Many meaningful subjects have been introduced to the world in the form of court cases that challenges the issues at hand. Without the challenges and compromise that took place we would not be educated on the inter workings of our society. Affirmative action is the nation's most ambitious attempt to redress its long history of racial and sexual discrimination. But these days it seems to incite, rather than ease, the nation's internal divisions. An increasingly assertive opposition movement argues that the battle to guarantee equal rights for all citizens has been fought and won and that favoring members of one group over another simply goes against the American grain. But defenders of affirmative action say that the playing field is not level yet and that granting modest advantages to minorities and women is more than fair, given hundreds of years of discrimination that benefited whites and men. Without a doubt in my mind their has been more than a few cases where it may have overstepped its boundary and taken on a different form. But with the ever-present changes in our society, it has been proven to still be a valuable source for helping those who are stuck for no other reason than lack of a strong family background. There are still many ambitious individuals capable of succeeding only if they had a chance to grow.
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Discussion.
If we examine the findings of an article written in opposition to continuing the affirmative action we can get somewhat of a understanding of why anyone would deny others there right to progress. On opposition to the issue, a writer from the Washington post said this. " The Supreme Court's famous 1978 Bakke opinion, on affirmative action, never made any sense. The justices announced on Monday that they would rethink it. Bakke held that the Constitution forbids public universities and other government agencies to use rigid racial quotas but does not forbid the use of race as a "factor- among others.