Quoted by Alex Haley, after a college campus speech, in the epilogue to The Autobiography.
The Autobiography of Malcolm X (1965)
“Affirmative action, rightly understood, would justify a wide variety of outreach programs for those whose lives have been stultified by poverty, broken families, bad schools, and neighborhoods filled with drugs, crime and gangs. One can heartily commend a program for tutoring young blacks, or young whites, who had never had a genuine teacher in a real classroom. One cannot, however, commend a program of raising the grades of young blacks, but not young whites, without having raised their skills. And what possible justification can there be there for giving scholarship assistance to the child of a black middle-class family, while denying it to a poor white? Can one imagine a more crass disregard for the genuine meaning of the Equal Protection Clause? The priests of this new religion of 'affirmative action' are not without material interests. Hundreds of millions of corporate dollars are spent annually on 'sensitivity training'. Within the universities, centers for black, brown and women's (i. e., feminist) studies are being established, with vast amount of patronage bestowed upon them. Traditional courses in Plato, Aristotle, Thomas Aquinas, Shakespeare and the Bible continue to appear in the catalogs, but they are increasingly taught by 'deconstructionists', who have no interest in the texts, but only in subjective reactions to the texts.”
1990s, The Party of Lincoln vs. The Party of Bureaucrats (1996)
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Harry V. Jaffa 171
American historian and collegiate professor 1918–2015Related quotes
“… alas, raising a young lady is a mystery even beyond an enchanter's skill.”
Source: The Castle of Llyr
Women Can't Hear What Men Don't Say (2000)
Source: House of the Sleeping Beauties and Other Stories
After the Revolution? (1970; 1990), Ch. 4 : From Principles to Problems
Brown : The Last Discovery of America (2003)
remark made in 1971, cited in Roger Lewis, Anthony Burgess (2002), p. 152
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