this post was submitted on 29 Jun 2023
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[–] Mayoman68@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

A lot of things that US courts have recently done(this included) is making making me wonder about how judicial review should work. Because what I keep seeing is that US courts will strike down shitty band aid solutions(which AA was, it was an attempt at a quick and easy solution for a very long list of social issues) without offering better alternatives. I do think that affirmative action should not have to exist, but the better choice is full scale education reform, addressing systemic racism, an understanding of how privilege affects educational outcomes, and greater availability and lower cost of the highest quality tertiary education. As it is today I am observing courts not choosing perfect over good, but rather destroying half baked solutions because they oppose the intended outcomes of those solutions.

[–] ElectroVagrant@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

the better choice is full scale education reform, addressing systemic racism, an understanding of how privilege affects educational outcomes,

This would likely help, which is why if I'm not mistaken conservatives in the U.S. are opposed to it by lambasting it as "woke Critical Race Theory". A significant part of the wealthy, and career political class views systemic racism and privilege as foundational, protected rights for which the nation was established to maintain.

That is, of course, contrary to the fact that those elements were only preserved as a result of compromise so that the nation could exist at all, and not because they necessarily wanted to preserve them, give or take those founding politicians involved.