Buttars misread book, author says
"I'm appreciative that the senator is recommending they read the book, but when they read it they won't find what he's saying," Greene said. "In fact, they'll find the opposite."
Buttars, R-South Jordan, had used references to the book when recanting a comment he had made on radio Monday that the 1954 Supreme Court decision outlawing segregation in public schools in Brown v. Board of Education was "wrong to begin with."
After Utah minority community leaders raised concerns about Buttars' comment, Buttars said Brown v. Board was "a brilliant, educated decision" but added, citing Greene's book, that there were downsides for some children who were bused from minority-majority schools in their neighborhoods to schools that weren't designed to meet their needs.
Greene told the Deseret Morning News on Thursday that his book isn't about desegregation but about what he calls "common claims in education not supported by evidence. Nothing in the book discusses the affects of segregation or desegregation."
In that context, Greene writes that a school isn't necessarily integrated just because it has a high ratio of minorities.
"If it were, then many Southern schools during the era of Jim Crow would have been wonderfully integrated due to their very high proportion of minority students," Greene writes. "By this standard, Brown v. Board of Education was a terrible defeat for integration since it broke up an educational system explicitly designed to maximize the number of minority students in many schools. Clearly, what we really mean by integration is having a balanced mix of different racial groups, rather than just greater numbers of certain groups."
Buttars on Thursday apologized if he misread "Education Myths." He expressed frustration at the attention to his statements on Brown v. Board, saying "everybody who touches this gets totally beat up.
"The obvious answer is Brown v. Board of Education was brilliant, whether there was a downside, or not, I'm through talking about that," Buttars said. "It isn't even something on my mind, it hasn't been on my mind ever, as far as legislation. It is over and done with, and I don't think it's a problem in Utah."
James Evans, chairman of the Salt Lake County Republican Party, grew up as an African-American in South Carolina and said he and Buttars are both among those who "applaud the defeat of segregation."




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