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Legacy admissions are affirmative action for the rich, and other lessons from the college cheating scandal | Jenice Armstrong

There has always been a tacit understanding in America that the wealthy use money and influence to get their children into elite schools that otherwise wouldn’t admit them.

Actress Lori Loughlin of "Full House" fame has turned herself into federal authorities investigating the college cheating scandal.
Actress Lori Loughlin of "Full House" fame has turned herself into federal authorities investigating the college cheating scandal.Read moreRichard Shotwell / Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP

For years, I’ve listened as people complained about black college students benefiting from affirmative action, but until Tuesday, I had never heard of any major pushback about people using wealth and influence to get white students into schools they otherwise couldn’t get into.

If folks had any reaction to this troubling practice, it was mostly a shoulder shrug, if that.

It has long been considered perfectly acceptable for rich parents to contribute to a university’s new research wing or whatever to guarantee little Johnny’s entry into a prestigious school. As a social media follower tweeted me on Tuesday, “Legacy admissions are affirmative action for the wealthy.”

And until Tuesday, when federal authorities announced that 50 people had been charged in a scheme to bribe college coaches and others so their kids could get into the nation’s most elite colleges, it had never been challenged in a big way.

America may have been largely quiet on this kind of thing but never so on the topic of affirmative action, which critics have long contended gives an unfair advantage to African Americans.

I’ve been reflecting on this as I’ve watched this admissions cheating scandal unfold. Many of the loudest critics of affirmative action ignore the historical and systematic disadvantages that black people have contended with for centuries and demand a color-blind but also level playing field. But when it comes to the issue of entitlement of the rich, there has been virtual silence, aside from occasional questions about how certain members of the Trump administration, including Jared Kushner, may have ended up at elite educational institutions.

I’m glad that this long-accepted but nefarious practice of allowing the wealthy to buy their way into certain high-status schools has been exposed for the illicit practice it is. As a nation, we should be in an uproar.

We’ve been hearing about this kind of shadiness on university campuses for years. As the saying goes, the rich get richer, and this is one way that wealth gets leveraged before young adults even make it to the workforce. Lori Loughlin, whose credits include the TV show Full House, is among the notables caught up in the scandal. The actress, who is accused of paying a $500,000 bribe to have her two daughters designated as crew team recruits at the University of Southern California, surrendered on Wednesday.

“Privileged people want to protect their privilege," pointed out Daniel Laurison, co-author of The Class Ceiling: Why It Pays to Be Privileged (Policy Press, 2019).

Ironically, when blacks enter traditionally white spaces on certain college campuses and in the workforce, they often are treated suspiciously even if they have not benefited from affirmative action.

“There are all of these folks telling these stories of, like, the white kid in high school saying, ‘You just got in because of affirmative action. You don’t really deserve it,' and the white kid at the college saying, ‘What are you doing here?'" said Laurison, who also is an assistant professor of sociology at Swarthmore College. “A big part of the story is just flat-out racism, the belief that black people are not as worthy or capable as white people and don’t deserve the same things.”

It will be interesting to see if this scandal, code-named Operation Varsity Blue, ignites the same passion.

Maybe one day, some rich kid will be confronted by a classmate questioning how he landed a spot at XYZ University.

Perhaps the wealthy will have to get used to being second-guessed the way so many black students have been for so many years. They’ll see how it feels when classmates demand to check their grades or SAT scores to see if they qualified for their spot at an elite university.

It could happen, but I won’t be surprised if it doesn’t. This is still America, and the wealthy are entitled to many breaks that the rest of us aren’t, on taxes and otherwise.