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I decided to look up proposition 209 exit polls [1]. (Proposition 209 ended affirmative action in California university admissions.)

Support for Prop. 209 was: white 63%, black 26%, latino 24%, asian 39%.

Another article [2] says that exit polling showed 27% of people that voted for 209 "also voiced support for 'affirmative-action programs designed to help women and minorities.'" (The question was in fact, "Are you in favor of both private and public affirmative action programs designed to help women and minorities get better jobs and education, or are you opposed to them?" It's from the L.A. Times exit poll [1])

Note that the overall proportion on that question was 54% in favor, 46% opposed.

I now invite you to divine what proportion of each minority group was in fact confused voters.

Now, this is affirmative action, not the definition of racism, personally I'd expect exit polls asking "Is it racist for a black store owner to ban whites from his store?" to get "Yes" with quite a higher proportion across all the population than what you see here. (And "Is it racist for a white store owner to ban whites from his store?" would get a ton of yesses too.)

[1] http://media.trb.com/media/acrobat/2008-10/43120439.pdf [2] http://www.csmonitor.com/1996/1205/120596.opin.opin.2.html



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