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Yale Medical School Accused of Racial Discrimination in Admissions (Jonathan Turley)
Posted on 5/15/26 at 9:41 am
Posted on 5/15/26 at 9:41 am
quote:
Yesterday, we discussed how UCLA medical school has been accused of racial discrimination in admissions. Now Yale School of Medicine has also been accused of “intentionally selecting applicants based on their race” in knowing circumvention of Supreme Court precedent.
The Justice Department announced that “Yale’s documents reveal that they studied how to use racial proxies to circumvent the Supreme Court’s prohibition on using race to select students…admissions data demonstrate that Black and Hispanic students have a much higher chance of admission to Yale than White or Asian students with the same test scores.”
Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon added on X that “a black applicant is 29 times more likely to be invited to interview than an Asian with equally strong academics.”
As discussed yesterday, many of us predicted that schools would knowingly evade such rulings and regulations.
After the historic ruling in the Harvard and North Carolina cases barring the use of racial criteria in admissions, administrators and academics admitted what they had long denied: that race was having a major role in admissions.
In anticipation of the rulings, many schools, including the California system, eliminated standardized testing. Without objective scores, there is less ability to identify the use of non-scholastic criteria for admissions. By eliminating or devaluing standardized testing, admissions offices can use the more subjective essays to achieve the same race-based results.
I wrote about how administrators were already preparing to use essays as an indirect way to achieve the same identifications and preferences in admissions. The essay “prompts” encourage students to effectively self-identify by discussing incidents where they faced discrimination. The shift to the essays would allow the removal of high-scoring students while elevating those with lower scores. That prediction was quickly confirmed, as top candidates were rejected based on their essays, while schools used essays to flag their backgrounds.
Interviews can serve the same function as an alternative to formal self-identification and race-based scoring.
Faculty and administrators at UCLA and other schools remain adamant in using race-based admissions. They simply justify discrimination as equity and diversity.
These schools remain hardened silos of race-based practices and policies. The same faculty and administrators are unlikely to yield unless compelled to do so. In the meantime, they will spend copious amounts of money and time fighting for differential treatment based on race. The hope is that a new Democratic administration will not enforce these rules and allow such circumvention to continue in admissions.
jonathanturley.org
Posted on 5/15/26 at 10:11 am to L.A.
democrats are the real racist
Posted on 5/15/26 at 10:13 am to tigersmanager
Ivy League schools are 50% Asian.
In a few years that will probably increase 50%. Do we really want our universities to exist primarily to train Chinese and Indians how to run our country?
In a few years that will probably increase 50%. Do we really want our universities to exist primarily to train Chinese and Indians how to run our country?
Posted on 5/15/26 at 10:17 am to L.A.
What never gets discussed are the applicants that were cheated out of a career.
Some journalists should do a follow up on what happened to the ones that almost made the cut but didn't because of their undesired ethnicity.
Some journalists should do a follow up on what happened to the ones that almost made the cut but didn't because of their undesired ethnicity.
Posted on 5/15/26 at 10:42 am to RogerTheShrubber
quote:
Ivy League schools are 50% Asian.
In a few years that will probably increase 50%. Do we really want our universities to exist primarily to train Chinese and Indians how to run our country?
When it comes to choosing my doctors, if I have a choice of criteria then I would choose experience/history, followed by hard evidence of academic excellence. Ethnicity or race is irrelevant for that decision. I have no problem giving everyone good educational opportunities, but I do have problem acting as if everyone is equally qualified to excel at every endeavor.
This post was edited on 5/15/26 at 10:45 am
Posted on 5/15/26 at 10:46 am to chity
Another good question would be what became of the students who got accepted based primarily because they filled a diversity quota.
If anyone ever wondered what became of the guy who took the med school spot that Allan Bakke got cheated out of (Bakke v, University of California Davis School of Medicine), wonder no more.
Carolina Journal: The Man Who Replaced Allan Bakke: The Tragic Life and Death of Dr Patrick Davis
Same story from The American Thinker. It adds some details that the Carolina Journal leaves out
`
If anyone ever wondered what became of the guy who took the med school spot that Allan Bakke got cheated out of (Bakke v, University of California Davis School of Medicine), wonder no more.
Carolina Journal: The Man Who Replaced Allan Bakke: The Tragic Life and Death of Dr Patrick Davis
Same story from The American Thinker. It adds some details that the Carolina Journal leaves out
`
This post was edited on 5/15/26 at 11:09 am
Posted on 5/15/26 at 10:47 am to wdhalgren
quote:
When it comes to choosing my doctors, if I have a choice of criteria then I would choose experience/history, followed by hard evidence of academic excellence. Ethnicity or race is irrelevant for that decision.
The issue isnt limited to Medical School though. Its pervasive in most high paying majors.
Native born Americans are losing.
Posted on 5/15/26 at 10:51 am to L.A.
The only way is to continue suing them making them bleed over and over again until they realize that self inflicted wounds are easy to stop..
Posted on 5/15/26 at 11:15 am to RogerTheShrubber
quote:
The issue isnt limited to Medical School though. Its pervasive in most high paying majors. Native born Americans are losing.
Medical school is the subject of the thread, but the problems caused by discrimination aren't limited to medical school either. I also wouldn't choose my attorney, or my airplane pilot, or my accountant, or even my plumber based on race/ethnicity. High paying majors usually require high levels of intelligence and hard work to succeed. Race based discrimination is a path to failure on an individual and a systemic level.
This post was edited on 5/15/26 at 11:18 am
Posted on 5/15/26 at 11:18 am to wdhalgren
quote:
High paying majors usually require high levels of intelligence and hard work
I've heard Sheila Jackson Lee speak before so I am having doubts about that.
Posted on 5/15/26 at 11:25 am to RogerTheShrubber
quote:
Ivy League schools are 50% Asian.
In a few years that will probably increase 50%. Do we really want our universities to exist primarily to train Chinese and Indians how to run our country?
Are they American or are they international students? If the latter, your argument would be better to narrow it down to American students getting first shot as well as limiting the number of international students.
Posted on 5/15/26 at 11:27 am to Bard
quote:
Are they American or are they international students?
A combination of both.
quote:
Three decades ago, foreign students at Harvard University accounted for just 11% of the total student body. Today, they account for 26%
Posted on 5/15/26 at 12:26 pm to RogerTheShrubber
Not many black students would be in med school if not for dei. My own med school class in the early 90s had a handful and they were less than intelligent and 1 took 8 tries to make it out of the 1st yr. I hope he isn't a doctor somewhere. They were given access to tests ahead of time to focus their studying and still didnt do well.
At my current institution some are adequate and others no so much. But we feel good dont we folks.
At my current institution some are adequate and others no so much. But we feel good dont we folks.
Posted on 5/15/26 at 12:33 pm to L.A.
Some of these places with outrageous endowments are selectively cherry picking in the name of DEI and paying for their tuition and expenses, while excepting research grants plus Land and Sea Grants from the Government which explicitly forbids discrimination in the language of the Law.
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