In the several decades that Republicans have tried to federally outlaw race-conscious school admissions policies that help diversify college campuses, their arguments haven’t gotten any stronger.
But times have changed, and Republicans see new opportunity in a Supreme Court that’s chock-full of like-minded conservatives eager to roll back efforts to level the playing field for marginalized people.
That, in essence, explains how we got to the point where we are now, with the court considering two key cases concerning race-conscious admissions policies at Harvard University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
As civil rights lawyer Sherrilyn Ifill explained, the Supreme Court and numerous lower courts have routinely upheld schools’ right to consider race.
And this isn’t merely for the benefit of the admitted. Education experts across the country have discussed how racially diverse college campuses benefit all students — regardless of race — as well as the campuses themselves, by offering valuable yet underrepresented perspectives.
But the empirical benefits of race-conscious admissions policies, often categorized as a form of “affirmative action,” don’t appear to matter, given the Supreme Court’s conservative majority. Reality is but a formality to them. And what we’re getting out of this case instead is a crash course in gaslighting.
Let’s count the ways.
For one, the organization leading the conservative movement’s latest efforts to dismantle race-conscious school admissions is, in both cases, holding up Asian American students as victims of these policies.
But as my NBC News colleague Kimmy Yam has reported, an overwhelming majority of Asian Americans support these policies, a likely and welcome understanding of the common goals shared by nonwhite students seeking access to, and equality on, college campuses.
Nonetheless, Justice Clarence Thomas, who has acknowledged that affirmative action policies factored into his admission to Yale Law School, claimed not to understand the value of diversity itself.
He posed this question to attorneys defending race-conscious policies:








