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HUGH B. PRICE is a senior fellow at the
Brookings Institution and a former president and CEO of the National
Urban League.
HUGH PRICE: THE OBAMA
VICTORY: GIVING AFFIRMATIVE ITS DUE:
30/06/2008
(MaximsNews Network)
|
UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / 30
June 2008 --
Voters of varying ethnic and economic backgrounds have put an African-American
one election away from smashing the loftiest glass ceiling in American
society. Predictably, Barack Obama's capture of the Democratic Party
nomination for president has triggered a flurry of post-mortems about why this
point of inflexion in our nation's history has occurred.
Pundits and
pollsters have explanations aplenty. Some say the decline in urban violence
has tamped down white anxiety about black people. More and more young voters
these days judge candidates on their merits, it's said, instead of their race,
gender or sexual preference, for that matter. Racially incendiary political
campaigns and ads supposedly are passe.
There is much to
be said for these theories. But another explanation rings out that politicians
and experts ignore, or perhaps hesitate to utter, because the phrase is as so
radioactive politically and legally. I refer, of course, to affirmative
action.
I recently
attended my 45th reunion at Amherst College in Massachusetts. Four other black
classmates entered with me in September 1963 (three of us graduated). In that
pre-affirmative action era, we comprised a scant 2 percent of the freshman
class. The make-up of the other classes was about the same. As a leading
bastion of male education, Amherst accepted no women back then. I vividly
recall from prospecting for dates that the women's colleges in the Pioneer
Valley weren't any more diverse ethnically.
In those days, the
majority of fraternities at my college refused to accept black students. Since
the frats served as the hub of most campus social life, I hardly got to know
most of my classmates. Last month's reunion made up for a half century of lost
opportunity as we discovered the vast commonalities among us in terms of
professional aspirations and setbacks, family experiences and joys, physical
ailments and laments over deceased classmates.
Two generations of
American voters have come of age since I stood with roughly 200,000 people on
the Washington Mall on August 28, 1963, straining to hear Rev. Martin Luther
King's soul-stirring speech that punctuated the March on Washington. If
anything, his words that day resonate even more today in light of the Obama
victory. As King intoned, "I have a dream that my four little children
will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of
their skin but by the content of their character."
Since 1963,
millions of Americans have studied together and lived together on college and
university campuses that are vastly more integrated than they were in my day.
We have worked alongside one another in teams in large companies, small
businesses, municipal agencies, hospitals and community organizations. As
members of the military, we have fought side-by-side in battles and served in
close synchronization onboard aircraft carriers. Our colleagues, co-workers
and bosses now come in all races, genders and sexual persuasions. We've grown
accustomed to seeing someone in addition to white males get elected, pilot
spacecraft and smash glass ceilings in every realm of American life.
The growing
acceptance of diversity that fueled Senator Obama's victory did not occur by
accident or osmosis. It wasn't the result of immaculate reconciliation. No, it
took years of conscious and conscientious affirmative action by the
gatekeepers of opportunity-in college admissions, in hiring and promotion, in
the allocation of business opportunity-to systematically expose two
generations of Americans to one another and gradually teach a gratifyingly
large proportion of the population to understand and trust, respect and rely
upon one another.
As we strive this
election season to rise above ethnicity, let us give this powerful-and
patently successful-engine of social and racial progress its due. Affirmative
action unquestionably has made our robustly diverse nation a more perfect
union.
___
Also
see recent news publication:
HUGH
PRICE JOINS PRINCETON’S WOODROW WILSON SCHOOL FACULTY: 30/06/2008 (MaximsNews
Network)
Labels:
United
Nations, U.N., Hugh
Price, Barack
Obama, Ethnicity,
Race, Affirmative
Action
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