Reagan Navy Secretary: 'White America' is 'Ethnic Fairy Tale'
1/24/2005 11:00:00 AM
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To: National Desk
Contact: William Perry Pendley of Mountain States Legal Foundation, 303-292-2021 ext. 30
DENVER, Jan. 24 /U.S. Newswire/ -- A highly-acclaimed historical and cultural examination of America's Scots-Irish was drawn to the attention of a Washington, D.C. court that will decide whether the U.S. Department of Defense's use of racial preferences in its purchase of goods and services is constitutional. According to a legal brief filed last week, Born Fighting: How the Scots-Irish Shaped America, by James Webb, contains new scholarship that undermines Congress' rationale, in 1977, for federal enacting race-based contracting programs, which still exist. Specifically, Webb writes, "the vast distinctions among white Americans" demonstrate that the "statistical straw man of 'white America'" used to justify racial preferences is "an imaginary facade. Indeed, white America is so variegated that it is an ethnic fairy tale." The brief was filed before the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia in DynaLantic Corp. v. U.S. Department of Defense, et al.
"We are pleased to bring to the court's attention evidence of the lie Congress told itself when it ordered federal agencies to discriminate against 'White Americans' when awarding contracts," says William Perry Pendley of Mountain States Legal Foundation, which was asked by the judge hearing the case to file a friend of the court (amicus curiae) brief. "I hope the court and Congress will conclude, not only that racial preferences are unconstitutional, but also, after reading Webb's scholarship, that they lack a factual basis."
Born Fighting argues that racial preferences are based on two false assumptions: "Anyone who was not a White Anglo-Saxon Protestant (WASP) had grounds for complaint about his or her people's collective 'struggle.' And anyone who was a WASP was by default a privileged, less-than-deserving whipping post." These assumptions were demonstrably false as early as 1974 when the University of Chicago published a groundbreaking study that, writes Webb, revealed "a greater variation within 'white America' than there was between white America and black America." Plus, "thirty years of (these programs) have not altered this reality; instead, they have exacerbated it."
Webb was a decorated Marine officer in Vietnam, served as Reagan's Navy Secretary, and is author of six novels, including Fields of Fire. DynaLantic is a New York corporation, formed in 1984, that designs and manufactures aircraft, submarine, ship, and other simulators and training devices, all of which it provides to the U.S. Department of Defense, particularly the U.S. Navy and the U.S. Army. As a "small business," its main competitors are small businesses that use racial preferences given members of various racial and ethnic minority groups on the basis of their race. With the Center for Individual Rights as its attorney, it filed its lawsuit in 1995.
Mountain States Legal Foundation is a nonprofit, public interest law firm dedicated to individual liberty, the right to own and use property, limited and ethical government, and the free enterprise system. Its 1995 U.S. Supreme Court victory in Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena all but ended government racial quotas. Its offices are in the Denver, Colorado, area.
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