"Base Selections on Quality, Not Race"
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Affirmative action programs seek to provide a larger applicant pool for desirable positions through quality training and recruiting. Once the larger pool is in place, previously disadvantaged minorities have an equal chance for selection.
For many people, this system is neither controversial nor discriminatory: the desired positions still go to the most qualified applicant, race and gender notwithstanding
Preferential treatment, on the other hand, seeks to instill sex and race as a part of the job-selection criteria.
Unlike affirmative action, which passively increases minority opportunities, preferential treatment actively places them in positions based on minority status.
This is not to say that someone hired under this process is not qualified, just that he may not be the most qualified
Proponents argue that this is a necessary evil if a greater good is to be achieved. They would say it is fair for a more qualified candidate to be passed over in favor of a possibly less qualified one to right past wrongs. Thankfully, at NCSU, I have met only one such individual
This person maintained that we owed her.
By “we,” I assume she meant some white establishment. She felt there should be a specified number of seats in each class reserved exclusively for blacks, both male and female. I would like to believe that this student’s view represents a small, shrinking minority
Contrary to my fellow student’s absurd claim, I feel that our student body should consist of people selected for merit and achievement, without regard to race or gender. And they should succeed through self-reliance, diligence and effort, not because they are “owed” something by an establishment.
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