EXCLUSIVE: SCOTUS ruling against affirmative action shows 'We are winning, but it's going to be a hard fight'

"We're winning. But it's going to be a hard fight. And you need everything you've got. If you want to take this country back. We're celebrating victory today."

"We're winning. But it's going to be a hard fight. And you need everything you've got. If you want to take this country back. We're celebrating victory today."

Jack Posobiec and guest Mike Davis delved into Thursday's bombshell Supreme Court ruling that overturned the decades-long practice of affirmative action in college admissions.

"This is Valley Forge time," Posobiec said. "We're winning. But it's going to be a hard fight. And you need everything you've got. If you want to take this country back. We're celebrating victory today."



The ruling, which said that colleges and universities cannot use race as a factor in deciding which qualified students should be admitted to their programs, caused President Joe Biden, his former boss Barack Obama, and so many pundits on the left lose their collective minds

But for Posobiec, Davis, and conservatives, it looks exactly like winning. Merit-based admissions, and not race-based admissions, are constitutional per the Supreme Court. 

"These elite universities cannot continue their illegal discrimination against poor, more qualified Asian applicants in favor of the elite, well-connected black applicants," Davis said. "And that has been systematic racial discrimination for too long, and the Supreme Court has finally held that this is unconstitutional under the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution. So when they consider applicants, they should look at factors like poverty instead of race."

The question then becomes what the enforcement mechanism will be, which Posobiec and Davis delved into. After the Supreme Court took up the case in December, universities began to shift their admissions criteria to allow for race-based consderations without overtly asking applicants for that information.

Some schools determined that they would ask for photos, or would ask for admissions essays about a student's experience with discrimination.

"They've been trying to hide this in the past," Posobiec said of the schools that veer toward discrimination, believing they are righteous for doing so. He asked if perhaps this will leave room for applicants to sue schools if they are not admitted despite qualifications.

Davis said that as soon as the ruling came down, Harvard sent an email saying that they would stay true to the cause of discrimination, saying "they're essentially telling, the Harvard's students, faculty, staff alumni, 'wink wink nod nod. We're gonna keep discriminating against Asian Americans, more qualified Asian Americans in favor of the elite, less qualified black applicants.'"

"And so they're gonna continue to do it. The way that you're gonna have to enforce this, unfortunately, is by playing whack-a-mole and you're gonna have to file lawsuits against the schools under the Title VII and the 14th Amendment. It's not going to be an easy slog, because as we know, these leftists are so subversive and they'll come up with every trick they can to take care of their elite friends."

As protesters gathered outside the court to declare their belief that some races should be elevated over others for opportunities, a suspicious package was discovered and the area was evacuated. 

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