Steele defends the thesis that
affirmative action programs should support equality of opportunity, not
quotas. Quotas require proportional representation. If, for example, a
large factory is located in an area where 30% of the population is black,
the factory owner is required to workforce that is 30% black.
Steele finds that racial quotas
do more harm than good to the black community. Racial quotas, he claims,
stigmatize further the already stigmatized. Racial preferences also raise
doubts concerning competency. Demands for competency are made in response
to these doubts, and such demands are enforced by the glass ceiling in
business and the revolving door in academia. In other words, a certain
quota of blacks may be given initial employment but later fired from the
job.
Racial preferences to achieve
proportional representation, Steele argues, reinforce discrimination. For
example, racial preferences favor middle class blacks and discriminate
against disadvantaged blacks.
Steele claims that constitutional, not racial,
rights should be enforced.
Steele’s argument may plausibly
be classified as a form of libertarianism.