Simply, yes
Well, what about getting the job in the first place? Do you prevent people from hiring based on race? If so, how?
Crack down on it? Increase the penalty for cases in which this occurs?
The problem with attacking this from a legal standpoint is that most companies will fight charges of discrimination. And it isn't an easy thing to prove, especially not when the company has access to a whole team of lawyers, and the employee probably gets a court appointed attorney.
Really, all that I can see it doing is, "Oh look, Native Americans get accepted into college easier than White people, simply for being Native American."
Says the person who did not get into a college. The people who DID get in benefit from the exposure to diversity. And more people than ever (as of 2010) are going to college, so...
If anything, it makes them less so because they may have resentment about the lower standards for minorities to get into a college.
As someone who goes to a college that uses affirmative action, I have never come across a person with this sentiment. More often than not, these kinds of thoughts are directed at athletes (even though we don't give athletic scholarships...), not minorities.
If a black person couldn't get into a college for any reason other than they're black, then they shouldn't be allowed in
This sounds reasonable at first, until you think about how college admissions actually works. Then, it is completely ridiculous.
No one gets into a decent college just because they are black. Back to Harvard: 35,000 people applied, about 2170 got in. So, how many of those 32,830 students weren't qualified to get in to Harvard? At first, one might say "Well, all of them. Otherwise they would have gotten in."
But that is simply not the case. Some of them might have been more qualified than people who got in, and some of them were probably not fit for community college. But most of them could have gone to Harvard and done quite well. Many of the rejects would have added to the achievements of the University. But there simply isn't enough room.
Given that there are literally tens of thousands of students who are qualified but didn't get in, do you really think they just picked some kid because he was black? No. He would have already had to have been just as qualified as everyone else. Being black just makes it more likely that he will be in the 2170 group.
Black people in general suck at tests, scoring by and far the lowest on exams and IQ testing.
Or, maybe these tests suck at actually determining the reasoning abilities of members of certain demographics. Different cultures think about things differently.
So who gets into college the most based on merit?
Since when is test taking the only measure of merit? If that was true, why is the application process so much more involved than simply submitting your test scores?
The fact is, people ARE still racist. Minorities still have to overcome racism. Isn't this act in itself worthy of merit?
So, I have another question. If affirmative action in colleges detracts from the potential of the college so much, then why do colleges do it? Why does a private university that is focused on making as much money as possible give out hundreds of thousands of dollars in the form of scholarships to minorities? Nobody is making them do this. So why?