Thursday, November 30, 2006
Paragraph of the Day
Thank you, Daily Cal:
"Prop 209 is like the canary in the mineshaft," said William Kidder, senior policy analyst at the UC Davis Office of the Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs. "The rate of access for African Americans, American Indians and Latinos at UC is exasperated by Prop 209 but is part of a systematic non-inclusiveness." Well, let's start from the tail end here. Rates of access do not generally feel emotions and such, but this rate apparently is "exasperated." I wonder A) if the problem is the thing that's being exasperated, and B) if so, how else do problems feel? Would a problem that is easily solved feel useless? Lack self-worth? Perhaps satisfied, knowing that it had done its role?
(Notice: I'm putting the blame on the Daily Cal here, either for a transcriptional error or a failure to ask the dude "what the fuck did you just say?")
But let's back up to the first part of this. "The canary in the mineshaft"? I'm no miner, but my understanding of such things is that miners would carry canaries with them when exploring tunnels or some such, and when the canary falls over dead, that means they've hit some poisonous gas and should get the hell out of there. (Anyone with mining experience can clarify this)
So, with this is mind... how is Prop 209 the canary in the mineshaft?
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