http://abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/story?id=3667079&page=1


'Silent' Justice Outspoken on Affirmative Action
Clarence Thomas: Job Search After Law School Left Him 'Humiliated' and
'Desperate'
By ARIANE de VOGUE
Sept. 30, 2007—


Although Clarence Thomas has written his views on preferential
policies in his Supreme Court opinions, the release of his book and
his interview with ABC News provide an opportunity for the justice to
explain, more thoroughly then ever before, why he thinks racial
preferences are wrong and detrimental.

His views have long vexed civil rights groups, but they also differ
from the traditional conservative outlook and might re-shape the
nation's debate over affirmative action. While conservatives often
talk about leveling the playing field for society as a whole, Thomas
focuses on the stigmatizing effect affirmative action has on those it
is meant to help.

Clarence Thomas's personal experience, living through segregated
elementary schools and then transitioning to mostly white schools,
gives him a starkly different perspective from that of white
conservatives opposed to affirmative action.

"When you talk about affirmative action programs you talk about the
benefits and the costs." says Roger Clegg of the Center for Equal
Opportunity, a group critical of racial preferences. "Thomas can talk
about costs with a credibility you can't have if you are not a
supposed beneficiary of affirmative action."

When Thomas applied to Yale Law School, his race was taken into
consideration. He wrote in his book, "I asked Yale to take that fact
into account when I applied, not thinking that there might be anything
wrong with doing so."

But Thomas says that after he graduated from Yale, he went on several
job interviews with "one high-priced lawyer" after another and the
attorneys treated him dismissively. "Many asked pointed questions,
unsubtly suggesting that they doubted I was as smart as my grades
indicated."

The fact that he couldn't get a job would shape his thoughts on
affirmative action programs for years to come. Thomas wrote, "Now I
knew what a law degree from Yale was worth when it bore the taint of
racial preference. I was humiliatedand desperate."

In his interview with ABC News, Thomas said he was unable, even when
he was nominated to the Supreme Court, to erase the stigmatizing
effects of racial preference. "Once it is assumed that everything you
do achieve is because of your race, there is no way out." he said.
"&it is irrebuttable and it is proved to be true. In everything now
that someone like me does, there's a backwash into your whole life is
because of race."

Peter H. Schuck, a professor at Yale Law School and a prominent critic
of affirmative action, says that the stigma associated with
preferences has long been an argument of those opposed to the
programs. But he hopes that Clarence Thomas's real life experience
"will help to broaden the debate". Says Schuck, "The fact that he is
who he is gives the argument a special force."

But opponents of Thomas's position argue there is no real stigma. Levi
Pearson, the Communications Director for the National Black Law
Students Association, contends "There are no special conditions once
you get into law school. You are competing at the same level." Pearson
says, "Affirmative Action creates doors to be opened. At some point
you have to have special access to be able to get in the door."

Besides the stigmatizing aspect that Thomas sees in affirmative action
programs, he also worries about young children being thrust into
programs and situations for which they are unprepared. Says Thomas,
"So we'll expend huge amounts of energy over affirmative action, but
very little over what's really happening in the classroom for the bulk
of these kids." Thomas maintains children "don't need all these
theories" and says "they need people to actually help them."

In the past, Thomas has gone after those who say that programs that
are predominantly black might somehow be inferior.

In a recent Supreme Court opinion striking down voluntary public
school district plans to assign children to schools based on race,
Thomas writes that scholars have "differing opinions as to whether
educational benefits arise from racial balancing."

As evidence, he cited a study done by George Mason University
professor David J. Armor. Armor, who opposed the school district plans
for race-based placement in the Supreme Court argument, says "actual
achievement data, when corrected for the rate of poverty at the
individual level, show that black students in majority black schools
perform about the same as in integrated schools."

In a 1995 case regarding judicial desegregation remedies, Thomas
wrote, "It never ceases to amaze me that the courts are so willing to
assume that anything that is predominantly black must be inferior."

After detailing his painful struggles in life, Thomas wrote he doesn't
want other children to have to suffer like he did. "You don't know
what you're putting on these kids," he wrote. "You don't know how it
is to have no money and no shoes or old boots and things like that.
You don't know how it is not to be able to afford to go home when
other kids are on spring break."

Dennis D. Parker, Director of the American Civil Liberties Union's
Racial Justice Program, scoffs at the fact that Thomas, who benefited
from affirmative action, "now appears to be closing the door for
others to follow." Parker contends, "Affirmative action recognizes
there are a lot of societal forces that act as a barrier to
opportunity." He adds, "I do not buy the argument that people are
being pushed into situations that they can't handle. Past history has
shown affirmative action has been successful in terms of assisting the
creation of a minority middle class."

Parker says that some critics are particularly hard on Clarence Thomas
because, not only is he the only African American on the court but he
took the seat of Thurgood Marshall, a civil rights pioneer who
dedicated his life to the cause of equality. Parker says, "There is a
sense there has been a loss."

But Thomas says he was able to sit down for "quite some time" with
Justice Marshall before his death. Thomas says Marshall's "attitude
was that it was up to me to do in my time what I have to do as he did
in his time what he had to do."


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