Civil rights advocates breathed a sigh of relief Monday after the Supreme Court declared affirmative action alive…for now. But in response to suggestions that the need for race-based programs in the admissions process is somehow eroding, advocates have a clear message: we’re not there yet.
“Race is a major problem in this country, it is a daily problem” said Julian Bond, former chairman of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP,) on msnbc Monday. “The fiction is that these problems have gone away, Dr. King solved them years ago, Barack Obama’s election proved they don’t exist anymore. So therefore, we don’t have to worry about these things.”
Such notions are “simplistic” and “idiotic,” said Bond.
The Supreme Court ruled Monday in the case of Fisher v. University of Texas that a higher bar would need to be met in using racial standards to create a diverse student body, and that essentially, the lower court hadn’t given the University of Texas’ affirmative action program a close enough examination. The high court sent the case back to a federal appeals court for review, leaving the question of whether affirmative action is constitutional for another day.
Bond said that though the Supreme Court raised the bar for affirmative action in college admissions, it won’t be difficult for universities to meet.








