Let me finish tonight with the Supreme Court and affirmative action.
The Roberts court decided today that states have the right to end affirmative action if the voters wish to do so.
If this court has a central narrative, it could be that those who held the advantage for most of this country’s history deserve to have it back if they can find the legislative or political means to take it back. If they do, the court won’t stand in the way.
%22If%20this%20court%20has%20a%20central%20narrative%2C%20it%20could%20be%20that%20those%20who%20held%20the%20advantage%20for%20most%20of%20this%20country%E2%80%99s%20history%20deserve%20to%20have%20it%20back%20if%20they%20can%20find%20the%20legislative%20or%20political%20means%20to%20take%20it%20back.%22′
Whether it’s states that once were blocked from passing restrictive voting rules by the Voting Rights Act but are now free to do so, or the rich, who from the Robber Baron era through Watergate were free to spend unlimited sums of money to buy a candidate or two or 20.
Or states like Florida, Arizona, California, and Michigan, whose voting majorities have had enough of affirmative action, but don’t mind a few legacies getting a leg up at their family alma mater.









