Monday, December 2, 2019
Prop. 209 Essays - Social Inequality, Discrimination,
  Prop. 209         On November 5, 1996 we will have the opportunity to have our  voice heard when we go to the polls on election day. Not only  will we be able to vote on who will be the next U.S. President,  but we can also help determine the fate of issues that will help  shape the future of our state, from water to healthcare to  campaign reform to minimum wage. One of these Proposition is  number 209.     Prop. 209 will restore our historic Civil Rights Act that  proclaims simply and clearly: 3The state shall not discriminate  against, or grant preferential treatment to, any individual or  group, on the basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity or national  origin in the operation of public employment, public employment,  public education, or public contraction.?(Ballot pamphlet)     Prop. 209 will generally prohibits discrimination or  preferential treatment based on race, sex, color, ethnicity, or  national origin in public employmnet, education, and contracting.  A yes vote on this measure means the elimination of affirmative  action programs for women and minorities that the government  runs. It will save $125 million annually by elemating programs  that the state uses to inforce affirmative action. These savings  can be used for other, more constructive programs to help elimate  discrimination. Maybe other Propositions on the ballet can use  the extra funds. I think that ending affirmative action will be  the right thing to do. It ends government-sponsored  discrimination by rejecting quotas, preferences and set-asides.     My brother had a run in with affirmative action. After  attending a junior college and getting a 4.0 there he transfered  to U.C. Davis for Pre-Med school. Two years later he applied to  Davis1s Medical school and was rejected because there were to  many white students in the college. He was then told to wait an  entire year and apply again. Instead he moved back to our home  town of Bakersfield and became a farmer with my Father. He had  the grades and the chance to become a very successful docter.  Now he is a farmer, far from the E.R. room.     Not every white person is advantaged like most think. We  are all individuals. Real 3affirmative action? originally meant  no discrimination and sought to provide opportunity. The only  honest and effective way to address inequality of opportunity is  by making sure that all California peoples are provided with the  tools to compete in our society. Then let them succeed on a  fair, color-blind, race-blind, gender-blind basis. Vote  fairness...not favortism.    
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