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Connerly’s
efforts swayed the state of California to pass Proposition 209,
in 1996, to end preferential treatment based on race, gender, or
national origin. “We are in a critical stage of refashioning a new
approach to affirmative action, the old one hasn’t worked, we have
had it for forty years,” Connerly said.
Krislov
passionately supports affirmative action, saying it is a modest
tool to insure equal opportunity is provided to those
underrepresented, and is not an issue of race but also of gender.
“The greatest beneficiaries of affirmative action have been white
women,” he said.
Krislov said
affirmative action provided a blue print for universities and
college to recruit a diverse population and therefore provide a
dynamic education and better opportunities. “Frankly I wish the
City Club should be talking about what is perhaps most important,
the pipeline issue,” he said.
Krislov cited
recent studies that attest Cleveland has the third largest
graduation gap between Metropolitan school districts and suburban
schools in the country. The average graduation rate in
Metropolitan districts is 43 percent compared to 78 percent of
suburban school.
He said the
real issues that should be debated are the educational inequities
between districts and the segregated communities where people do
not have access to opportunities or interaction with diverse point
of views.
Connerly
agreed the educational discrepancies between whites, blacks, and
Asian kids are increasing and said the disadvantages begin the
moment a child is born. “We were so concerned about integration
that we have destroyed black neighborhoods, destroyed black
schools, we do not provide the infrastructure, we do no provide
equality of education for these kids because we are more concerned
about a black kid sitting next to a white kid,” he said.
Connerly said
he agrees with many parts of affirmative action that advocate
equal opportunity and denounce discrimination but, “the race based
era of affirmative action is coming to an end my friends,” he
said.
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