what we have here is no failure to communicate.  Sonia Sotomayor is Biden-like when it comes to just tossing stuff out there that reveals her mindset - most famously her blurt about the Supreme Court being "where the law is made."  Here's TD Blog's budwhite  ["Racial Quotas or a Color-Blind Society?"].
I realized that Sotomayor does something I’ve heard before. She employs a very common strategy in the politically correct world of college campuses. In order to defend her position on racial preferences, she must first deny that she understands the terms. In her world, merit and ethnicity are synonymous.

Therefore, one’s “experience” being Hispanic is equal with a high LSAT score. As Sotomayor points out, Hispanics and other minority students — though not Asians — score lower on many standardized tests. She acknowledges these “statistics.” Instead of attacking the real culprits of this discrepancy, likely poverty, poor education, and parental education levels, she believes the system itself must bend to accommodate “fairness.”
A perfect example of the mediocrity racial quotas propagate.  In a color blind society, Sotomayor is a mall divorce lawyer at best.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I graduated from both law school and masters degree in seminary. Without exception every minority was there solely because of their race. I saw their work. I did better work in 8th grade. The papers that were written were incredibly bad. One judge in my town, over 40 yrs on the bench, said he has yet to see a good --------- minority lawyer. I agree with him as far as my practice experience has been. Sotomayor is a disgrace, as far as her understanding of the role of judges, legislatures and "empathy" -- but we shoudl not be surprised, she holds the exact same views of Obama.

molonlabe28 said...

Yeah, there is nothing quite like adding points to test scores to make things equitable.

When I was in (a public) high school back in the 1970s, a black guy in my class, who had marginal grades (certainly well below my grades), got a full scholarship to MIT and Cal Tech.

I was turned down for financial aid to the private (Jesuit) schools I got into.

My parents were comforted to know that the government thought we were well off, but I was rather miffed about the situation because I was relegated to attending the state university.

Three months later I was in a frat house basement singing "Twist and Shout" and "Louie, Louie" and forgot about it all.

Life has a way of working itself out, at least God seems to do so for me.

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