Category: Uncategorized

  • Portales: We Are Constitutionally Correct

    Email: “Hola, Greg”
    from Professor Marco Portales,
    Texas A&M

    University
    Thu, 29 Jan 2004

    Dear Greg,

    Glad I have your e-mail

    address from your
    Texas Civil Rights Review website. Good to
    see some outside help. I read your

    letter to
    the Eagle and the one to the Battalion and
    meant to write to you . . . but I

    have
    been busy finishing the books listed below.
    I have been writing on the race issue

    for
    awhile, as you may have gathered. FYI: When the minority faculty and staff met

    with
    President Gates on campus on December 18th,
    2003 (a meeting that was not reported by any

    of
    the media), four Latino faculty members
    stood up, as well as several other faculty

    and
    staff TAMU members, to urge him to follow
    the Grutter decision, to leave legacy behind,

    and
    to do several other things that we believe would
    improve our chances of recruiting more

    minority
    students and faculty. But he was already committed
    to the position of admitting

    applicants only on
    “merit” considerations, excluding race anew (as
    Hopwood, which has now been

    superseded)
    required between 1996 and 2003.

    Below I am sending you my recent

    and
    forthcoming publications, two of which
    address the issue of why we should embrace
    race, in

    keeping with the Constitution. As
    you can see, I don’t buy the way conservative
    groups have

    interpreted the 14th Amendment
    for their convenience, just as they had it their
    way before the

    Civil Rights Act of 1964.
    Part of the problem is that they always want it
    their way, and only

    their way, without working to
    bring in the perspectives of minorities.
    Fortunately, Justice

    O’Connor saw the
    constitutionality of Bakke. So we are
    constitutionally correct; the problem is

    that
    they have the power and the support of the
    general public,

    unfortunately….

    Best

    regards,
    Marco

    _____________________________

    BOOK MANUSCRIPTS

    under Contract for Publication

    “Quality Education for Latinos: Print and Oral Skills

    for All Students, K-College”; this book manuscript, written with my wife, Rita Portales, is designed

    to produce more academically-competitive minority students. The 272-page manuscript received an

    advanced contract from the University of Texas
    Press in the summer of 2003 and will be published

    late in 2004 or early 2005

    “Latino Sun, Rising: Our Spanish-speaking U.S. World” is a

    collection of 44 essays divided into three parts: Youth (8), Parenthood (12), and Public Policy Issues

    (24).

    The Texas A&M Press will published this 310-page
    manuscript in Fall 2004

    BOOK

    CrowdingOut Latinos: Mexican Americans in the Public

    Consciousness Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2000; 209 pages

    FORTHCOMING

    ARTICLE

    “A History of Latino Segregation Lawsuits” in The Unfinished Agenda of Brown

    v. Board of Education, edited by James Anderson; Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, (March or

    April, 2004, 20 pp.

    REFEREED PUBLICATIONS

    “Can the Supreme Court

    Constitutionally Uphold the
    Hopwood Opinion? Race, ‘Color-blindness’ and Public Opinion before

    Bakke,” Callaloo: A Journal of African Diaspora Arts & Letters , Volume 26, Number 1, Winter 2003,

    26-46. Article traces the history of the concept of “color- blindness” from the Reconstruction Period

    following the Civil War to Bakke and Hopwood.

    “Examining the Recruitment and

    Enrollment of Eligible Hispanic and African American Students at Selective Public Texas

    Universities,” New York: AMS Press, Inc., 1999, Volume 16, Readings on Equal Education, an education

    series. One of eleven articles in Education of Hispanics in the United States: Politics, Policies and

    Outcomes, pp. 201-222.

    “Hopwood, Race, Bakke and the Constitution,” Texas Hispanic

    Journal of Law and Policy, University of Texas School of Law publication, Volume 4, Number 1, Spring

    1998, pp. 29-44.

    “Anti-Hopwood: Why Race Ought to be Legally Recognized,” The

    Hopwood Effect: Problems, Prospects, and Impacts on Minorities in Higher Education; conference

    proceedings, edited by Mitchell Rice, Race and Ethnic Studies Institute, Texas A&M University, Fall

    1998; pp. 172-176.

    “Affirmative Action: Best Idea, So Far,” Hispanonoticias: The

    Hispanic Caucus of the American Association for Higher Education, featured one-page article; June

    1995.

    “K-12 Education and the Responsibilities of the University,” one-page excerpt

    published by HACU, the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities; Seventh Annual Meeting

    presentation; Washington, D.C., October 1993.

  • Jeff Wentworth: 10 Percent Plan Hotter than Affirmative Action?

    It looks like that’s what Texas State Senator Jeff Wentworth is saying

    to El Paso Times Reporter Darren Meritz in a Jan. 23 report on the “Princeton

    Study.”

    Could it be, that Texas politicians would prefer affirmative action over the

    ten percent plan?…
    [Quote:] One problem that state Sen. Jeff Wentworth sees in the Top 10

    Percent Plan is a lack of consideration of which of three high-school curricula — minimum, recommended

    for college, or advanced — a student completes upon graduation.

    Wentworth also said

    that the 10 percent plan might not be necessary because it was created to help increase minority

    enrollment at Texas universities before the Supreme Court ruled this year that race can be considered a

    factor in university admissions.

    “There are a lot of problems with the Top 10 Percent

    rule, and it needs to be repealed,” said Wentworth, R-San Antonio. The rule “has energized and

    infuriated both students and parents alike.” [end quote El Paso Times Jan.

    23].

    Wentworth says the ten percent plan is no longer needed, now that affirmative

    action has been restored, and the legislature will repeal the 10 percent plan if it gets a chance in

    April.

    But does that mean the state will also ask its universities to practice

    affirmative action in admissions?

    This is interesting news, since the ten percent plan

    is sometimes viewed as a politically more popular measure than affirmative action. Stay

    tuned.

    [For more on the Princeton Study, see News Archives and links, BTW the El Paso

    Time headline, “Top 10% plan has improved diversity at top Texas colleges” should be taken with

    caution.]

  • Penn Will Keep Legacy Program, Thankyou

    “We have a well-established program to encourage students of our graduates to apply to Penn

    and have had this program in place for years,” [Admissions Dean Lee] Stetson said. “Basically we say

    we will give a measure of preference to students with an alumni affiliation who apply during the early

    decision program.”

    “I would find it difficult to believe we would change the

    admissions program drastically to eliminate a program that has worked so well for us over the years,”

    Stetson said. [From the Daily Pennsylvanian, “Texas A&M Abandons Legacy Admissions,” Brooke Daley

    Jan. 28, 2004.]

  • Comment from jblanton: There are Better Ways

    I would like to post a contrary view that is likely to be unpopular on this site. My

    intent is not to be a troll, but to generate a serious discussion and exchange some different points of

    view, even at the risk of getting flamed.

    [This message was originally posted as a

    “comment” to one of the items below. It deserves to be lifted out for fuller consideration. I am

    replying to jblanton at the “Forums” section. See “reply to legacy” under “Texas A&M Today” and

    “reply to affirmative action under “Philosophy of Affirmative Action”–gm] First of all, as an

    alum of Texas A&M, I have two different perspectives on the legacy issue. As a father, I certainly like

    the idea of my daughters getting an extra 4 points on a 100 point admissions scale. A&M is a great

    school and is much more competitive now than it was when I attended, and it wasn’t that easy to get in

    back then. And as a parent, you always want what is best for your kids. However, in the context of the

    recent admissions changes which are supposed to make admissions based soley on merit, I understand the

    need to eliminate the legacy benefit. President Gates has as well, and I support his decision to remove

    it. My point is that people who like the idea of legacies getting a little extra help aren’t

    necessarily doing it because they hope to keep a minority student from being admitted, just as a

    supporter of affirmative action in admissions isn’t doing it with the main purpose of depriving a

    white guy of getting admitted. From the soundbites I’ve seen on the news, some protesters seem to

    think that the legacy policy was designed with a secret racist agenda to screw over minorities, and I

    really don’t think that’s the case.

    With regard to affirmative action, I think we need

    to step back and look at the bigger picture. It is a fact that the student population of Texas A&M is

    weighted towards whites relative to the ethnic makeup of the population of the state it serves. It is

    also true that historically, minorities were not admitted, so there is a history of discrimination.

    Finally, regardless of your point of view, I think most reasonable people would agree that diversity is

    a good thing, especially at an institution of higher learning. In fact, it is a necessity IMHO for A&M

    to continue to be a top-notch, world-class university, and Gates has acknowledged as

    much.

    I see two questions from this. The first is: when have you reached the goal? The

    second is: what is the best way to achieve it?

    Gates didn’t come right out and state

    what the racial breakdown should be for the student population, he just said that it’s not what it

    should be and that A&M needs to increase the minority enrollment. I agree with that position. Take

    Prarie View A&M for example. Prarie View A&M has traditionally been a mostly black college. I think it

    would probably benefit them as well to diversify their student populace for the same reasons as I think

    the College Station campus should. Diversity is a good thing. Does that mean Prarie View A&M needs to

    establish an affirmative action program for non-blacks? I don’t think so. Should the student body

    relect the overall state population’s ethnic makeup exactly? Again, I don’t think so. I still think

    A&M (College Station) needs to continue to strive to increase minority enrollment, but like everything

    else, it should be put in perspective.

    So, let me address the second question: what is

    the best way to increase minority enrollment? Affirmative action is one way of doing it, but is it the

    best way? Although the U.S. Supreme Court decided that it is constitutional, race cannot be the primary

    factor in admissions, nor are any kind of quotas allowed. Secondly, if you do use it, it is a very

    controversial method, even if the intent is good. If you’re a white guy that doesn’t get admitted

    while someone else with a slightly lower score does because they happened to get extra points due to

    their race, it’s hard to view it as anything but reverse discrimination. It makes some people

    resentful and others get unfairly labeled. I’m not a minority, but I imagine it would make me angry if

    someone accused me of obtaining something not because of my hard work but the color of my

    skin.

    Gates has suggested special minority recruitment programs, which certainly is

    certainly a good idea. But why do A&M (and other universities) have to recruit top minority students?

    i.e., why aren’t there enough “good” minority students to go around so that you don’t have to make

    such a special effort to recruit them?

    I think the biggest civil rights issue isn’t

    with A&M’s office of admissions, but rather the secondary education system. Secondary eduction in

    Texas has traditionally been funded with local property taxes, and local property taxes vary widely

    depending on the socioeconomic condition of the local populace. Minorities that were historically

    discriminated against tend to be concentrated in poorer property districts, which in a lot of cases

    means their kids go to crappy schools and get a crappy education, and then have trouble competing to

    get in to A&M or UT or get a decent job. Seems like a vicious cycle to me. By ensuring that every Texas

    kid gets an opportunity for a decent secondary education, we don’t have to fix the problem with a

    controversial affirmative action program when that kid gets older and wants to compete for a slot at a

    prestigious university or a decent job. The state legislature is supposedly supposed to take this issue

    up in the near future. Maybe they can get it right this time.

    Well, that’s it. I don’t

    mean to be insensitive or rude, so if I’ve come across that way, I apologize. I am just trying to

    start an open and honest discussion, and I’m open to listening to other points of view. Flame on. And

    Gig’em Aggies.

  • Time to Remember Texas Professor Oliver C. Cox

    [Quote: Wiley College Professor Oliver C.] Cox did not dismiss racism among working-

    class whites. He argued that “the observed overt competitive antagonism is produced and carefully

    maintained by the exploiters of both the poor whites and the Negroes.” He recognized that elite whites

    defined the matrix within which non-elite whites crafted their political agency, and he emphasized the

    ruling-class foundations of racism as part of his critique of the liberal scholars of race relations

    who theorized race relations without regard to capitalist political economy and class dynamics.[end

    quote, Adolph Reed’s Introduction to the Monthly Review edition of “Race”–part three of Cox’s

    masterwork, “Caste, Class, and Race” see “Web Links” or additional quote below.] Cox’s

    perspective goes right to the heart of how we should try to understand race by encouraging us to move

    beyond categories for defining and sorting supposedly discrete human populations, beyond concepts of

    racial hierarchies, and beyond racist ideologies—all components of a singular, indivisible unholy

    trinity—and instead recognize that race is the product of social relations within history and political

    economy.