From Kendall and Sheila Qualls <[email protected]>
Subject Does lowering standards help close the black achievement gap?
Date January 15, 2024 1:00 PM
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TakeCharge Ambassadors share the truth about the black achievement gap

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Dear ,

As we recognize the Martin Luther King Jr. (MLK) holiday, it is ironically a day honoring values despised by many on the left. King’s intellectual and moral challenge of judging people by the content of their character, not by the color of their skin, is in direct opposition to leftists’ narrative that judging people’s value begins with their skin color. If leftists have their way, they might decide to change the name of Dr. King’s holiday to Oppressed People’s Day. Some will think I’m guilty of hyperbole. Many will not.

For equity’s sake, both the American Bar Association and the American Medical Associations have released statements that support DEI or adjusting standards to pass their exams.

Proud black Americans have been passing and exceeding the bar exam and medical school standards since the 1800s, even in the face of egregious, overt, and legal forms of racism. They would be rightly appalled at the notion currently peddled by leftists that standards need to be lowered in the name of equity.

Although blacks have been passing these exams for two centuries, leftists believe adjustments in bar exam standards and medical school scoring methods are necessary to combat disparities between the races in the criminal justice system, healthcare, and academic testing methodologies.
Currently, the states of California and Delaware have lowered the points required to pass their bar exams. In the name of equity, other states are considering following suit. In addition, many medical schools have changed their internal rank order of exams to a pass or fail model. They claim the changes are necessary because of chronic racial disparities in outcomes and institutional racism.

Sadly, these disparities do not start in law school and medical school.

TakeCharge is a grassroots organization of predominately black Americans from broken families and/or difficult upbringing that embraced Dr. King’s vision. Despite our troubled backgrounds, we have achieved a level of success in America and reject the victimhood mindset of DEI and CRT. We represent a sizable percentage of black Americans who are censored by the corporate media and marginalized because of our views and faith. We are insulted by the notion that standards need to be lowered because of “disparities.”

The racial disparities among black Americans are real but the real drivers of those disparities have been ignored by black leaders for decades because of their lust for political power, desire for personal wealth, and fear of being held accountable.

Full article by Kendall Qualls, published in the Federalist.
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Watch ([link removed]) TakeCharge Ambassadors share the truth about these disparities below. ⬇️

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