The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Scandal doesn’t prove privilege

- Mona Charen She writes for Creators Syndicate.

Operation Varsity Blues has unleashed a veritable orgy of stereotype­s. “Entitled white kids” have been trending, along with told-you-so’s about how the system is “rigged.” A writer at The Week declared meritocrac­y a fraud, while The New York Times perceived a “lesson in harsh racial disparitie­s.”

A Washington Post columnist hit the same theme, asking: “Now that the FBI has shown what stealing a college slot really looks like, can we stop making students of color feel like frauds?” Theresa Vargas, noting that she spoke from personal experience, complained that:

“For so long, people of color who have attended elite schools in this country have felt the need to prove that they deserved to be there. They have accepted that no matter their grades or SAT scores, people will look at them as affirmativ­e action recipients and talk about them, sometimes to their faces, as tokens.

“… All those people who have blamed poor brown and black kids for taking the spots of ‘more deserving’ white kids through affirmativ­e action should have been looking closer at who really didn’t earn their seats.”

Whoa. This is stealing a base. The FBI has not shown that every white kid who gets into college has bought and/or lied his or her way in. As for the stigma that attaches to affirmativ­e action, that’s an unfortunat­e and inevitable byproduct of racial preference­s. It’s one of the reasons to oppose them. It’s great to be at Stanford, but much less satisfying if you are saddled with the suspicion of being an affirmativ­e action baby.

Many of the lamentatio­ns this week about “white privilege” and “poor minorities” have seemed frozen in a time warp. Black and poor are no longer synonymous. As the Institute for Family Studies reports, the share of black men in the upper third of the income tier rose from 13 percent in 1960 to 23 percent in 2016.

A bunch of cheats lied and bribed their way into some top schools. They deserve the scorn and criminal prosecutio­ns they’re facing. But the rush to say, “See, this proves the system is rigged for rich, white kids,” is not proved. Yes, wealth confers benefits (even without cheating). And some wealthy people are also black, brown and other tones. But college admission standards also explicitly “privilege” some minorities at the expense of other minorities and the majority. As the suit by a group of Asian-Americans against Harvard has shown, Asian-Americans have the lowest admit percentage of any group — along with the strongest credential­s. Isn’t it extraordin­ary that the students who got into top schools by fraud seemed to have little trouble performing there? This should cause more raised eyebrows than the finger wagging about privilege. What does this say about grade inflation and academic rigor?

What this scandal and the intense interest it has sparked demonstrat­es, among other things, is that we’ve come to invest way too much importance in brand names. You’d think parents wanted prestige for themselves more than the right fit for their child. The opaque nature of admissions decisions, together with schools’ dishonest claims of “holistic” evaluation­s of each candidate, invite cynicism. Perhaps a better system would be to eliminate all preference­s — racial, ethnic, geographic, legacy, donor, sports — all of it. Take students of proven ability who want to learn, and provide scholarshi­ps based on need. It might just improve everyone’s morale.

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