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Get government out of the diversity business
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The problem isn't civil rights
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Secession is legal
Reparations: racial power play
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There are real group differences
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"Resegregation" is not the government's business
The true test
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Needed: A thicker skin
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Has the man no pride?
Electioneering for me, but not for thee
Western values under assault
Stop trying to racially balance the schools
Promoting envy as "social justice"
A tool to punish men
Owned by the government
Mystic "diversity"
Supported by lies and duplicity
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Real people vs. abstract categories
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A memorial to perpetuate victimhood
Legitimizing a myth
California's immigration woes
Still destroying the family
Inclusive secular clubs
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Dependency plus paranoia
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A modern fad
Protecting us all from the WHAMs
Wolfing down New Yorkers' pets
Offending Hollywood
Laughing at affirmative action
Mississippi rising
Utopian aims
The Passion and its deceitful critics
Organized force endowed with legitimacy
The ongoing reparations fraud
Can you be more fair than fair?
Women as wanton killers
The crusade to nationalize land
J.P. Morgan meets the reparations crusaders
What real panic looks like
Welcome to the new conservatism
Discrimination via statistics
When blacks scold blacks
The punishment continues
What is wrong with these people?
Tone deaf and talentless
A zero-sum game
The scrupulous and the reptilian
Praise instead of rebuke
A madness in the soul
The menace of emotions
Seduction or coercion?
Giving people what they want
Farewell to the states
Put an end to eminent domain
On government interference
Rules to avoid poverty
Raking Whitey over the coals . . . again
Black Warmongers and Pseudo-conservatives
 
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Dependency plus paranoia

Wish I'd said that!

[Reprinted from Issues & Views October 6, 2003]

There is nothing that I have accomplished in my education or my career that wasn't accomplished by other blacks before me -- and long before affirmative action. Getting a degree from Harvard? The first black man graduated from Harvard in 1870. Becoming a black economist? There was a black professor of economics at the University of Chicago when I first arrived there as a graduate student [1960s]. Writing a newspaper column? George Schuyler wrote newspaper columns, magazine articles, and books before I was born.

The most dramatic rise of blacks out of poverty occurred before the civil rights movement of the 1960s. That's right -- before. But politicians, activists and the intelligentsia have spread so much propaganda that many Americans, black and white, are unaware of the facts.

There is a lot of political mileage to be gotten by convincing blacks that they owe everything to the government and could not make it in this world otherwise. Dependency plus paranoia equals votes. But blacks made it in this world before the government paid them any attention.

Nor has the economic rise of blacks been speeded up by civil rights legislation. More blacks rose into professional ranks in the five years preceding passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 than in the five years after its passage. What moved blacks up was a rapid increase in education. There was certainly discrimination but, in many fields that demanded higher levels of education, there were not that many blacks to discriminate against in the first place.

Moreover, even if certain laws and policies may once have served a purpose, that does not mean that these laws and policies should last forever, in total disregard of their counterproductive effects today. For a California election in 2003 to be held up by the federal government because of what happened in Mississippi decades ago is ludicrous.

Finally, the argument that anyone who has benefited from affirmative action should never oppose it is as illogical as it is ignorant of the facts. I certainly benefited from the Korean War, which led to my being in the military and therefore getting the G.I. Bill that enabled me to go to college.

Does that mean that I should never be against any war? Was it wrong of me to be against the Vietnam War after I had personally benefited from the Korean War? Are the duties of a citizen, not to mention the duty to be honest and truthful, to be over-ridden by what happened to benefit me personally?

©2003 Creators Syndicate, Inc.

-- Thomas Sowell, an economist at the Hoover Institution, is the author of many books, including Preferential Policies: An International Perspective (Morrow), Inside American Education: The Decline, The Deception, The Dogmas (Free Press/Macmillan) and Migrations and Cultures: A World View (Basic Books).

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