Here's how Fox's Chris Wallace decided to help celebrate the fifty year anniversary of the March on Washington... by asking if we still have a need for affirmative action, regardless of the record income disparity we're still dealing with in America to this day.
August 26, 2013

Here's how Fox's Chris Wallace decided to help celebrate the fifty year anniversary of the March on Washington... by asking if we still have a need for affirmative action, regardless of the record income disparity we're still dealing with in America to this day.

Media Matters has more on that here: Fox's Chris Wallace: When Will Gov't Stop "Putting A Thumb On The Scale" For African Americans?:

On Eve Of 50th Anniversary Of March On Washington, Wallace Wonders: "At What Point Do We Say, You're On Your Own?"

Fox host Chris Wallace used a discussion on the 50-year anniversary of the March on Washington to ask whether the time has come for the government to stop "putting a thumb on the scale" for African Americans with affirmative action policies. Wallace's question ignores the continuing problem of economic inequality between whites and African Americans.

The August 25 edition of Fox News Sunday discussed racial progress since the 1963 March On Washington For Jobs And Freedom. During the segment, Wallace raised the issue of affirmative action and asked Fox contributor Kirsten Powers, "50 years after the March on Washington, one of the questions is how long - well, how much longer the government should give special treatment to minorities." After Powers noted that historically unemployment among African Americans has been higher than among white Americans, Wallace asked contributor Scott Brown, "At what point have we gone as far as the country, as the government, needs to go in putting a thumb on the scale, if you will? You know, it is 50 years after Martin Luther King's speech. Obviously there were hundreds of years of discrimination. But at what point do we, in effect, say, 'you're on your own?'"

As Powers noted, the March on Washington was about civil rights, but it was also about economic inequality. Today, white families tend to earn twice as much income as do African-American families, while African Americans experience double the unemployment rate. There's also a racial gap when it comes to wealth. According to the New York Times, "Many experts consider the wealth gap to be more pernicious than the income gap, as it perpetuates from generation to generation and has a powerful effect on economic security and mobility." CNN reported that as of 2010, white Americans were worth as much as 22 times more than African-Americans:

Go read the rest for more on the what the impact of ending affirmative action would be and as they noted, it "would devastate most minority college enrollment."

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