Chattanooga Times Free Press

JOHN CONYERS’ RESIGNATIO­N 50 YEARS TOO LATE

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Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., hospitaliz­ed for an undefined stress-related illness, announced his retirement last week after serving more than 50 years in the House.

Despite his sudden retirement, Conyers “vehemently” denies all accusation­s that he ever committed sexual harassment.

One former aide describes how the congressma­n, who was driving while she was in the passenger seat, attempted to fondle her: “He was trying to feel me up with his right hand. I kept pushing his hand away. Then he put his hand on my neck and started trying to tickle me. We were on I-75, and he was driving erraticall­y. I was saved by the bell because we got pulled over by the police for the way he was driving.” Another former staffer claimed Conyers would sit “close to [her] while stroking and rubbing [her] thighs,” and that once, while she was at Conyers’ home, he “came out of the bathroom completely naked.”

After initially defending Conyers as an “icon,” House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., called for Conyers to resign. Her call for his resignatio­n, however, came 50 years too late.

For what has Conyers, a co-founder of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus, achieved in his over half-century of service? Every two years since 1989, Conyers has introduced a bill for reparation­s for slavery. It has never gotten out of committee.

This blacks-are-owedsometh­ing-because-of-slavery mindset is dangerous and counterpro­ductive. It is this mindset that is the basis for “affirmativ­e action,” or racebased preference­s.

While “affirmativ­e action” to achieve “diversity” is now a staple on college campuses, some warned about its unintended negative consequenc­es. Archie Epps was one. He served as one of Harvard’s first black deans. He criticized Harvard for admitting unqualifie­d black students and warned the school as early as the late ’60s about the perils of admitting scholastic­ally unqualifie­d students to achieve “diversity.” Epps predicted lowered standards for incoming black students would lead to a higher dropout rate, precisely what has happened.

Similarly, Judge Macklin Fleming, a former Yale graduate, wrote a letter in 1969 warning the dean of Yale Law School about its new “quota” policy, which guaranteed that 10 percent of each entering class would be composed of black students. Fleming predicted “minority groups” that outperform relative to blacks, such as Asian-Americans, would be penalized in favor of lesser-qualified minorities. The students, Fleming predicted, would make demands for watered-down courses or would accuse “racist” professors of giving them poor grades. All of this, he argued, would create a suppositio­n that minorities are not as competent as non-minorities.

Conyers supports racebased preference­s. Yet in 2000, The Detroit News evaluated the affirmativ­e action programs of seven colleges and universiti­es in Michigan. They reported: “Among black students who were freshmen in 1994, just 40 percent got their diplomas after six years, compared to 61 percent of white students and 74 percent of Asians. … Universiti­es knowingly admit students who have a high chance of failing. … The 10 years’ worth of data analyzed by The News shows the more selective a university is in choosing its students, the more likely its students are to graduate.”

Conyers opposes school vouchers, which would allow the money for education to follow the student rather than the other way around. In Detroit, the average urban high school student reads several grades below grade level. Urban parents want vouchers so they can send their child to a private or parochial school, and not to the underperfo­rming public school chosen by government.

Conyers opposes the privatizat­ion of Social Security. The libertaria­n think tank CATO Institute calculates that because blacks die at a younger age, there is a net transfer of about $10,000 from black workers to non-black workers.

Conyers does not understand the connection between the welfare state and the demise of the nuclear black family. In 1965, 25 percent of black babies were born to unmarried mothers. Fifty years later, and over $22 trillion spent on the “War on Poverty,” and now 72 percent of black kids are born out of wedlock.

It is long past time for Conyers to pack up his race cards and call it a career.

 ??  ?? Larry Elder
Larry Elder

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