I do? I think he was admitted only because he was black? Do I think that if Thomas had graduated from Georgia Tech with a 2.1 grade average and had a 130 LSAT, he would have been admitted to Yale because he was black?
I'm guessing you are not quite that delusional.
I only got where I am because I am white. You've gotten multiple benefits over the years, most of them not asked for, because you are white. Why should Thomas not receive a, by comparison, minor and occasional benefit from his blackness?
I've said all along he deserved to be there, why is it suddenly backpedaling?
Why are you still using the arguments, including the caricatures, of racists?
If all you can do to demonstrate that is create a gross caricature, out of hyperbole which even you don't actually believe, then I'm not inclined to take this seriously. Your caricature is certainly offensive, no question.
Where's your evidence for this? What's the correlation between LSAT scores and GPAs of Yale law-school graduates?
Actually, it was caused by the historical facts of his being raised speaking non-standard English, his not attending an Ivy League college, and his very-good-but-not-great grades. I would assume a white person of Thomas' background got in via a legacy, while Thomas had AA. You only think the second assumption is insulting, and only are ranting about the second assumption. Why is that?
Again, why not both?
Where?
https://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/92-351.ZO.html
The closest I can find is "a classification neither involving fundamental rights nor proceeding along suspect lines is accorded a strong presumption of validity". In what way did Kentucky's commitment laws discriminate by class?
Can you list a couple of these cases? Was the state providing non-medically-necessary abortions to the non-indigent?
My understanding is that federal funding of abortions is denied to black people. However, it is also denied to white people, so it is not discriminatory.