Will the Supreme Court Toss Out Affirmative Action in College Admissions?
The Supreme Court is weighing legal challenges to admissions at top schools in the U.S. Judge Napolitano joins Gerald Celente
Gerlad Celente and Judge Andrew Napolitano discuss the Supreme Court case on whether universities in the U.S. should be allowed to consider race during admissions. Also, please don’t miss our latest Trends Journal released on Tuesday.
JudgeNap.com: Today, nearly all colleges and universities use race as an admissions factor. According to their own public statements, they believe that they are serving a societal good and advancing the public policy of the United States by assuring a racially diverse makeup of all incoming classes and by compensating for past egregious racial wrongs.
To their point, the Supreme Court, in an absurdly reasoned 2003 opinion, generally accepted these goals and employed them to trump the 14th Amendment, but only until 2028. Why 2028? Because Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, who wrote the opinion, opined that in the 25 years following her opinion, race relations in the United Stated will have so improved that racial quotas in college admissions will not be a public issue. How wrong she was!
Another option is a plebiscite on scholarships to low income and to remove student loan barriers that is medical scholarships so a degree can protect from corrupt pharmaceuticals,
Though The book Natural Healing should be sufficient a degree is of use to refute those who view those who object to to injections as ignorant bumpkins or suspicious bumpkins.