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- Essay Name : 899.txt
- Uploader : RICE, BERTRAM
- Email Address :
- Language : txt
- Subject : Politics
- Title : equal opportunity
- Grade : b +
- School System : university maryland
- Country : u.s.
- Author Comments :
- Teacher Comments : good examples
- Date : 961111
- Site found at : search
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- In recent years preferential hiring has become an issue
- of great interest. Preferential hiring, which was devised to
- create harmony between the different races and sexes, has divided
- the lines even more. Supporters on both sides seem fixed in
- their positions and often refuse to listen to the other groupÆs
- platform. In this essay, the recipients of preferential hiring
- will be either black or female, and the position in question will
- be a professorship on the university level. The hirings in
- question are cases that involve several candidates, all roughly
- equal in their qualifications (including experience, education,
- people skills, etc.), with the only difference being race and/or
- sex.
- What we have here is a case of predetermined preference.
- The two candidates in question are equal in all ways, except race.
- The black applicant is selected, not because of skills or
- qualifications (in that case the white man would have provided
- the same result), but for his skin color. This seems to be blatant
- discrimination, but many believe it is justified. Some feel
- retribution for years of discrimination is reason enough, but that
- issue will be discussed later. First, lets focus on why this is
- not a solution to creating an unbiased society.
- Martin Luther King Jr. had a dream: "I have a dream that
- my four little children will one day live in a nation where they
- will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content
- of their character." He desired a world without discrimination,
- without prejudice, and without stereotypes. The fundamental lesson
- years of discrimination should have taught is that to give anyone
- preference based on skin color, sex, or religious beliefs is, in
- one word, wrong. As Martin Luther King Jr. stated, judgment based
- on skin color must not exist. All preferential hiring does is
- keep judgments based on skin color alive. Race and sex should not
- be issues in todayÆs society, yet preferential hiring continues to
- make these factors issues by treating minorities as a group rather
- than as individuals. More importantly preferential hiring may
- actually fuel, rather than extinguish, feelings of racial hostility.
- Applying the concept of preferential hiring to another
- situation may help elucidate its shortcomings. A party of white
- men and a party of black men both arrive at a restaurant at the same
- time and only one table is free. The headwaiter can only seat one
- party and must make a decision. According to preferential hiring
- theory it is necessary to seat the black party first, since
- historically blacks have been discriminated against when seated
- in restaurants. In another situation, a white man and a black man
- are both equidistant from the last seat on the bus. Both men are
- the same age, have no medical problems, and are equal in all ways
- except skin color. Should the black man get the seat since in the
- past black men have been discriminated against? We could continue
- this practice for several centuries before the debt we owe for
- depriving blacks of a seat on the bus would be paid. Perhaps these
- examples are invalid. It could be said that jobs are a different
- issue. They help define social status and provide economic
- well-being. They might even boost self-confidence, something that
- discrimination has stolen.
- Two points must be considered before moving any further.
- First, blacks may learn better from a black, and women may learn
- better from a woman. Second, hiring women and blacks will provide
- role models for others. The first point Thomson quickly concedes
- as likely to be false. Discussion about the second point however
- is required, and will, in effect, serve to negate the first point
- as well.
- First, lets create a character, Bill. Bill is grossly
- overweight and unattractive. Studies have shown that many employers
- discriminate (whether subconsciously or not), against both overweight
- and unattractive individuals. Unfortunately for Bill, he fits into
- both categories. His inability to land a job reflective of his
- abilities, coupled with years of public humiliation through jokes
- made at his expense, has destroyed his self-esteem. This has caused
- him to accept as fact the notion that he will never be able to reach
- his goals. Few "Bill" success stories exist, only further plummeting
- his self-confidence.
- This example sounds strikingly similar to a common argument
- for preferential hiring. I have been discriminated against, which
- has caused my self esteem to fall, and now I am stuck, with few role
- models to follow. BillÆs success has probably been thwarted by more
- sources than the todayÆs average black or female, but there is no
- provision in preferential hiring for him. Just like no one can
- control their race or skin color, BillÆs obesity is caused by a
- medical problem beyond treatment. Selective preferential hiring
- wonÆt work. Even if one doesnÆt accept the fact that preferential
- hiring discriminates against the white male, one must accept the
- fact that preferential hiring discriminates against Bill.
- Now letÆs assume that this argumentation is invalid for one
- reason or another. LetÆs assume the lack of self-confidence and
- self-respect that todayÆs blacks and women are suffering from may
- deserve some compensation. But before continuing, it seems necessary
- to narrow the range of who qualifies for compensation for suffering.
- The issue at hand concerns todayÆs blacks and todayÆs women. TodayÆs
- society is not responsible for incidents preceding its own existence.
- Other opinions may not coincide with this belief, but I do not feel
- any responsibility for the positive or negative actions of my
- grandfather or my father. However, as a member of society I will
- take responsibility for the positive or negative actions of society
- today. For example, todayÆs society is not responsible for blacks
- or womenÆs lack of voting rights years ago. If for some reason we
- were responsible, how could this possibly be repaid? Make a black
- or female vote count two or three times? No, this is preposterous.
- We have canceled our debts, simply by giving them a right to vote
- and a say in the election of their representatives. Now that is
- not to say that todayÆs society is not responsible for the
- discrimination of blacks and women in recent years. But, even prior
- to the lifetime of those that would be most affected by preferential
- hiring: both blacks and women have had the right to vote;
- discrimination based on race, color, religion, or sex has been
- illegal; segregation has ended; and the civil rights movement has
- taken place. Clearly, we live in a different United States than
- out predecessors.
- TodayÆs blacks and women may still experience some repercussions of
- discrimination, but for decades laws have been enforced prohibiting
- discrimination. If someone discriminates against a black today,
- charges could be filed against that person and that person will be
- punished. That is the bottom line. Preferential treatment cannot
- be given to victims of all crimes. It would become chaotic trying
- pin the level of preference a victim should get for different crimes.
- For a moment let's digress to the case of Judy. Judy was
- raped. All society can offer her is the punishment of her rapist,
- if her rapist is found guilty. Sure, Judy will probably suffer for
- the rest of her life believing that it was her fault; she will lose
- self-respect and self-confidence. But is Judy going to receive
- preferential treatment when she walks into an office and applies
- for a job? There is no space on a job application for Judy to say:
- "I should receive special consideration, because several years ago I
- was raped. This rape has caused me years of anguish, and now I lack
- the self-confidence I once had. All this has cause me to underachieve
- in school and in life. Please consider this when you review my
- application." If Judy, who lost her self-confidence and self-respect
- through the violation of her rights by a member of society, is given
- no compensation for her trauma, why should blacks or women? All
- society owes the victim of a crime is that the criminal be punished
- if in fact a law was breached.
- Possibly their case is more powerful. Not all women (or men)
- are raped each year, but most blacks and women have been discriminated
- against at some point in their life. Could we possibly owe the
- victims of discrimination something?
- If, as Thomson claims, all blacks and females have, as a
- consequence of their past lack of rights, suffered a lack of
- self-confidence and self-respect, then why preferentially give them
- jobs? Jobs have no direct correlation to a lack of self-respect and
- self-confidence. Indirectly, yes, maybe many blacks and women have
- not been able to achieve their highest goals due to this lack of
- self-confidence and are therefore handicapped when they enter the job
- market. But it seems to me that if we were to solve the problem and
- provide repayment with the loosening of qualifications necessary, or
- even not the loosening but the offering of preferential treatment
- when hiring blacks and women, this does not solve the problem. It
- seems to make more sense to dig deeper; to find the root of the
- problem and change it. Since we canÆt go back and change history,
- eliminating the poor treatment blacks and women of the past, then the
- next best thing seems to be to reverse the effects of discrimination
- in the present.
- The lack of presence in the upper levels of the job market is
- not a direct effect of discrimination. It is, as Thomson states, a
- lack of self-confidence and self-respect that has kept toadyÆs blacks
- and women down. So the logical solution would be to renew their
- self-respect, and to restore their self-confidence. It seems like too
- superficial of a solution to simply give blacks and women preference
- when it comes to hiring. Certainly it would not bolster my
- self-confidence to know that I received a job over another equally
- qualified individual, simply due to my skin color or sex. I would
- feel as if again race and sex were dominating decisions. WasnÆt the
- original goal to eliminate the issue of skin color and sex from all
- decisions?
- Thomson, in her essay on preferential hiring, tells us that
- she is not happy with the solution of preferential hiring in its
- entirety: "If there were some appropriate way in which the community
- could make amends to its blacks and women, some way which did not
- require depriving anyone of anything he has a right to, then that
- would be the best course to take." There must be a better way.
- Psychological treatment would help give the victims of poor treatment
- renewed self-confidence, providing them the confidence to go out and
- try to earn a job, rather than get handed a job. The feeling of
- accomplishment that results from earning a job would help improve
- self-confidence.
- But now another issue arises. We would owe all victims of
- crime some sort of compensation. Maybe there is another way to elevate
- the status of minorities without bringing the issue of race or sex into
- the arena. If what is desired by preferential hiring is a jump-start
- to promote diversity in the workplace and in society, where race and
- sex are irrelevant, why not enact a plan where preferential hiring is
- not based on these factors? Instead, why not give preference to
- underrepresented towns or areas of town (possibly by zip code), to
- those that are financially burdened, and to those with handicaps.
- This would help relieve the pressure of race and sex in these issues.
- The underprivileged will still be given a jump-start, and diversity will
- still be promoted.
- However, this solution breaches another point that any form of
- categorization of people should not occur. The solutions presented are
- more acceptable than preferential hiring, though they still have their
- defects. Why not bury the issue of race? Discrimination is waning. It
- has become a crime to discriminate. Soon blacks and women will become
- full members of the job world. There are plenty of role model success
- stories available. There is no reason to believe that anyone, in todayÆs
- society, cannot achieve whatever they wish. Hard work and diligence will
- pay off and eventually race and sex will no longer be issues. The goal
- is to make race and sex irrelevant, and preferential hiring only keeps
- these issues alive. LetÆs try to live in a society modeled after Martin
- Luther King Jr.Æs dream, and I believe the issues of race and sex will
- disappear, leaving people to be judged solely on their character.
-
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