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The IRS's Bad Credit
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Subject:
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The Texas Plan as Desegregator
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From:
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Josh Pollack
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Re:
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""
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Date: Thu
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Dec 9
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I'm surprised that Bruce Gottlieb is so troubled by
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the Texas-California-Florida quasi-affirmative action collegiate admissions
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plans. If one accepts the need for a corrective (or, depending on how one views
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it, is willing to live with a mere palliative), why not design one that
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operates in direct proportion to how segregated a state's schools are?
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Of course, affirmative action has never been
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intended as a corrective (or palliative) for segregation. Yet there is surely
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some considerable connection between segregation, school quality, and student
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performance. One could argue that, absent school segregation, any kind of
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affirmative action admission plans are that much less necessary. Thus, three
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states now have automatically self-adjusting policies. Surely that's not such a
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terrible outcome.
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(To reply, click
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here .)
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Subject:
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Texas Plan About Class, Not Race
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From:
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Walter L. Williams
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Re:
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""
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Date: Fri
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Dec 10
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In reality, it takes more work and more character
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for poor student "X" to finish in the top ten percent of his or her public
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school class and obtain a mediocre SAT score than it does for rich kid "Y" to
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finish in the bottom half of his private school class and score slightly higher
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on the SAT. Unlike affirmative action, high school quotas avoid giving an
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advantage based on something other than merit in those situations where student
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"X" is white and student "Y" is a minority.
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(To reply, click
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here .)
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Subject:
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Connerly No Fan of Compromise
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From:
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John Archer
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""
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Date: Thu
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Dec 9
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It is not true that the Texas, Florida and
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California plans, which guarantee the top 10 percent of each high school
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graduating class admission to a state university, have been "heralded" by Ward
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Connerly, as reported in this article. Mr. Connerly strongly criticized Gov.
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Jeb Bush's Florida plan in a Nov. 18 Wall Street Journal op-ed
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article, "Why I'm Still Fighting Preferences in Florida." "Part of me applauds
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Mr. Bush for trying to reach a compromise on this issue," he wrote. "... But
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some things can't be compromised, and equality under the law is one of them.
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Mr. Bush's initiative falls short in several areas."
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Slate
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should
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correct this misrepresentation of Mr. Connerly's views.
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(To reply, click
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here .)
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Subject:
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Visa: The Tax-Cheat Helper
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From:
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Daniel Thomas
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""
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Date: Wed
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Dec 8
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I am not a lawyer but I can understand why Visa
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won't accept tax payments by credit card. If you fail to pay your taxes the IRS
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can seize your assets. But if a credit card company pays your taxes and then
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you don't pay the credit card company what measures can the credit card company
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take to get its money? I can't imagine that in court the debt you owe to the
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IRS is equivalent to the debt you owe your credit card company. This seems like
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a real good deal for the IRS and a horrible idea for the credit card companies.
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In effect, the IRS is using them as a collection agency.
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(To reply, click
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here .)
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Subject:
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The Measure of Subjectivity
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From:
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Tom Stevens
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""
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Date: Wed
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Nov 10
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In the "Everyday Economics" article of Nov. 8,
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Landsburg cites an October 18 th
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New York Times editorial in
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which I am quoted as an environmentalist who is skeptical about the concept of
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existence value because the "numbers might not add up in our favor." This
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statement is then used to argue that I do not value intellectual consistency. I
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would simply like to set the record straight. I was partially misquoted by the
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Times , and Landsburg's interpretation of my "statement" is not accurate.
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My concern about existence value is that it is very hard to measure and one can
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generate almost any number one wants to. So I am concerned that some groups
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will attempt to measure existence value in such a way that they do, in fact,
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come up with a number that is in their favor. This is my concern, it is
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not what I advocate. As a University Professor I make every attempt to
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be objective. I value intellectual consistency highly. I am therefore quite sad
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that the opposite impression is being conveyed. With respect to existence
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value, the real problem is that its measurement often becomes subjective.
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(To reply, click
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here .)
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[ Tom Stevens is a
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professor of resource economics at the University of Massachusetts. ]
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