Affirmative Action – Too Little or Too Much?12
May 7, 2016
This week, our topic is Affirmative Action, We thought we’d focus on the question whether affirmative is too little, or too much, “Too little or too much what?” you ask. Does it bring about too little racial justice – because it doesn’t go far enough? Or does it bring about too much racial resentment – because it goes way too far? I fear that the correct answer may be that it’s a little bit of both. Affirmative action doesn’t begin to be a fully adequate instrument for achieving racial justice but, nonetheless, it generates way more racial resentment than it deserves to.
Comments (1)
Lupine
Thursday, January 24, 2019 -- 7:57 PM
Sorry not to hear theSorry not to hear the original broadcast, however I’d like to tell of my and my husband’s experiences! I am a woman of European descent (white, but a woman!). If it wasn’t for Affirmative Action, I would have had a much harder time entering my field of interest: Natural Resource Management. I was hired in 1970, at age 19, as one of the first women on a Timber Stand Improvement crew for the U.S. Forest Service. There were 1 - 2 Hispanic young men, but no other minorities as I can recall. I was required to cut down small trees with a chainsaw, cut off branches and pile branches and cut logs (slash) in piles for chipping. They told me “we picked your name out of a hat because of Affirmative Action”. However, I was later told they wanted college students; people who had some sort of ambition. What needs to be considered is the work environment, which was a real challenge for me! Yes, USFS had to hire women and minorities, but they really resented my presence on the crew, and I was kidded and treated as a “dumb woman” who could barely do the job. This situation has changed dramatically over the years, and many women are on these and other crews, such as recreation or fire. When Affirmative Action is initially instituted, there are difficulties in a social sense, helping workers “get along” and respect each other’s abilities instead of their race or gender. ON the other hand, my husband (also in the NR field) found he was overlooked for promotions when a woman with less experience or skills was promoted instead of him. A bit of discrimination there. However, he says he was in favor of AA, as minorities needed to be considered more often especially in the Natural Resource/Outdoor fields.