To above: But what good is liberty without the material and social resources one needs in order to *exercise* that liberty? I've always understood school diversity policies as aimed at making people more free by giving them a better education, which they can use to do better things than they otherwise might not have done. I don't think that equality and liberty are mutually exclusive.
Re: “Gerald Grant on Wake's school success”
To above: But what good is liberty without the material and social resources one needs in order to *exercise* that liberty? I've always understood school diversity policies as aimed at making people more free by giving them a better education, which they can use to do better things than they otherwise might not have done. I don't think that equality and liberty are mutually exclusive.