Clarence Thomas and “Affirmative Action”:

A New York Times book review by Orlando Patterson gives us the following biographical details on Justice Thomas:

Pin Point, where he spent his first six years, comes as close to a scene of rural desolation as is possible in an advanced society. This is black life in the rural South at its bleakest, in which the best hope of the law-abiding is a job at the old crab-picking factory. It is in this sociological nightmare that a 6-year-old boy, by some miracle of human agency, discovers the path to survival through absorption in books. Born to a teenage mother, abandoned by his father when he was a year old, plunged into the even more frightening poverty of the Savannah ghetto, Thomas, along with his brother, was eventually rescued by his grandparents…. Coastal Georgia is one of the few areas in America where a genuinely Afro-English creole

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