California Mulls Prioritizing Descendants of Slaves for University Admissions

sirtravelalot / shutterstock.com
sirtravelalot / shutterstock.com

The California legislature has lost its collectivist mind over President-elect Donald Trump’s 2024 victory. Instead of getting a clue that Americans are sick of the Democrat Party’s anti-white racism, they’re doubling down. The California Assembly is now considering a bill to institute race-based college admissions that would prioritize the descendants of slaves in the state’s public university systems.

California voters banned affirmative action in all public schools back in 1996. Prop 209 prohibited all public schools, including state colleges and universities, from using race as a factor in school admissions. The voters approved Prop 209 by a margin of 55% to 45%.

Los Angeles Assemblymember Isaac Bryan (D) introduced a new bill on Monday that would prioritize black students who are descendants of slaves for admissions to the ten University of California campuses and the 23 California State University campuses across the state.

The idea for the racist admissions change originated with California’s Reparations Task Force which was established by Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) last year. The task force was an election-year stunt designed to trick black voters in California into thinking the Democrats would actually pay them reparations.

Assemblymember Bryan says the bill is also a direct challenge to President-elect Trump’s promise to end the anti-white racist policies of diversity, equity, and inclusion in all public schools. Black students in California are the ones who are really being punished by the Democrats’ race-based policies.

Only 50% of black students admitted to California’s universities manage to graduate because they’re not ready for college-level courses after spending 12 years in the public school system. Maybe if the schools focused more on reading, writing, and math instead of ancient racial grievances that have nothing to do with modern life in America, black students would stand a better chance of graduating in California.