I don't like their decisions, but that fact doesn't invalidate my point. Courts like the current one that turn over long, longstanding precedents on partisan lines deserve special scrutiny, and I will gladly say the same thing if in the future some liberals court starts spitting on stare decisis the way this one has.
Other than the fact that none of the case law of the last 50 years concerns religious AA in higher education, I think it's a perfectly good analogy if say, for instance, Muslims had been systematically oppressed and discriminated against for hundreds of years and only started going to college in any substantive numbers in the 70s, 80s, and 90s....
Funny you
now want to go back to the individual-based discussion....
Wasn't this just you?
That’s the thing people don’t get. Just because my MCAT as an Asian was double that, doesn’t mean I am definitely, individually a better doctor than choco. There are always outliers that might overcome their test scores etc.
However, when you looks at GROUP statistics and realize these massive gaps in color standards are being applied across groups, it does a disservice to the profession, patients and pretty much everyone (not to mention the issue of fairness).
I'm just looking at the GROUP statistics here from my perspective.