I like how you use someone's university to argue for their intelligence - but, only if they're white. If they're a minority - the only reason they were allowed to attend a prestigious university is quotas.
Well, I'm sorry, but it is a factor. I think that if a person makes it into an institution like Baylor Law School they are more intelligent than average but the bar does vary according to race.
What I say is that if you see a Black person granted entry into a prestigious institution like Baylor Law School is that it's very possible they would not have been admitted had they not been Black. If you are about to randomly select a Black person who gained entrance into an institution like that you know the odds are way better than even that you will select a person who would not have gained entrance had they not been Black.
As I've noted before, you can get some insight into that by looking at the GRUTTER v. BOLLINGER Supreme Court decision pertaining to the Michigan Law School (
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/g ... vol=02-241" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;). Do a find on "Raudenbush" and you will find this statement:
Dr. Stephen Raudenbush, the Law School's expert, focused on the predicted effect of eliminating race as a factor in the Law School's admission process. In Dr. Raudenbush's view, a race-blind admissions system would have a " 'very dramatic,' " negative effect on underrepresented minority admissions. App. to Pet. for Cert. 223a. He testified that in 2000, 35 percent of underrepresented minority applicants were admitted. Ibid. Dr. Raudenbush predicted that if race were not considered, only 10 percent of those applicants would have been admitted. Ibid. Under this scenario, underrepresented minority students would have comprised 4 percent of the entering class in 2000 instead of the actual figure of 14.5 percent. Ibid.
If you do the math your conclusion will be that only about 28 percent of the "underrepresented minority" students who were admitted with the Michigan Law School 2000 class would have been admitted if they had not been members of an "underrepresented minority."
It is what it is.
There are other factors. Like GW Bush would not have been accepted to Yale had he not been a legacy. But we have other information in the form of his SAT score that allows us to get an idea as to how he falls in the intelligence distribution. And he falls high.
Louis Gohmert? I looked and I cannot find any reason for him gaining entrance to Baylor Law School other than he earned it under circumstances where he did not get favorable treatment as a member of an "underrepresented minority." Maybe you can find something.