“The intentions of this melancholy country, as concerns Black people — and anyone who doubts me can ask any Indian — have always been genocidal. They needed us for labor and for sport. Now, they can’t get rid of us.” — James Baldwin, speaking at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1979
After the Supreme Court decision that struck down affirmative action in college admissions — and potentially elsewhere, too — I have absolution on my mind.
As in, the act of absolving one’s self from guilt.
I once believed this conservative-laden court embodied the white evangelical id. Today, I see it more as a sort of stand-in for the white evangelical god.
Where some people look to God or good deeds to absolve themselves of sin or wrongdoing, white evangelicals have sought, and received, absolution through the gavel. Assurances that wrongdoing committed in their name is all water under the bridge now.
The social progress we’ve seen in the United States over the past century — in everything from voting rights to abortion rights to affirmative action — has repudiated the racist, sexist power structure imposed by white evangelicals that predates our country’s founding.
Now, the Supreme Court is telling Americans the repudiation has gone too far. On Thursday, the Republican-appointed justices said that — in the name of the 14th Amendment, which was specifically adopted to stem anti-Black racism — affirmative action on college campuses must end.
In their longing for colorblindness — a racial neutrality that requires us to ignore the role that race plays in present-day systems — the six conservative justices effectively excused white people from consideration of their privilege and oppressive power. (Notably, the justices left in place many end-arounds, including priority admissions for children of alumni and donors that overwhelmingly favor white students.)
Justice Clarence Thomas, an opponent of affirmative action who has benefited from race-based preferences in his career, wrote this in his concurring opinion:
[U]niversities’ discriminatory policies burden millions of applicants who are not responsible for the racial discrimination that sullied our Nation’s past. … Whatever their skin color, today’s youth simply are not responsible for instituting the segregation of the 20th century, and they do not shoulder the moral debts of their ancestors.
And Bloomberg reporter Greg Stohr noted that Chief Justice John Roberts, a longtime opponent of affirmative action, had satisfied a yearslong quest by drafting the majority opinion Thursday.
In his opinion, Roberts repeatedly bemoans the continued use of affirmative action at colleges, complaining that “no end is in sight” for such policies, and he suggests there’s no way for a court to know “when the perilous remedy of racial preferences may cease.”
It’s as if the justices are saying to white people — and white men, in particular: You’ve done enough good for the world. It’s time for you to do well for yourself.








