Anonymous ID: 8d36b9 Aug. 30, 2018, 8:44 p.m. No.2811711   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1723

Correcting Correct The Record’s Record

Does no one notice how much this looks like a chan op?

 

Anonymous online attacks, from both sides of the political spectrum, have sought to spread lies and misleading narratives about Secretary Hillary Clinton. Hillary’s supporters are more enthusiastic than Sen. Bernie Sanders’ supporters, yet oftentimes are discouraged from engaging online and are “often afraid to voice their thoughts” because of the fear of online harassment. Many of Hillary Clinton’s female supporters in particular have been subject to intense cyber-bullying and sexist attacks from swarms of anonymous attackers.

 

Peter Coffin

satirist/weirdo - youtube.com/petercoffin

Apr 22, 2016

Anonymous ID: 8d36b9 Aug. 30, 2018, 8:58 p.m. No.2811936   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Asian-Americans Suing Harvard Over Admissions Policies Win DOJ Support

 

 

BOSTON—The U.S. Justice Department has added its support to a lawsuit that accuses Harvard University of discriminating against Asian-American applicants, saying the Ivy League school’s race-based admissions process disadvantaged them.

 

The department (DOJ), which has been investigating Harvard for potential civil-rights violations, made its argument on Aug. 30 in documents filed in federal court in Boston, where a trial in the case is due to begin in October.

 

The DOJ argued that Harvard had failed to establish that its use of race as a factor in deciding which students to admit hadn’t resulted in it illegally discriminating against Asian-Americans. Instead, the department said the evidence in the lawsuit by Students for Fair Admissions (SFFA) showed Harvard’s admissions process “significantly disadvantages” Asian-Americans compared with other groups.

 

“No American should be denied admission to school because of their race,” U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in a statement.

 

Harvard, which didn’t respond to requests for comment, has defended its admissions practices as consistent with the law and necessary to promote student diversity.

 

Supporters of Harvard, including the American Civil Liberties Union, assailed the Trump administration’s decision to intervene in the case, with some calling the DOJ’s position an assault on efforts to promote campus diversity.

 

The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that universities may use affirmative action to help minority applicants get into college. Conservatives have said such programs can hurt white people and Asian-Americans.

 

In 2016, the top court rejected a challenge that was brought by a white woman to a University of Texas program designed to boost the enrollment of minority students. SFFA is headed by prominent anti-affirmative action activist Edward Blum, who found the woman who brought the UT suit.

 

Harvard has called SFFA a “litigation vehicle designed to advance the ideological objectives of its founder.”

 

After Republican President Donald Trump took office last year, the DOJ began reviewing whether Harvard’s policies are discriminatory because they limit Asian-Americans’ acceptance.

 

In court papers, SFFA claimed an Asian-American male applicant with a 25 percent chance of admission would have a 35 percent chance if he were white, 75 percent if he were Hispanic and a 95 percent chance if he were black.

 

SFFA said in 2013, a Harvard research division found that over the span of a decade, Asian-American admission rates were lower than those for whites annually, even though whites only outperformed Asian-American applicants on a subjective personality rating.