威斯康星州最高法院裁定基于种族的奖学金违宪
Wisconsin Supreme Court Strikes Down Race-Based Scholarships As Unconstitutional

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/wisconsin-supreme-court-strikes-down-race-based-scholarships-unconstitutional

威斯康星州最高法院近日裁定,该州的“少数族裔本科生留校补助金计划”违宪,理由是基于种族发放纳税人资助的奖学金违反了《平等保护条款》。法院援引美国最高法院在“学生公平录取组织诉哈佛大学案”中的先例,重申宪法要求根据个人经历而非种族来对待个人。 虽然多数派裁决执行了“色盲”标准,但两位自由派大法官——首席大法官吉尔·卡罗夫斯基(Jill Karofsky)和大法官苏珊·克劳福德(Susan Crawford)——发表了一份对该裁决表示遗憾的协同意见书。她们认为,基于种族的计划对于解决历史边缘化和系统性不平等问题是必要的。 作家乔纳森·特利(Jonathan Turley)认为,这份协同意见书预示了如果民主党成功“重组”最高法院,将会占据主导地位的司法哲学。他警告称,这种扩张意在推翻包括禁止基于种族的歧视在内的各项宪法里程碑式裁决。特利总结道,重塑法院的推动力使得即将到来的选举成为美国司法完整性未来的关键公投,并暗示改变法院组成的举措旨在绕过宪法对民主党议程的限制。

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原文

Authored by Jonathan Turley,

The Wisconsin Supreme Court struck down a state-funded scholarship program that awarded financial aid based on the race of college students. The Democrat-controlled court followed the precedent laid out by the United States Supreme Court in finding that Gov. Tony Evers and the state were violating the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution.

Two of the most liberal justices, however, wrote a concurrence denouncing the bar on the use of race for such scholarships.

If Democrats are able to pack the Supreme Court as demanded by many party leaders, this concurrence is an example of the likely changes that a packed court will bring in reversing anti-discrimination and other rulings.

The Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty represented the taxpayers in this successful challenge of the Wisconsin Minority Undergraduate Retention Grant Program.

That program administered taxpayer-funded grants of up to $2,500 per academic year to eligible students of Black American, American Indian, Hispanic, or certain Southeast Asian backgrounds.

The state paid out roughly half a million dollars in scholarships, now found to be racially discriminatory.

Citing the 2023 U.S. Supreme Court decision Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, the Court reaffirmed that “The Constitution requires that every person ‘must be treated based on his or her experiences as an individual — not on the basis of race.’”

While many have heralded the new bright line against racial discrimination in higher education, two of the most liberal justices, Chief Justice Jill Karofsky and Susan Crawford, lamented the loss of racially discriminatory programs.

In her concurrence, Chief Justice Karofsky captured the sweeping, open-ended rationales used for such programs:

“Why have we not learned from our past? Why are we not willing to recognize the harms this country has caused to those who are marginalized, disempowered, or disenfranchised? Why, instead of wielding the Equal Protection Clause as a sword against racism, do we employ it to shield against the promise of equality for all? The answer appears to be because we have failed to fully recognize how societal and governmental practices have long continued to enforce a preference for White Americans and to burden Black Americans and those of other disadvantaged races or backgrounds.”

These justices would continue race-based programs indefinitely under the claim that there is a “preference for White Americans” in programs that focus purely on academic achievement or specific non-racial criteria.

The two justices quote from the dissent of Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson that requiring race-neutral rules is just more “let-them-eat-cake obliviousness” by a white privileged society.

She added, “I fully recognize and acknowledge that I am bound by the precedent set forth in SFFA and other cases decided by the U.S. Supreme Court…However, I also choose to write separately. I do so because I find it impossible to ignore the truths that Justice Jackson identifies.”

Notably, those “truths” from the Jackson dissent have been challenged as containing glaring false claims.

I have previously discussed my disagreements with Jackson and her jurisprudence, including her dissent in the SFFA case. However, this concurrence vividly shows the jurists whom the Democrats could call upon to pack the Supreme Court to reverse decisions like the one in SFFA.

With various Democratic leaders now openly pledging to pack the Court to reverse such decisions, the 2028 election is becoming a referendum on the future of an institution that has proven key to maintaining this Republic for 250 years.

Democratic politicians and pundits have made clear that they need the immediate control of the Supreme Court to carry out an agenda that would be struck down as unconstitutional. That includes reversing core constitutional rulings. The Karofsky concurrence offers a glimpse into our future if we allow the Court to be the object of a political hostile takeover.

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