The Columbus Dispatch

Genetics undercuts the case for racial quotas

- Michael Barone is a senior political analyst for The Washington Examiner. @MichaelBar­one

these people say, but there definitely aren’t any in intelligen­ce.

Such people responded with rage and fury to the publicatio­n in 1994 of Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray’s book, “The Bell Curve.” That book explored difference­s among races in intelligen­ce as measured by rigorous IQ tests.

Herrnstein and Murray’s conclusion was that those difference­s are the result of both nature and nurture — genes and environmen­t — in as yet unknown proportion­s. They predicted that research like Reich’s would provide a clearer understand­ing of just how much is genetic.

Reich obviously wishes to avoid the demonizati­on endured by Murray, who was shouted down at Middlebury College just last year. Reich is at pains to say that his findings should not be used to justify racist practices such as the slave trade.

He also makes a point that is obvious to the ordinary person but that he — and some of his critics who wrote to the Times — thinks needs reiteratio­n, which is, as one reader put it, “difference­s in individual­s vary far more widely than population­s.” When we are comparing traits of people with different genetic ancestry, we are looking at averages, such as the difference­s between American whites’ and Asians’ IQ scores. (Asians’, on average, are higher.) But within the white and Asian population­s, there is wide variety — which can be represente­d as a bell curve.

The assumption of “wellmeanin­g people” is that ordinary Americans aren’t capable of grasping this. My view is that they understand it very well. They have learned — from school, from work, from everyday life, from public events — that there is a wider variation within each measured group than there is among measured groups.

To take a concrete and accurate example, they suspect that even if blacks might on average score lower than whites on average in intelligen­ce tests, it does not change the fact that former President Barack Obama is a highly intelligen­t person.

In arguing that racial difference­s do not justify racial discrimina­tion, Reich steps out on some possibly dangerous turf. “Most everyone accepts that the biological difference­s between males and females are profound,” he writes, though some Times readers would volubly disagree. Yet “we should accord each sex the same freedoms and opportunit­ies regardless of those difference­s.” A fortiori, we should do the same for those with different racial ancestry whose average difference­s are far less profound.

It’s a strong argument. Contrary to the fears of “well-meaning people,” the difference in average racial IQ scores does not undermine the case against racial discrimina­tion. Ordinary Americans can and do see that racial discrimina­tion against individual­s is irrational.

But the continuing existence of racial gaps, even as the IQ scores of all groups rise (that’s the Flynn effect, identified and named by Herrnstein and Murray), does undercut the case for racial quotas and preference­s and the “disparate impact” legal doctrine establishe­d by the Supreme Court 47 years ago.

The justificat­ion for quotas is the assumption that in a fair society, we would find the same racial mix in every school, every occupation and every neighborho­od. Any significan­t deviation from statistica­l equality, in this view, can be evidence of persistent racial discrimina­tion.

This notion suffuses the behavior of leaders in colleges and universiti­es, in large corporatio­ns, in government at all levels. Many such leaders regard enforcing quotas as a moral duty, even if they place people in positions for which they’re unprepared. For these “well-meaning people,” David Reich has a ( probably unintentio­nal) warning: Science is underminin­g the rationale for the work you’re doing.

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