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Alternately, it rewards those who made the school great in the first place -- by admitting their children.

Note that it's not strictly zero sum either. Huge grants by previous may have opened the university to more people than are admitted by legacy admissions -- yielding greater participation by non-legacy than previously possible.

People are choosing one small slice of what goes on with a university -- admissions right now. They are glossing over the fact that it is other people who made the university great over the years to the point that it is desirable at all. Those people made it great by donating money and going on to bring prestige to the university. Ignore them and lose the prestige and money.



==They are glossing over the fact that it is other people who made the university great over the years to the point that it is desirable at all. Those people made it great by donating money and going on to bring prestige to the university. Ignore them and lose the prestige and money.==

Nobody is glossing over that fact. I am simply saying that if anything outside of a student's merit is "discrimination", then taking into account the alumni status or past contributions of [not that student] is also "discrimination".

They are not the student's merits to weigh, they are the relative's merits.


Ok, but "discrimination" is a loaded word and definitely not neutral. It has implications. It implies a right to admission that ignores the desires of those who built the school to what it is now (which would be that their heirs get to attend as well).

Not all selection criteria is "discrimination". Alternately, if it is, then there is nothing inherently wrong with discrimination.

Again, these are private schools that everyone is talking about. The use of legacy admissions in a state school would be completely wrong.


I think we are agreeing. I was trying to highlight that by calling everything that involves subjectivity “discrimination”, we diminish the word.

Very much agree on these being private schools and playing by a different set of rules.




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