Fact: Affirmative Action is fair!
Affirmative Action levels the playing field so people of color and all
women have the chance to compete in education and in business. White men
hold 95% to 97% of the high-level corporate jobs. And that's with affirmative
action programs in place. Imagine how low figures would be without affirmative
action. Of 3000 federal court decisions in discrimination cases between
1990 and 1994, only 100 involved claims of reverse discrimination; only
6 of those claims were found to be valid.
Myth: Affirmative Action isn't necessary anymore because discrimination
is illegal.
Fact: Women and people of color still face discrimination.
Despite the enormous gains made by the civil rights and women's rights
movements, women and people of color still face unfair obstacles in business
and education. An astonishing 70% of schools are not in compliance
with Title IX, the federal equal education opportunity law. For every dollar
earned by men, women on a whole earn 74 cents, African American women earn
63 cents and Latina women earn 57 cents. According to the Census Bureau,
only 25% of all doctors and lawyers are women. Less than 1% of auto mechanics
are women. And women are only 8.4% of engineers.
Myth: Women-owned companies get fewer contracts because there aren't
very many of them.
Fact: Women-owned businesses don't get their fair share of government
contracts.
Less than 3% of federal contracts go to women-owned firms. In Washington,
less than 10% of state contracts and purchasing dollars go to women-owned
firms even though women own 39% of firms.
Myth: Affirmative Action should be based on economic need.
Fact: Affirmative Action is necessary so that women and people of
color of every economic class have the opportunity to enter all fields.
Women and people of color should, of course, have the chance to compete
for jobs in the trades, construction, skilled labor and they should
have access to professional jobs in engineering, medicine and the law as
well as policy-making positions in executive suites and on boards of directors.
Myth: Affirmative Action lowers standards in education and the workplace
by letting unqualified people get ahead.
Fact: Affirmative Action helps qualified candidates overcome racism
and sexism.
Affirmative Action is an investment in the future. By the time today's
college students are at the height of their careers, one-third of the population
will be comprised of African Americans and Latinos/Latinas.
Myth: My son can't get into a good school because of affirmative
action.
Fact: If half of the people of color who are admitted to schools
under affirmative action programs were cut, the acceptance rates of white
men would only increase by 2%.
Women still face barriers in schools. In Washington, women receive only
12% of doctorates in engineering, and women are substantially under-represented
in computer science nationwide.
Myth: Nobody else gets special consideration when applying to a college
or for a job. Why should all women and people of color?
Fact: Lots of people get "special" consideration when applying for
jobs or to schools.
Veterans often get preferences in workplaces and on campuses which
usually benefit men more than women. The children of alumni get preferential
treatment over others in admission to college. Friends help friends and
acquaintances get jobs. Affirmative Action helps open doors for women and
people of color who often don't have those connections.
Myth: Affirmative Action won't help me.
Fact: Everyone benefits when discrimination is eliminated.
The majority of families depend on the income of women. When Affirmative
Action opens up education, employment, and business, families and communities
have greater economic security. Business leaders understand that affirmative
action is necessary to develop a strong workforce. Women and people of
color have a lot to offer their communities. Affirmative Action helps insure
that everyone gets the chance to contribute.
Myth: Affirmative Action = Preferences
Fact: Affirmative Action = Equal Opportunities
Affirmative Action programs merely acknowledge that hundreds of years
of discrimination cannot be erased in a few decades and still hold women
and people of color back. Affirmative Action is the bridge between changing
the laws and changing the culture.
Myth: Things are different now, we don't need affirmative action
any more.
Fact: Until women and people of color get equal pay and education,
we need affirmative action.
The radical right wing would have us believe that women and people of
color earn less because we don't work as hard or we're not as smart. That
simply isn't the case. Laws have changed, but discrimination persists.
Affirmative Action only opens doors, women and people of color have to
walk through those doors by themselves.
Sources:
The Shape of the River, Bok, Derek and Bowen, William
G., September, 1998
The Federal Glass Ceiling Commission Report, December,
1995
The Census Bureau, Statistical Abstract of the United
States, 1996
The U.S. Department of Labor, Women's Bureau, September,
1996
The Department of Transportation, 1995
The National Council of Women's Organizations, "Women
Speak on Affirmative Action," 1998
Myth: Affirmative Action is "reverse discrimination" let's stop
giving special rights to certain groups while others are left out.
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