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Jun 29 21 tweets 4 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
[THREAD]

1/ The most perfect (and almost unbelievable) metaphor for affirmative action: The lives of Allan Bakke (a white guy who challenged racial quotas at UC Davis) and Patrick Chavis (a black guy admitted to UC Davis under affirmative action the year Bakke was rejected).
2/ After Bakke won his SCOTUS case in 1978 (which ended the use of *overt* racial quotas in university admissions), he finally was accepted at UC Davis medical school. He graduated and eventually began practicing medicine. He kept a low profile, and didn't give interviews.
3/ Years later, the NY Times, still stinging from Bakke's victory, published a long and glowing account of a “thriving” black UC Davis medical school graduate named Patrick Chavis, noting how he had benefited from the school's old affirmative action quota system.
4/ Dr. Chavis' story was also featured on TV programs, and senator Ted Kennedy called him a “perfect example” of affirmative action. It was even suggested that Dr. Chavis had achieved more than Dr. Bakke, who graduated a few years after Chavis at UC-Davis.
5/ State Senator Tom (“Mr. Jane Fonda”) Hayden asked his fellow Californians: “Who made the most of his medical school education? From whom did California taxpayers benefit more?"

Here's Dr. Chavis. He seems nice, doesn't he?
6/ But Dr. Chavis wasn't nice — he was a terrible and spectacularly incompetent doctor, and perhaps, if this is possible, an even worse human being. If the fawning reporter for the Times had done his job and just asked around a little, he would have gotten an earful.
7/ At the very least, the reporter might have at least been bothered to go down to the court house and dig up records that showed that Dr. Chavis had been sued for malpractice twenty-one times, and had paid settlements on some of those suits.
8/ But when the NYT has a thesis as important as this one, it usually doesn't want to be hobbled by contradicting evidence or cognitive dissonance.
9/ Highlights from Dr. Chavis' storied medical career included botched operations at his clinic which killed patients and left others in permanent pain, and — this is rather striking — hiding a patient in his home for two days after she nearly bled to death at his clinic.
10/ Dr. Chavis' incompetence and disregard for human life finally caught up with him in 1997 when a patient bled to death after he performed a “fly-by-night liposuction” on her and then “disappeared.”

Patients later said they were afraid to report him because of his celebrity.
11/ With an obviously dead patient and a conspicuously missing doctor on their hands, the California Medical Board California finally acted. Later, that same year, they revoked Dr. Chavis' license.
12/ In their decision, it cited the doctor's "inability to perform some of the most basic duties required of a physician" and his "poor impulse control and insensitivity to patients' pain."

Special weight was given to that last item.
13/ A tape recording surfaced of Dr. Chavis chanting "liar, liar, pants on fire” at his patients while they screamed in agony — an extremely idiosyncratic way, to say the least, of soothing them and expressing disbelief at their claims of excruciating pain.
14/ All told, the California Medical Board brought 90 counts of misconduct and “gross negligence” — probably fair to say a bludgeoning of the Hippocratic Oath — against “the perfect example” of affirmative action.
15/ If you're finding any of this a little hard to believe, well, I can't say I blame you — it *does*strain credulity.

But wait, it actually gets weirder — PREDICTABLY weirder.

Because, you know, racism.
16/ That's right, the truly lousy doctor and even lousier human being, now-just-plain-Mr. Patrick Chavis, reached into his back pocket and pulled out the race card, blaming his bad fortune on a particularly virulent strain of structural oppression — “white envy.”
17/ That sounds interesting. Maybe something the NY Times might want to investigate?

You'd think so, but no — this time the suspiciously silent Times didn't feel it necessary to send a reporter to Cali to capture the thoughts and feelings of its former cover boy.
18/ So whatever happened to Allan Bakke? Dr. Bakke is retired, finishing his career the way he started it, quietly and with integrity — as an anaesthesiologist at the world-renowned Mayo Clinic.
Postscript: Patrick Chavis was murdered by carjackers on the streets of Hawthorne, California in 2002, at the age of fifty. He had gone out for an ice cream cone.
Bakke decision legacy: Very little changed in the UC system. It continues to quietly practice (and quietly celebrate) institutional racism against whites and (especially) Asians.

Just ask the Korean kid who got a 1530 SAT and didn't get in, and the Hispanic with a 960, who did.
An excellent article (which mentions the above example of the rejected Korean-American applicant) about the persistence of racial preferences in admissions at universities in the UC system .

manhattan.institute/article/califo…

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More from @monitoringbias

Jun 29
[THREAD]

1/ Over the more than 50 years affirmative action's morally squalid and racist practices were in place, how many white and Asian applicants were denied admission in favor of less qualified black and Hispanic applicants? I was likely one of them, and maybe you were, too.
2/ Years ago, I applied to a top law school, and was rejected.

My GPA: 0.3 points higher than average GPA of blacks admitted

My LSAT: Higher than the average at this school

Average LSAT of blacks admitted: MUCH lower than my score and the white average
3/ My undergrad degree: In a program ranked #1 in nation.

Also: I had received academic awards, had a book published by an academic imprint as an undergrad, had glowing recommendations from well-known scholars.
Read 8 tweets
Jun 20
[THREAD]

Five dangerous anti-scientific notions:

(1) Sex in humans is not a discrete and binary distribution of males and females but a spectrum

(2) All behavioral and psychological differences between human males and females are due to socialization

skepticalinquirer.org/2023/06/the-id…
(3) We should avoid studying genetic differences in behavior between individuals

(4) Race and ethnicity are social constructs, without scientific or biological meaning

(5) Indigenous “ways of knowing” are equivalent to modern science and should be respected and taught as such
"Biology faces a grave threat from progressive politics that are changing the way our work is done, delimiting areas of biology that are taboo and will not be funded by the government or published in scientific journals, stipulating what words biologists must avoid..."
Read 5 tweets
Jun 20
Conservative follows me but then can't believe that someone who isn't a conservative might have a view that's different from one of theirs. Surely, it must be because I'm "trying" to conform to some artificial notion of what I am, rather than just expressing what I truly believe.
This kind of comment — which I get a lot — baffles me. Why do people assume that someone who sometimes has views which seem conservative, and other times liberal or "moderate", is only being sincere when expressing views conforming to their own. It's a weird kind of narcissism.
Or maybe it's because they can't transcend a hard-wired partisan bias that convinces them that views existing outside their own range on the political spectrum aren't legitimate, and therefore can only be accounted for by insincerity, indoctrination, or some ulterior motive, etc.
Read 4 tweets
May 28
[THREAD]

1/ The mean IQs of various racial/ethnic groups in the US from the ABCD study (2016-2018):

Northeast Asians, 110-112
Asian Indians, 103
Filipinos, 102
Whites, 100
Middle Eastern, 96
Black African, 90
Native American, 90
US Black, 83

I'll discuss some details below. Image
2/ The study tested ten-year olds. You can see that some of the sample sizes were small. You can put less faith in the averages drawn from these samples. But the sample sizes for whites and US blacks were large, and those results can be trusted.
3/ The study draws largely from the NIH Toolbox, which is a fluid intelligence-loaded instrument. This is not a dataset of weakly g-loaded test results.
Read 7 tweets
May 27
At a 100 meters quarterfinal at the NCAA East Regionals yesterday, Cole Beck became the fastest white man in history.

Take a look at the clip and I'll talk about the significance of this, and also about something anomalous that's going on in track and field.
If you've followed me for awhile you probably already know that I'm interested in a subject that people aren't supposed to be interested in: Performance differences between population groups.

These show up most conspicuously in IQ, sprinting, and long-distance running.
When Virginia Tech's Cole Beck broke a race barrier in sports yesterday — becoming the first person of wholly European ancestry run 100 meters in under 9.9 seconds (his time was 9.87) and only the third to go below 10 seconds, it got zero coverage in the media.
Read 14 tweets
May 27
"Whiteness institutionalizes lies and dishonesty."

Every study I've seen finds a strong positive relationship between "whiteness" and honesty — whether it's citizens returning wallets, companies resisting bribes, or governments fighting corruption.

Corruption Perceptions Index: Image
Ms. Shah came all the way from one of the most corrupt and racist countries in the world to lecture white people from her perch in Canadian academia about their lies and dishonesty.
These are the most corrupt nations in the world.

The whiteness is blinding. Image
Read 4 tweets

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