BLACK MSNBC anchor forced to admit she got into Harvard by affirmative action

You're that IBdman moron.

Is that the best you can do? You get nailed lying again, and you scream I am a sock of someone who has and distinctly different posting style?

There are some socks here, Guno and TigerRed are the same person - both socks. ThatOwlCunt and Phantasmal are the same person.

But I post only under this name.

Now I think you are the opposite of a sock. I think three or four people at the troll farm in China use the account you are posting under - to keep the trolling rolling 24/7....
 
Again people here need to stop arguing with Clarence Thomas, who admits he had the grades and did the work, but would have never made it without AA.

AA does not give unqualified people a shot. It makes sure a spotlight is shined on QUALIFIED people in communities that otherwise do not get noticed.


Clarence Thomas entire life is a story of the success of Affirmative action. A person who qualified by grades who would not have been notices or chosen without the help of AA.


Yale Law School admission - "As an undergraduate at Holy Cross College, Thomas received a scholarship set aside for racial minorities. He was admitted to Yale Law School in 1971 as part of an aggressive (and successful) affirmative-action program with a clear goal: 10 percent minority enrollment. Yale offered him generous financial aid."

"But for them (affirmative-action laws), God only knows where I (Clarence Thomas) would be today. These laws and their proper application are all that stand between the first 17 years of my life and the second 17 years." Thomas called affirmative action "critical to minorities and women in this society."

On early key Jobs - "It was his race, as Thomas has admitted, that got him two civil-rights posts in the Reagan White House; the jobs came because he opposed the civil-rights movement. So did his boss, President Ronald Reagan, whose opposition dated back to the years of Martin Luther King Jr." President Bush - who, like Reagan, had opposed the landmark 1964 Civil Rights Act - later chose Thomas to fill the Supreme Court seat of civil-rights legend Thurgood Marshall, the only other African American to sit on the highest court.
 
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