Obama Administration Pushes Program to Force Universities to Accept More Incapable Nonwhites

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer

October 3, 2013

"Yee, nigga, nahs I bees habben dem callage decrees, ah be bouta bees up in dat bitch.  Git money, nigga, yah feels meh?" --Black Person, after having been pushed through the university system by institutionalized anti-White racism
“Yee, nigga, nahs I bees habben dem callage decrees, ah be bouta bees up in dat bitch, lyk blaw-chigga-chicca, wut nah? Git. money. nigga. yah feels meh?” –Black Person, after having been pushed through the university system by institutionalized anti-White racism

Because we are all the same and race does not exist, the Obama administration made a move last week to put further pressure on universities to put nonwhite applications in front of White applications, whenever possible.

After all, it must be Whites who gave blacks such a low IQ (even though African blacks have an even lower IQ than American blacks), so it is then our duty to put them ahead of ourselves, and give them a free pass to college, giving them degrees that they don’t deserve and dragging down our whole society by then placing them in jobs they are incapable of properly fulfilling.

So what if it will necessarily lead, eventually, to the collapse of the entirety of Western Civilization?  That’s what freedom and democracy are all about.

The LA Times reports:

In the wake of a recent Supreme Court ruling that narrowed but did not do away with affirmative action in college admissions, the Obama administration has reaffirmed its commitment to using race as a factor in college admissions to help increase campus diversity.

In a letter to college and university presidents, the departments of Education and Justice reminded educators that the Supreme Court in June ruled that race could still be used as a factor in admissions, as long as the race-based policies were necessary to achieve diversity.

In its 7-1 decision in Fisher vs. University of Texas, the court held that race could be used if “no workable race-neutral alternatives would produce the educational benefits of diversity.”

Civil rights advocates and many university officials were relieved that the high court continued to allow race to be used in considering admissions, while opponents argued that there was still enough ground for further suits to challenge such policies.

The use of affirmative action has divided Americans since the 1970s. In college admissions, supporters have used such policies to give opportunities to qualified minority students to help them overcome the effects of long-term discrimination. Opponents have contended that affirmative action is really reverse discrimination. The Obama administration has supported the use of race to help improve diversity.