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Before Affirmative Action, black Americans were closing education gaps, increasing incomes, and joining the middle class at record speed. But since the introduction of Affirmative Action, that progress has significantly slowed. How can we account for this? Jason Riley, senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, explains Affirmative Action’s troubling legacy.
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By PragerU4.8
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Before Affirmative Action, black Americans were closing education gaps, increasing incomes, and joining the middle class at record speed. But since the introduction of Affirmative Action, that progress has significantly slowed. How can we account for this? Jason Riley, senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, explains Affirmative Action’s troubling legacy.
Get all our content ad-free on PragerU.com or download the PragerU app: https://l.prageru.com/45GvWlu
Follow PragerU on social media:
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X/Twitter
Rumble
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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