<p>"What in the world are you saying? Why would I want to prove that AA is not happening?"</p>
<p>Your quote was:</p>
<p>"what matters at me is that people are admitted because of their talents and not the color of their skin."</p>
<p>And I said: </p>
<p>"Yet you have no way to prove that this already isn't happening, now do you?"</p>
<p>You've since clarified your point, so this is all moot. </p>
<p>"One employee is not speaking the voice of an entire school."</p>
<p>-No, but an admissions official is, for the purpose of admissions, a representative of the school. Thus, this would still be the <em>school</em> saying that such a practice happens.</p>
<p>"Princeton has joined with seven other leading private colleges and universities in asking the U.S. Supreme Court to uphold affirmative action policies ... In addition to Princeton, the signatories on the amicus curiae ("friend of the court") brief were Harvard University, which prepared the brief, and Brown University, the University of Chicago, Dartmouth College, Duke University, the University of Pennsylvania and Yale University."</p>
<p>-What exactly is all this? These schools like AA..... ok...?</p>
<p>"I'm opposed to any school that considers race in admissions."</p>
<p>-Well then, to which criteria SHOULD schools limit themselves when considering admitting students?</p>