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| Explaining | Affirmitive action From wiki: Affirmative action (U.S. English), or positive discrimination (British English), is a policy or a program promoting the representation in various systems of people of a group who have traditionally been discriminated against, with the aim of creating a more egalitarian society. I'm not sure to what extent has affirmitive action been implemented in the US to leverage the socio-economic parity. If true, by what means - race, gender, or socio-economic status? What would be the ideal solution in creating an opportunity-based egalitarian society? Anyone care to edify this issue? | |
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| | #2 (permalink) | ||
| Suspended | Re: Affirmitive action Quote:
In theory, affirmative action says that if you have two candidates who are equal in all of the measures you consider to be important and relevant, then the minority will be chosen. My thought is... discrimination is discrimination. Anyway... I mean, seriously, how often are two candidates EXACTLY equal? Gimme a break. Cheers. ![]() | ||
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| | #3 (permalink) | |
| Thinking | Re: Affirmitive action What happened to meritocracy? Talent is not distributed equally amongst humanity. Systems can be implemented to allow equal access to education and employment, given reasonably equal qualifications. Constant redistribution of wealth withing a welfare state adds to societal malaise and apathy. Any individual with skills to contribute should be allowed to do so, and to rise to their own level. Simply raising the penalty for discrimination would improve things greatly, although funding for education and training has to be available. | |
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| | #4 (permalink) | ||
| Explaining | Re: Affirmitive action Quote:
A merit-based system would continually oppress those who are at a disadvantage. In terms of education, lets say two students have shown identical academic performance, but one is the son of Bill Gates, while the other is a daughter of housemaid, who do think deserves to be given a scholarship? Of course, I'd say that a race-based affirmitive action might not be fair to a working-class majority group, but a socio-economic-based policy is more complicated to enforce. | ||
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| | #5 (permalink) | ||
| ¿42? | Re: Affirmitive action Quote:
It's not OK to discriminate against anyone and that's exactly what affirmative action is. Just because some socioeconomic group of the past was discriminated against does not make it OK to punish some other, current socioeconomic group for the actions of those that discriminated in the past. In short, 2 "wrongs" DO NOT make a "right". ---------------- Clay Editor and Forum Administrator stego anyone? Add yourself to Hypography's Frappr. "There are only 10 kinds of people in the world -- .....Those who understand binary, and those who don't." "Draw no conclusions before their time." | ||
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| | #6 (permalink) | ||
| Explaining | Re: Affirmitive action Quote:
You raised a good point in that affirmative action will result in a waste of talent. Regarding your comment on welfare state, I think it depends on the kind of welfare that is being employed. | ||
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| | #7 (permalink) | |
| Explaining | Re: Affirmitive action C1ay, I don't think it is a punishment for the majority. It is still based on merit, but because one group has an advantage in terms of financial support, people in this group should do better in, say, academic exams. therefore, a person who comes from a poor family has more merit than a person who is well-off but has the same level of achievement on paper. this is why I say that affirmative action is still merit-based. The hostility that people have shown here toward affirmative action makes me feel I am missing something. And I think perhaps affirmative action in Malaysia is viewed and applied in a different context than that in America. | |
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| | #8 (permalink) | |
| ¿42? | Re: Affirmitive action Affirmative action is discrimination and taking a seat at a job or a school away from someone that has earned it only to give it to someone else based on their class or hardship is wrong and it is a punishment for something that individual is not personally responsible for. What you advocate is that it should be OK for some unqualified minority individual to have my job instead of me just because they didn't have the same opportunities I had. That they had fewer opportunities than I is not my fault and it should not entitle them to the job I have earned or the job anyone else has earned. ---------------- Clay Editor and Forum Administrator stego anyone? Add yourself to Hypography's Frappr. "There are only 10 kinds of people in the world -- .....Those who understand binary, and those who don't." "Draw no conclusions before their time." | |
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| | #9 (permalink) | |
| Creating | I’m sure it’s little consolation to someone who strongly suspect, or even knows, that their hiring or admission to a much-desired job or program was set aside because a measurably less qualified person was admitted under affirmative action, but affirmative action is not, IMO, without merit. By artificially increasing the number of minority employees and students, affirmative action has a gradual influence on common perception, combating widespread and scientifically unsupported beliefs that these racial minorities are inherently or genetically less capable of certain jobs or academic disciplines. This is a slow effect, and one that some argue would occur, possibly in a better way, without affirmative action. Such objections are, however, as speculative as the belief that this social transformation would never occur without affirmative action. Like many social engineering efforts, affirmative action is based on an informed guess that its overall social impact is beneficial. I find it remarkable that many people who express outrage that less qualified people who are members of racial minorities are given preference in hiring and admissions, seem less offended that the same employers and institutions admit less qualified people who are wealthy, or are recommended by influential people. I, for one, find classism, nepotism, and influence pedaling more offensive than racism, either typical or reverse. | |
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| | #10 (permalink) | |
| Doing the Impossible | Re: Affirmitive action A person who owns a business should be able to hire any way he sees fit. He is hiring people to help him to run a profitable business. And he is risking the future of his enterprise to the capabilities of his employees. When a person has been hired they need to enter into a binding contract that will outline the conditions that must be met to terminate their employment. They have committed their time and talent to their employer, and the employer is providing them with compensation for that time and talent. If the employer wants to fire them, they must do it within the scope fo the contract. If the employee wants to remain employed they must also live up to the terms of the contract. The government should have virtually no say as to the terms that can be listed in that employment contract. Do I want to hire only albino midgets with speach impediments? Nothing should stop me from doing that. Do I want to hire inner city youths who are not getting any other opportunity? Nothing should stop me from doing that. Do I want to hire white college educated men who have the same last name as me? Nothing should stop me from doing that. Economics drive who I am hiring, and what I can pay. The guy who went to college has expectations of making more money because of his education that he would otherwise. So it costs me more to hire a college educated person than otherwise. That college education hopefully has created a more rounded person, who will bring a greater skill set to my business that someone without a college education (this is not always the case, but is a rule of thumb). At first glance I assume the inner city youths may not be in the same market position as the college educated (white or otherwise) and so they will bring less valuable skill sets, providing less value, and thus needing lower wages. The albino midgets with speach impediments are very hard to come by, and because they are so specialized would be in a unique position to demand higher wages, after all, who is going to replace them? Often the argument is made that the government should be regulated by affirmative action. I would say no to that too. As long as you are giving up efficiency for an equitable distribution you are wating money. We already waste enough money in government by doing stupid valueless things. But to do it with stupid valuless people, of all colors shapes and sizes, is a double insult to the taxpayers. But the real argument against it is when standards are lowered in an attempt to get more diversity. City's have lowered the test scores required by candidates of oppressed races for such things as police and fire department. So now we have better distribution of race, but less qualified police. Or they adjust the physical standards to let women do jobs that are overall too physically demanding for a woman to do. I have not met the woman firefighter who could lug my 265 pound as down a flight of stairs. But that is who comes running to help in cities that have traded public safety for public image. if minority groups want to fund educational programs, and other efforts to close the gap, then more power too them. There are plenty of businesses who would love to work with them because of the owner's morality. There are plenty of businesses who would choose not to. The market will sort out the winners from the losers. My business, my decision. My government, my safety, my money, my decision. No affirmative action. You want something, earn it. Bill ---------------- aka TheBigDog - Hypography Full Freaking Moderator Become a Hypography sponsor! The truth is incontravertible; malice may attack it, ignorance may deride it, but in the end there it is. - Winston Churchill TheBigDog's recommended reading: The Science of Success - Charles G. Koch A neutron goes into a bar and asks the bartender, "How much for a beer?" The bartender replies, "For you, no charge." | |
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