Most of the black people who disregard DEI/affirmative action probably never even went to college.

Yagirlcheatinonus

Icon Poster
Joined
May 26, 2012
Messages
12,000
Reputation
-64
Daps
19,879
Reppin
NULL
If it’s not a trade school:camby:
:mjlol: Liberal Arts Degree

Unless you’re studying engineering, nursing, lawyer, or some sort of public occupation college is pointless minus the social and networking opportunities.
 

BaggerofTea

dapcity.com
Supporter
Joined
Sep 15, 2014
Messages
53,418
Reputation
-879
Daps
262,005
Where did I say DEI is useless? I didn't say that. I don't think it's the end of the world for black people like y'all make it to be.

every L stacks up in the long term.

20 years from now why your child is so limited in their educational/career opportunities due to initiatives like this.

these are scholarships and job opportunities that are given out due to DEI.


had a relative have their entire post bach education paid for due to a minority womans scholarship initiative.

They have these for black men as well
 

Jasonmask

Superstar
Joined
Oct 30, 2017
Messages
10,021
Reputation
3,300
Daps
27,305
I know you was being serious but the delivery was like a comedy bit man be a comedian
 

Blessings

Superstar
Supporter
Joined
Feb 25, 2013
Messages
18,865
Reputation
3,298
Daps
53,393
Reppin
NULL
Not all. The amount of white people oblivous to shyt would shock you, because they don't even have to think about shyt like that. The amount of clueless white girls or just get it from your parent's Chad's is fukking wild in the corporate world.

It's definitely a conversation amongst other minorities, but many of them go so hard to fit in, they compromise themselves for it. I'm thinking of a few I've personally known and befriended to an extent.

I've mentioned it on here before, but I've legit had an Asian cat tell me he was "white" before. It was tongue-in-cheek, but not really. He was specifically referring to how he presented himself socially. I know another Indian ireh, who goes out of his way to mimic white peers when they do certain things socially. This is not to say there's an acting "white" or "black" or "purple", but rather it's a mimicking of the dominant culture just to get ahead, which to me is some sucker shyt.

No one respects them. They make decent salaries and get regular promotions because they're in the right circles, but they will never run the show because people see through them.



The privilege to be oblivious early on in their careers - absolutely
Or in non-tech companies and departments

However, in tech companies, especially within tech roles they don't want the entire engineering or IT department majority Indian or Chinese

Which can easily happen once an Indian or Chinese person holds a leadership position.
 

Vandelay

Life is absurd. Lean into it.
Joined
Apr 14, 2013
Messages
27,021
Reputation
8,023
Daps
99,036
Reppin
Phi Chi Connection
The privilege to be oblivious early on in their careers - absolutely
Or in non-tech companies and departments

However, in tech companies, especially within tech roles they don't want the entire engineering or IT department majority Indian or Chinese

Which can easily happen once an Indian or Chinese person holds a leadership position.
I've never worked in tech, but I hung around a gang of computer nerds in my teens and recognize the archetype. I know tech is completely different than most industries because it usually attracts a very specific type of individual.

However, Sundar Pichai and Satya Nadella seemingly haven't rocked the boat.
 

RickyDiBiase

aka Hash Brown Hands
Bushed
Joined
May 25, 2022
Messages
19,164
Reputation
3,246
Daps
79,726
Reppin
Cbus
If it’s not a trade school:camby:
:mjlol: Liberal Arts Degree

Unless you’re studying engineering, nursing, lawyer, or some sort of public occupation college is pointless minus the social and networking opportunities.

So fukk teachers and non engineering scientist huh

fukking moron
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

The Original
WOAT
Supporter
Joined
Dec 9, 2012
Messages
337,288
Reputation
-34,891
Daps
640,819
Reppin
The Deep State



Black enrollment is waning at many elite colleges after affirmative action ban, AP analysis finds
Christopher Quire poses for a portrait Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025, in Princeton, N.J. (AP Photo/Hannah Beier)
WASHINGTON (AP) — After decades of gradual growth, the number of Black students enrolling at many elite colleges has dropped in the two years since the Supreme Court banned affirmative action in admissions, leaving some campuses with Black populations as small as 2% of their freshman class, according to an Associated Press analysis.

New enrollment figures from 20 selective colleges provide mounting evidence of a backslide in Black enrollment. On almost all of the campuses, Black students account for a smaller share of new students this fall than in 2023. At Princeton and some others, the number of new Black students has fallen by nearly half in that span.

Princeton sophomore Christopher Quire said he was stunned when a recent welcome event for Black freshmen filled just half the room. Last year, it filled up so quickly that they needed to find extra chairs.

Christopher Quire poses for a portrait Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025, in Princeton, N.J. (AP Photo/Hannah Beier)
Christopher Quire poses for a portrait Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025, in Princeton, N.J. (AP Photo/Hannah Beier)
“If this trend continues, in three years this campus will be as Black as it was in the Civil Rights era,” said Quire, a member of the campus’ Black Student Union. “It feels like tying our feet together and telling us to restart.”

Some colleges downplayed trends spanning just two years, yet it raises questions about who should get a spot at elite campuses that open doors to the upper echelons of American life. It also emerges as the Trump administration unleashes a new campaign to police colleges it believes have quietly factored race into admissions decisions in defiance of the 2023 high court ruling.

Under scrutiny, colleges have been slower to release data

The AP analysis offers a view into 20 campuses that have released enrollment figures this fall. The national picture remains unclear as more colleges delay the release of their figures amid federal scrutiny. The AP requested data from dozens of the nation’s most selective colleges, but many that had released figures by this time last year declined to share them.

Many campuses have also seen decreases in Hispanic enrollment, though they have been more scattered and less pronounced. Trends among white and Asian American students were mixed.

Yet the erosion of Black enrollment has been clear.

Among the 20 campuses, just one — Smith College — had a larger percentage of Black students in this year’s freshman class than in 2023. Tulane University’s numbers stayed flat. The others saw sizable dips over two years, driving down Black enrollments that were often only 7% or 8% of the student body. By contrast, Black students account for about 14% of America’s high school graduates.

At the California Institute of Technology and Bates College, students who identified as Black accounted for only about 2% of freshmen this year.

At Harvard University, new figures released Thursday show a second straight year of waning Black enrollment, going from 18% of freshmen in 2023 to 11.5% this fall. Latino enrollment is also down at the Ivy League campus, while Asian American figures ticked up.

This year’s admissions decisions at Swarthmore College were made the same way they were last year, but fewer Black students applied and ultimately enrolled, said Alisa Giardinelli, a college spokesperson. She said the decrease “reflects the new legal landscape, one in which we expected to see these numbers fluctuate.”

Christopher Quire poses for a portrait Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025, in Princeton, N.J. (AP Photo/Hannah Beier)
Christopher Quire poses for a portrait Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025, in Princeton, N.J. (AP Photo/Hannah Beier)
Students notice dramatic changes

Princeton University appeared to weather the turmoil last year when its racial makeup remained about level. But this fall, the number of Black students fell to 5% of the new class, down from 9% last year. The last time Black students represented such a small share of new students was 1968, according to The Daily Princetonian, a student newspaper.

Princeton spokesperson Jennifer Morrill said it’s the result of natural fluctuations in the application pool, adding that Princeton has “scrupulously adhered” to the court’s requirements.

Some students say it can’t be ignored. Quire, the sophomore, said it threatens decades of progress at a campus that has become a stepping stone for social mobility.

“We’re very confused as to what changed and whether we should be expecting this to be a fluke,” Quire said.

Trump ramps up oversight of college admissions

Other factors could be contributing to the swings, said James Murphy, a director at the Education Reform Now think tank who is tracking fallout from the affirmative action ruling. The Biden administration’s troubled rollout of a new federal financial aid form could have played a role, he said, and some colleges may be backing away from diversity initiatives the Trump administration has sought to eliminate.

“Not too many institutions of higher education have stepped up and pushed back against the White House,” Murphy said. “I do expect that there will be increased pressure to come up with the numbers that the Trump administration wants.”

President Donald Trump escalated his scrutiny of college admissions in August, ordering schools to divulge vast troves of admissions data each year. It’s aimed at catching colleges that he accuses of using “racial proxies” to sway admissions decisions, including diversity statements that invite students to discuss their backgrounds.

Conservative organizations have also kept close watch. Last year, Students for Fair Admissions threatened to sue Princeton, Yale and Duke universities when their Asian American enrollments fell after the ruling — an outcome the organization said was “not possible under true race neutrality.” The group argued Black, Latino and white students were being admitted to elite colleges over more qualified Asian American students.

Kennedy Beal poses for a portrait Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025, in Princeton, N.J. (AP Photo/Hannah Beier)
Kennedy Beal poses for a portrait Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025, in Princeton, N.J. (AP Photo/Hannah Beier)
Some still see ways to build campus diversity

On average, the decreases don’t appear to be as steep as some college leaders predicted, said Richard Kahlenberg, a researcher at the Progressive Policy Institute. And he believes colleges can still do more to promote racial diversity, such as giving greater preference to students from lower-income families and eliminating legacy preferences that tend to benefit wealthy, white students.

“I wouldn’t want people to draw from the data a conclusion that the situation is hopeless,” he said.

Earlier this month, Princeton junior Kennedy Beal was walking across campus with her older brother, who was visiting, when he asked a question she couldn’t answer: “Where are all the Black men?” They had been wandering around campus for more than two hours and saw none.

Beal said it sends the message that Black students don’t belong there. With few Black students on campus to begin with, it feels like her sense of community is being stripped away, she said.

“It feels like we’re being set back in time a little bit, and it’s heartbreaking to see. But at the same time, I still have faith that we will persevere,” Beal said. “We will continue to demonstrate our excellence in these institutions.”

___

Associated Press writer Todd Feathers in New York contributed to this report.


Screenshot-2025-10-24-at-12-53-04.png


Screenshot-2025-10-24-at-12-53-33.png
 
Top