This was a dilemma I came across while discussing affirmative action and the system of quotas forcefully imposed on India's education system by the government.
To put it in terms with which more people will be familiar here:
Imagine that tomorrow, the US government decides that races X, Y, and Z are "underprivileged", and that 50% of all admission from then on must be only for people from these races. Also that the normal admission criterion do not apply to them - if the quota of 50% is not being filled, then even people who would be ordinarily be excluded and not given admission have to be admitted.
Now imagine that there are some other races, say A, B, and C, who think that this system is very unfair, and they decide to fight it. Now it so happens that X, Y, and Z outnumber A, B, and C, so politicians consider the votes to be had from appeasing X, Y, and Z to be greater than the loss of votes from A, B, and C.
The democratic mechanism being useless here, A, B, and C decide to get organised, and decide to set up a bunch of social institutions which will advantage them, and will, in their eyes, "balance" the effects of they being discriminated against. Something like a system of scholarships accessible only to people from the races A, B, and C, so that even if they are disadvantaged in their own country, they can always go out of the country on the scholarship money and get an education equivalent to the one they missed out on. If the laws of their own country penalise or prohibit it, they will set it up to operate from outside the country.
Would such a system (like the preferential scholarships I described) be wrong in any way? Or is it more complex than simply labelling it right or wrong?
To put it in terms with which more people will be familiar here:
Imagine that tomorrow, the US government decides that races X, Y, and Z are "underprivileged", and that 50% of all admission from then on must be only for people from these races. Also that the normal admission criterion do not apply to them - if the quota of 50% is not being filled, then even people who would be ordinarily be excluded and not given admission have to be admitted.
Now imagine that there are some other races, say A, B, and C, who think that this system is very unfair, and they decide to fight it. Now it so happens that X, Y, and Z outnumber A, B, and C, so politicians consider the votes to be had from appeasing X, Y, and Z to be greater than the loss of votes from A, B, and C.
The democratic mechanism being useless here, A, B, and C decide to get organised, and decide to set up a bunch of social institutions which will advantage them, and will, in their eyes, "balance" the effects of they being discriminated against. Something like a system of scholarships accessible only to people from the races A, B, and C, so that even if they are disadvantaged in their own country, they can always go out of the country on the scholarship money and get an education equivalent to the one they missed out on. If the laws of their own country penalise or prohibit it, they will set it up to operate from outside the country.
Would such a system (like the preferential scholarships I described) be wrong in any way? Or is it more complex than simply labelling it right or wrong?
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