“Democratic strategist” and “Hillary advisor” waxes wroth at the idea of equal treatment under the law

Be aware, when you read Adam Parkhomenko’s tweet, screen captured at the left, that his Twitter biography states that he is a “Dem Strategist. Dad to Cameron, Paxton, Moose and Simba. Former DNC National Field Director, Hillary advisor and more.”

The distinguished Mr Parkhomenko is upset, angry, waxing wroth, because President Donald Trump is ending DEI, the “Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion” programs that the Federal government has been using to base hiring and promotions not on ability or job performance, but whether a prospective candidate is a member of an Accredited Victim Group™.

In the 2003 decision Grutter v Bollinger, Associate Justice Sandra Day O’Connor said that Affirmative Action plans had to come to an end, that the ‘exception’ the Supreme Court allowed to the 14th Amendment required an end date, and that the Court anticipated that, 25 years from then, they’d expect to see all accomplished, and Affirmative Action ended.

We take the Law School at its word that it would like nothing better than to find a race-neutral admissions formula and will terminate its race-conscious admissions program as soon as practicable. See Brief for Respondents Bollinger et al. 34; Bakke, supra, at 317ñ318 (opinion of Powell, J.) (presuming good faith of university officials in the absence of a showing to the contrary). It has been 25 years since Justice Powell first approved the use of race to further an interest in student body diversity in the context of public higher education. Since that time, the number of minority applicants with high grades and test scores has indeed increased. We expect that 25 years from now, the use of racial preferences will no longer be necessary to further the interest approved today.

If the University of Michigan Law School told the Court that “would like nothing better than to find a race-neutral admissions formula and will terminate its race-conscious admissions program,” then even the Law School was admitting, in its defense of Affirmative Action, that that race-conscious admissions program had to end at some point. Perhaps Mr Parkhomenko disagrees with that?

Well, we’re 3½ years early in general terms, but the Court ended Affirmative Action in colleges, including private colleges, in Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College, in June of 2023. If 45 years of Affirmative Action — 25 from Regents of the University of California v Bakke to Grutter and twenty from Grutter to Students for Fair Admissions — didn’t ‘fix’ the problems, how much more time would?

To hear the principal dissent tell it, Grutter blessed such programs indefinitely, until “racial inequality will end.” Post, at 54 (opinion of SOTOMAYOR, J.). But Grutter did no such thing. It emphasized—not once or twice, but at least six separate times—that race-based admissions programs “must have reasonable durational limits” and that their “deviation from the norm of equal treatment” must be “a temporary matter.” 539 U. S., at 342. The Court also disclaimed “[e]nshrining a permanent justification for racial preferences.” Ibid. Yet the justification for race-based admissions that the dissent latches on to is just that—unceasing.

The Federal Government is prohibited by the Constitution from treating people differently based on race. More, in one of his last acts, former President Biden — and I do so love typing former President Biden, or, to paraphrase the Munchkins, “Ding, dong, the dunce is gone!” — tried to declare the Equal Rights Amendment ratified, even though it wasn’t. But, to declare that means that Mr Biden was saying that any sex-based advantages being given in DEI were also gone.

The Federal government, and all of the government-based institutions need to follow the requirements of the 14th Amendment and treat people equally. Candidates for admissions and employment should be treated based upon their qualifications and abilities, not to which Accredited Victim Group™ they belonged.

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2 thoughts on ““Democratic strategist” and “Hillary advisor” waxes wroth at the idea of equal treatment under the law

  1. I’m so glad to see you quoting the 14th Amendment! Naturally, it follows that you agree that the Constitution must be protected, including the very first line of the 14th, which famously guarantees birthright citizenship.

    • Actually, I support birthright citizenship, and believe President Trump is wrong on this issue.

      Congress said nothing about illegal immigration when the 14th Amendment was written, in large part because we had no immigration laws at the time; anyone who wanted to come here could.

      We had a few restrictions on Chinese workers coming here in the 1870s, but other than that, we had no restrictive immigration laws until 1924, and one of the effects of that was disastrous: the United States turned away the Jewish refugee ship MS St Louis in the spring of 1939, as did Cuba and Canada, and the ship had to return to Europe.

      What we need now is control of the border, and the assumption of guilty until proven innocent for potential immigrants: they must prove, through a strong vetting process, that they are people with clean criminal records, and have no gang affiliations. Were it up to me, I would allow in only married couples and their children, and absolutely no single males of prime crime-committing ages. I would want documentation of regular Church attendance, as a reference of good moral character. I would want good health and the ability to work for a living while they are here.

      We need good immigrants, people who will work hard and integrate well as decent and respectable people, who will be good and productive members of their communities.

      Most of the immigrants are good people, but there have been enough bad ones that it justifies keeping out everyone until he proves himself worthy; I’d rather miss out on 100 great immigrants if that was the price of keeping one Venezuelan gang banger out.

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