Ethnic Divisiveness - Another Round
The University of Michigan is a powerhouse institution. Two of my sons have Masters Degrees from UM, so I have a bias toward that university. Nevertheless, UM continues to be the focal point for the political hot potato of affirmative action.
The Detroit Free Press reports that there is now a petition for putting the issue to the Michigan voters in 2006. In this article, Mary Sue Coleman, UM President, is quoted:
""All our students benefit when we are able to build a diverse learning environment," she said. "The ballot initiative seeks to eliminate a moderate but effective tool the court allowed for recruiting a diverse group of students.""I find the statement a little disingenuous. Why? Because "diversity" does not mean "diversity of thought." Rather, in this situation, it only means diversity of skin color. For an institution whose purpose is to educate, such shallowness of "diversity" is appalling. It is the same thought process that drives young blacks to yell "Quit tryin' to eat white," at their peers for eating chicken with a fork and knife.
It is an approach to "diversity" that doesn't examine, critically, whether a statement or position is functional or dysfunctional... only that it is "ethnically diverse." It is an approach to "diversity" that creates divisiveness.
Other thoughts on this subject: