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THE (STATE) CIVIL RIGHTS INITIATIVE BALLOT LANGUAGE:

The State shall not discriminate against nor grant preferential treatment to, any individual or group on the basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin in the operation of public employment, public education, or public contracting.

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For 2008, Race Free Zone is dedicated to being the no-spin zone of the Civil Rights Initiative movement. This year, we encourage all people, media, and candidates of Arizona, Colorado, and Nebraska to tour the information we have posted here for their consideration as they have the chance to vote on Civil Rights Initiatives in their states this November. We invite all media in the United States to tour this site for facts about this movement. We are strictly fact-oriented. All opinions are clearly shown to be opinions.

The Civil Rights Initiatives are anti-race preference and anti-gender preference ballot initiatives. This all started when California passed Proposition 209, eliminating race and gender preferences in state government, including universities and colleges supported by the state, state employment, and state contracting. The surprising success of this proposal spurred the people of Washington State to do the same, and in 2006 Michigan became the third state to stop the destructive habit of using race and gender preferences in its state education, employment and contracting.

Because of passage in those three states, 25% of the United States' citizens live in non-preference/non-discrimination states.

Below you will find our FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS. We invite all questions and any challenge to the answers. Challenges that turn out to be true will be immediately accepted and put up front. We hide nothing. We are fact-based. All postings have been researched, and are cited.

Race Free Zone is constructed to be of use to media, campaigners, debaters, petition circulators, candidates, and to any citizen who wants clear answers and facts.

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Why are these initiatives called "civil rights" initiatives?

Don't we already have this?

Are there "hidden consequences"?

Will gender-specific programs be eliminated?

Are gender-specific college sports "endangered"?

Will the Civil Rights Initiatives "threaten" or "put at risk" women's health, breast cancer screenings, shelters, domestic violence programs or gender-specific health programs funded by the state?

Is the language "deceptive"?

Do women make only 70% of men's incomes?

Are the circulators paid?

Are "outsiders" invading your state?

Who's on their side? Who's on our side?

Has affirmative action in college admissions actually resulted in a higher FAILURE rate for minority-student graduation?

Are women incompetent or is the State government sexist?

Why would a mother of a multi-race family be in favor of the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative?

Is America more racist now than in the past?

Is it true that multi-millionaire immigrants and wealthy Americans are getting affirmative action set-asides for "disadvantaged minorities"?

Did Ward Connerly "bless" the KKK?

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Thursday, November 09, 2006

Some Very Perceptive Post Election Analysis: Read this.

Learning from the MCRI

by Roger Clegg, published on NRO.com, National Review on line

Five comments in light of another vote to end racial preferences.By Roger Clegg
A few brief observations regarding the passage this week of the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative, which bans discrimination and preferences by state government for the purposes of education, employment, and contracting:

1. Preferences of this sort are very unpopular. How unpopular? Well, they were banned by a margin of 58-42 percent of the popular vote; in a blue state; in a Democratic year; with opponents vastly outspending the supporters; and the former calling the latter racists and sexists. The voters approved the amendment over the well-publicized objections of the corporate establishment, and the political establishment (Democratic and Republican alike), and the media establishment, and the civil rights establishment, and the labor unions, and even the clergy. And this success follows that of identical bans — also by decisive margins — in two other blue states (California and Washington) in two other Democratic years (1996 and 1998).So, pretty unpopular.

2. The political significance of the vote is twofold.First, it makes it likely that other states will enact similar referenda. Ward Connerly, who, along with Jennifer Gratz, ran the Michigan campaign, seems ready to make it four for four (he also ran the successful campaigns in California and Washington).Second, it makes it more likely that Republicans nationally will rethink their stupid decision not to aggressively oppose preferences, and maybe even that Democrats will rethink their demagogic decision to embrace them.

3. The legal significance of the vote is also twofold.First, the Supreme Court does to an extent follow “th’ illiction returns.” Specifically, those justices who worry about establishment disapproval if they do the (legally) right thing and strike down racial preferences may be reassured if the public, at least, has provided them some political cover.Second, as more and more universities stop using racial-admission preferences, it becomes harder and harder for the remaining schools to insist that one simply cannot run a decent university without them.Consider: The University of California public system of higher education — probably the nation’s best — has not used preferences for ten years now. The state of Washington’s public universities have not used them since 1998. Florida abandoned its system of preferences in 1999. Texas used no preferences between 1996 and 2004. The University of Georgia, too, went without preferences for a time, in the early 2000s. And now we add another highly regarded state system — Michigan’s — to the mix. Finally, bear in mind that most schools have never used racial preferences, because they just aren’t that selective. None of these schools is collapsing under the weight of nondiscrimination.“How essential, then, can preferences be?,” the Supreme Court will eventually ask. There will be no persuasive answer.

4. And, when you think about it, how can an increasingly multi-racial and multi-ethnic America survive in the 21st century with a system of state-imposed racial and ethnic preferences? How will we decide which groups are to be preferred and which ones discriminated against, and how will we define and police membership in the various groups? This madness simply must stop.

5. Ward Connerly and Jennifer Gratz are national treasures.— Roger Clegg is president and general counsel of the Center for Equal Opportunity, which last month published three studies demonstrating the heavy weight being given to race and ethnicity by the University of Michigan in its undergraduate, law, and medical school admissions.

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