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PCG Statement on Affirmative Action
This statement is addressed to citizens who recognize the injustice in
our society toward minorities and women but doubt or deny that
affirmative action is a proper form of redress. Affirmative action,
it is said, violates a fundamental moral principle of democratic
society, which requires that laws never differentiate among people on
the basis of natural differences such as race or gender. This view,
we hold, misunderstands our shared democratic commitment. It is true
that no law may conflict with the fundamental equality of all
individuals as members of "we, the people." Thus, natural
differences can never in themselves justify differential treatment
among people. But laws may treat people differently based on natural
distinctions when doing so serves the common good, and our political
community has many laws of this kind. Affirmative action, too, has
this purpose, and we advocate effective programs of affirmative action
as essential to the common good.
At its inception in the 1960s, affirmative action meant special
efforts to solicit minority applicants. Subsequently, it came to
include favoring African-Americans and women over men and whites who,
as judged by test scores and other prevailing criteria, are better or
equally qualified. In part, the practice has developed voluntarily,
but some of its better-known forms occur by governmental mandates.
Though punctuated by public controversy from time to time, the
evolution of affirmation action proceeded with minimal dissent until
the past decade. More recently, however, major political opposition
to virtually all forms of the practice has emerged.
Many critics charge that some of these programs have allowed
widespread abuse and that most have failed to serve their stated
purpose, namely, to help correct the persisting effects of generations
of institutionalized discrimination. But this indictment is typically
coupled with a principled claim that affirmative action, whatever its
results, is inherently unjust or unfair, committing the very kind of
injustice whose consequences it is supposed to correct. Against all
forms of the practice, we are told, our public life should always be
blind to differences of religion, race, sex, or ethnic origin. To
deny this principle is always an offense to human dignity, and to
justify current violations on the grounds that the principle has been
violated in the past is a practical contradiction. However worthy the
ends sought, opponents say, reverse discrimination is no less
discrimination and, for this reason, they believe that affirmative
action should be declared unconstitutional.
We are aware that attacks on the practice are sometimes a covert
attempt to maintain established patterns of racial and gender
advantage. But we recognize that many citizens of good will also
question affirmative action because it appears to run against the
moral vision of a society that is fair to all. Even while they insist
that minorities and women are often denied equal access to the social
conditions of human flourishing, they also doubt that affirmative
action is an appropriate form of redress. Many are genuinely torn.
We seek here to address this uncertainty by clarifying the moral
grounds for affirmative action. We take for granted that the problems
affirmative action is meant to help solve are real and acute. We
further assume that some forms of the practice (involving, say,
employment decisions, governmental contract awards, or higher
education admissions) do or could help correct the legacy of
institutionalized discrimination. We also assume common commitment to
a democratic political community that guarantees to all the rights
belonging to free and equal citizens. The question, then, is whether
the very idea of affirmative action violates an overriding moral
principle of a democratic society. Only if doubt on these grounds is
overcome can be practice be defended as important to the common good.
Our address to this question is not a legal brief and thus does not
argue for an interpretation of the United States Constitution. The
issue for us is a moral one. We are concerned with the principles of
justice that a democratic political community at its best will honor
and to which finally the law itself is accountable, and we believe
that many of our fellow citizens also approach affirmative action in
this way. Democracy is government by the people, so that even its
constitution is ordained and established by "we, the people." Only
the entire community itself is the final political authority, and
decisions or activities of the state are rightly determined only
through a process of full and free debate among all the people. Thus,
the proper task of the fundamental framework is to provide the
essential conditions for this kind of political process, such as
rights to freedom of religion, speech, assembly, and the press; the
right to vote; and offices and procedures of political decision making
that maximize government by all the people. Fundamental laws ought to
provide the architecture of a political community in which all
political norms and policies, actual or proposed, are open to full and
free public assessment.
One essential pillar is agreement that all individuals are equal
members of "we, the people." All natural and historically created
differences, those not resulting from differing choices of the
individuals in question, are constitutionally irrelevant. In a full
and free discourse, the only differences that matter are differences
in the validity of claims, the force of arguments, and whether people
are willing to seek the truth. What we now call "equal protection of
the laws" (a long-standing political and moral concept, recognized in
the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution) is central
to our fundamental equality as citizens who rule together, and thus it
belongs to the architecture of a democracy. This concept means that
no law can prescribe differential treatment of individuals solely
because they exhibit some natural or historically created difference.
For instance, no law can prescribe differential burdens or benefits
solely on the basis of differences in race or gender or ethnicity.
Treating persons differently solely for some reason of this kind
implies that such differences have a fundamental moral importance, as
if they mark a difference of status within "we, the people." The
basic equality essential to government by the people is violated.
This equality is why, for some citizens, affirmative action appears to
be inherently unjust. But clarity about the principle also provides
the context for assessing that view. If "equal protection of the
laws" asserts the constitutional equality of all as members of "we,
the people," does this mean that natural or historically created
differences are never relevant to political purposes, so that
differential treatment on this basis is never permitted?
Consider what’s implied by that interpretation. It would be
unconstitutional to exempt older people from military conscription or
entitle them to special treatment, since differences in age are
natural. Similarly, all statutes that prescribe differential
advantage on the basis of physical circumstance (for instance, special
support for those who are physically challenged or who are victims of
natural disasters) would violate the constitution. Indeed, we would
need to question any law that requires differential treatment based on
differences in past performance or present abilities, since these
differences are due at least in part to talents and opportunities that
are naturally given or historically created. A law that prescribes
admission to public law schools based on past grades and
L.S.A.T. scores, or one that prescribes selection for governmental
employment on the basis of civil service examinations, would be
suspect. Though differences in ability may be due in part to people’s
efforts to develop their potentialities, how could the relevant
institutions ever decide whether or to what extent superior capacities
derive from individual initiative rather than beneficial conditions?
In truth, there are many laws that distinguish among people based on
natural and historically created differences and that no one calls
unconstitutional because the differential treatment serves some other
end. Equality within "we, the people," in other words, is not
equality with respect to all specific political purposes. To the
contrary, the first means that natural and historically created
differences can never in themselves justify differential treatment, as
if these differences alone had some fundamental moral importance.
Hence, the basic moral concept expressed in "equal protection of the
laws" can only mean that natural and historically created differences
are irrelevant unless differential treatment is justified by some
purpose assigned or permitted to the state - for instance, raising an
army, relieving the suffering of people who are victims of
circumstances beyond their control, or educating a competent legal
profession.
Democratic citizens, we are persuaded, must distinguish between
questions of principle proper to a constitution and questions of
justice in the democratic process. To be sure, all questions about
the fundamental framework are questions of justice, because a
constitution is meant to provide the architecture of a just community.
But only some questions about justice are properly constitutional.
The public school segregation declared inherently unjust by the United
States Supreme Court decision in 1954 did indeed violate a basic
democratic principle because the practice served no plausible purpose
except to assert that differences in race have in themselves moral
importance. In contrast, a law prescribing that academic record alone
shall be relevant for admission to public universities, enacted say,
because the democratic process decides that this rule for selection
serves the long-term welfare of the community, may or may not be
unjust. But it does not violate the idea of "equal protection of the
laws," even if the differential treatment it prescribes is based on
differences due in large part to naturally given talents and
historically created benefits.
In like manner, our debate about affirmative action programs cannot be
settled by appeal to the architectural principle captured in "equal
protection of the laws." These programs do not assert the fundamental
moral importance of differences in race or gender or ethnicity. To
the contrary, affirmative action serves another purpose: to help
correct the persisting effects of generations of institutionalized
discrimination. As we have noted, some argue that the practice is not
effective in pursuit of that aim. But we have here assumed that some
forms of affirmative action have consequence they seek in order to
clarify that the relevant question of moral principle is not
constitutional but, rather, concerns justice in pursuit of the common
good.
Our contemporary public life includes major disagreements about
principles of the common good. Many of our fellow citizens appear to
hold that government should minimize its interference with the actions
of individuals, who should be at liberty to make of themselves
whatever they can, given the capacities and social circumstances they
happen to inherit. Others appear to believe that justice also
requires the state to cultivate habits of personal moral
responsibility, especially with respect to family life, disciplined
work, and perhaps private charity. Together, adherents of these views
typically resist public policies designed to transform the social
patterns or institutions that emerge through voluntary interactions or
associations. Whatever arguments there may be for these beliefs,
however, they are views of the common good and cannot be defended on
the grounds that they simply restate a constitutional principle.
Appeal to the basic equality of "we, the people" is a confusion of the
issue.
We believe, moreover, that the Christian faith authorizes a very
different ideal. For Christians, the source and end of all human life
is the all-embracing love of God, which calls our politics to help
structure a community by which all are empowered and to which all
contribute. Our common life should pursue the kind of mutuality in
which all are at once both beneficiaries and benefactors. Justice,
then, is achieved by laws and policies that provide or promote general
conditions of human flourishing to which all have equal access.
Because discrimination against minorities and women has caused acute
inequalities in access to the general conditions of human flourishing,
policies that correct those consequences are imperative. For this
reason, we vigorously advocate effective programs of affirmative
action as essential to the common good.
Adopted by the Board of Directors of Protestants for the Common Good on May 14, 2003.
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