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United States v. Virginia
518 U.S. 515
116 S. Ct. 2264
135 L. Ed. 2d 735
UNITED STATES, PETITIONER
v.
VIRGINIA ET AL. VIRGINIA, ET AL., PETITIONERS
v.
UNITED STATES
No. 94-1941, 94-1941, 94-2107
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
January 17, 1996, Argued
June 26, 1996 * , Decided* Together with No. 94-2107, Virginia et
al. v. United States, also on certiorari to the same court.
As Amended July 3, 1996.
ON WRITS OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
THE FOURTH CIRCUIT.
No. 94-2107, 976 F.2d 890, affirmed; No. 94-1941, 44 F.3d 1229,
reversed and remanded.
GINSBURG, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which STEVENS,
O'CONNOR, KENNEDY, SOUTER, and BREYER, JJ., joined. REHNQUIST, C.
J., filed an opinion concurring in the judgment, post, p. 558.
SCALIA, J., filed a dissenting opinion, post, p. 566. THOMAS, J.,
took no part in the consideration or decision of the case.
JUSTICE GINSBURG delivered the opinion of the Court.
Virginia's public institutions of higher learning include an
incomparable military college, Virginia Military Institute (VMI).
The United States maintains that the Constitution's equal
protection guarantee precludes Virginia from reserving exclusively
to men the unique educational opportunities VMI affords. We
agree.
I
Founded in 1839, VMI is today the sole single-sex school among
Virginia's 15 public institutions of higher learning. VMI's
distinctive mission is to produce "citizen-soldiers," men prepared
for leadership in civilian life and in military service. VMI
pursues this mission through pervasive training of a kind not
available anywhere else in Virginia. Assigning prime place to
character development, VMI uses an "adversative method" modeled on
English public schools and once characteristic of military
instruction. VMI constantly endeavors to instill physical and
mental discipline in its cadets and impart to them a strong moral
code. The school's graduates leave VMI with heightened
comprehension of their capacity to deal with duress and stress, and
a large sense of accomplishment for completing the hazardous
course.
VMI has notably succeeded in its mission to produce leaders; among
its alumni are military generals, Members of Congress, and business
executives. The school's alumni overwhelmingly perceive that their
VMI training helped them to realize their personal goals. VMI's
endowment reflects the loyalty of its graduates; VMI has the
largest per-student endowment of all public undergraduate
institutions in the Nation.
Neither the goal of producing citizen-soldiers nor VMI's
implementing methodology is inherently unsuitable to women. And the
school's impressive record in producing leaders has made admission
desirable to some women. Nevertheless, Virginia has elected to
preserve exclusively for men the advantages and opportunities a VMI
education affords.
II
A
From its establishment in 1839 as one of the Nation's first state
military colleges, see 1839 Va. Acts, ch. 20, VMI has remained
financially supported by Virginia and "subject to the control of
the [Virginia] General Assembly," Va. Code Ann. § 23-92
(1993). First southern college to teach engineering and industrial
chemistry, see H. Wise, Drawing Out the Man: The VMI Story 13
(1978) (The VMI Story), VMI once provided teachers for the
Commonwealth's schools, see 1842 Va. Acts, ch. 24, § 2
(requiring every cadet to teach in one of the Commonwealth's
schools for a 2-year period). n1 Civil War strife threatened the
school's vitality, but a resourceful superintendent regained
legislative support by highlighting "VMI's great potential[,]
through its technical know-how," to advance Virginia's postwar
recovery. The VMI Story 47.
VMI today enrolls about 1,300 men as cadets. n2 Its academic
offerings in the liberal arts, sciences, and engineering are also
available at other public colleges and universities in Virginia.
But VMI's mission is special. It is the mission of the school"'to
produce educated and honorable men, prepared for the varied work of
civil life, imbued with love of learning, confident in the
functions and attitudes of leadership, possessing a high sense of
public service, advocates of the American democracy and free
enterprise system, and ready as citizen-soldiers to defend their
country in time of national peril.'" 766 F. Supp. 1407, 1425 (WD
Va. 1991) (quoting Mission Study Committee of the VMI Board of
Visitors, Report, May 16, 1986).In contrast to the federal service
academies, institutions maintained "to prepare cadets for career
service in the armed forces," VMI's program "is directed at
preparation for both military and civilian life"; "only about 15%
of VMI cadets enter career military service." 766 F. Supp., at
1432.
VMI produces its "citizen-soldiers" through "an adversative, or
doubting, model of education" which features "physical rigor,
mental stress, absolute equality of treatment, absence of privacy,
minute regulation of behavior, and indoctrination in desirable
values." Id., at 1421. As one Commandant of Cadets described it,
the adversative method "'dissects the young student,'" and makes
him aware of his "'limits and capabilities,'" so that he knows
"'how far he can go with his anger, . . . how much he can take
under stress, . . . exactly what he can do when he is physically
exhausted.'" Id., at 1421-1422 (quoting Col. N. Bissell).
VMI cadets live in spartan barracks where surveillance is constant
and privacy nonexistent; they wear uniforms, eat together in the
mess hall, and regularly participate in drills. Id., at 1424, 1432.
Entering students are incessantly exposed to the rat line, "an
extreme form of the adversative model," comparable in intensity to
Marine Corps boot camp. Id., at 1422. Tormenting and punishing, the
rat line bonds new cadets to their fellow sufferers and, when they
have completed the 7-month experience, to their former tormentors.
Ibid.
VMI's "adversative model" is further characterized by a
hierarchical "class system" of privileges and responsibilities, a
"dyke system" for assigning a senior class mentor to each entering
class "rat," and a stringently enforced "honor code," which
prescribes that a cadet "'does not lie, cheat, steal nor tolerate
those who do.'" Id., at 1422-1423.
VMI attracts some applicants because of its reputation as an
extraordinarily challenging military school, and "because its
alumni are exceptionally close to the school." Id., at 1421. "Women
have no opportunity anywhere to gain the benefits of [the system of
education at VMI]." Ibid.
B
In 1990, prompted by a complaint filed with the Attorney General by
a female high-school student seeking admission to VMI, the United
States sued the Commonwealth of Virginia and VMI, alleging that
VMI's exclusively male admission policy violated the Equal
Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Id., at 1408. n3
Trial of the action consumed six days and involved an array of
expert witnesses on each side. Ibid.
In the two years preceding the lawsuit, the District Court noted,
VMI had received inquiries from 347 women, but had responded to
none of them. Id., at 1436. "Some women, at least," the court said,
"would want to attend the school if they had the opportunity." Id.,
at 1414. The court further recognized that, with recruitment, VMI
could "achieve at least 10% female enrollment" -- "a sufficient
'critical mass' to provide the female cadets with a positive
educational experience." Id., at 1437-1438. And it was also
established that "some women are capable of all of the individual
activities required of VMI cadets." Id., at 1412. In addition,
experts agreed that if VMI admitted women, "the VMI ROTC experience
would become a better training program from the perspective of the
armed forces, because it would provide training in dealing with a
mixed-gender army." Id., at 1441.
The District Court ruled in favor of VMI, however, and rejected the
equal protection challenge pressed by the United States. That court
correctly recognized that Mississippi Univ. for Women v. Hogan, 458
U.S. 718, 73 L. Ed. 2d 1090, 102 S. Ct. 3331 (1982), was the
closest guide. 766 F. Supp., at 1410. There, this Court underscored
that a party seeking to uphold government action based on sex must
establish an "exceedingly persuasive justification" for the
classification. Mississippi Univ. for Women, 458 U.S. at 724
(internal quotation marks omitted). To succeed, the defender of the
challenged action must show "at least that the classification
serves important governmental objectives and that the
discriminatory means employed are substantially related to the
achievement of those objectives." Ibid. (internal quotation marks
omitted).
The District Court reasoned that education in "a single gender
environment, be it male or female," yields substantial benefits.
766 F. Supp., at 1415. VMI's school for men brought diversity to an
otherwise coeducational Virginia system, and that diversity was
"enhanced by VMI's unique method of instruction." Ibid. If
single-gender education for males ranks as an important
governmental objective, it becomes obvious, the District Court
concluded, that the only means of achieving the objective "is to
exclude women from the all-male institution -- VMI." Ibid.
"Women are [indeed] denied a unique educational opportunity that is
available only at VMI," the District Court acknowledged. Id., at
1432. But "[VMI's] single-sex status would be lost, and some
aspects of the [school's] distinctive method would be altered" if
women were admitted, id., at 1413: "Allowance for personal privacy
would have to be made," id., at 1412; "physical education
requirements would have to be altered, at least for the women,"
id., at 1413; the adversative environment could not survive
unmodified, id., at 1412-1413. Thus, "sufficient constitutional
justification" had been shown, the District Court held, "for
continuing [VMI's] single-sex policy." Id., at 1413.
The Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit disagreed and vacated
the District Court's judgment. The appellate court held: "The
Commonwealth of Virginia has not . . . advanced any state policy by
which it can justify its determination, under an announced policy
of diversity, to afford VMI's unique type of program to men and not
to women." 976 F.2d 890, 892 (1992).
The appeals court greeted with skepticism Virginia's assertion that
it offers single-sex education at VMI as a facet of the
Commonwealth's overarching and undisputed policy to advance
"autonomy and diversity." The court underscored Virginia's
nondiscrimination commitment: "'It is extremely important that
[colleges and universities] deal with faculty, staff, and students
without regard to sex, race, or ethnic origin.'" Id., at 899
(quoting 1990 Report of the Virginia Commission on the University
of the 21st Century). "That statement, " the Court of Appeals said,
"is the only explicit one that we have found in the record in which
the Commonwealth has expressed itself with respect to gender
distinctions." 976 F.2d, at 899. Furthermore, the appeals court
observed, in urging "diversity" to justify an all-male VMI, the
Commonwealth had supplied "no explanation for the movement away
from [single-sex education] in Virginia by public colleges and
universities." Ibid. In short, the court concluded, "[a] policy of
diversity which aims to provide an array of educational
opportunities, including single-gender institutions, must do more
than favor one gender." Ibid.
The parties agreed that "some women can meet the physical standards
now imposed on men," id., at 896, and the court was satisfied that
"neither the goal of producing citizen soldiers nor VMI's
implementing methodology is inherently unsuitable to women," id.,
at 899. The Court of Appeals, however, accepted the District
Court's finding that "at least these three aspects of VMI's program
-- physical training, the absence of privacy, and the adversative
approach -- would be materially affected by coeducation." Id., at
896-897. Remanding the case, the appeals court assigned to
Virginia, in the first instance, responsibility for selecting a
remedial course. The court suggested these options for the
Commonwealth: Admit women to VMI; establish parallel institutions
or programs; or abandon state support, leaving VMI free to pursue
its policies as a private institution. Id., at 900. In May 1993,
this Court denied certiorari. See 508 U.S. 946; see also ibid.
(opinion of SCALIA, J., noting the interlocutory posture of the
litigation).
C
In response to the Fourth Circuit's ruling, Virginia proposed a
parallel program for women: Virginia Women's Institute for
Leadership (VWIL). The 4-year, state-sponsored undergraduate
program would be located at Mary Baldwin College, a private liberal
arts school for women, and would be open, initially, to about 25 to
30 students. Although VWIL would share VMI's mission -- to produce
"citizen-soldiers" -- the VWIL program would differ, as does Mary
Baldwin College, from VMI in academic offerings, methods of
education, and financial resources. See 852 F. Supp. 471, 476-477
(WD Va. 1994).
The average combined SAT score of entrants at Mary Baldwin is about
100 points lower than the score for VMI freshmen. See id., at 501.
Mary Baldwin's faculty holds "significantly fewer Ph. D.'s than the
faculty at VMI," id., at 502, and receives significantly lower
salaries, see Tr. 158 (testimony of James Lott, Dean of Mary
Baldwin College), reprinted in 2 App. in Nos. 94-1667 and 94-1717
(CA4) (hereinafter Tr.). While VMI offers degrees in liberal arts,
the sciences, and engineering, Mary Baldwin, at the time of trial,
offered only bachelor of arts degrees. See 852 F. Supp., at 503. A
VWIL student seeking to earn an engineering degree could gain one,
without public support, by attending Washington University in St.
Louis, Missouri, for two years, paying the required private
tuition. See ibid.
Experts in educating women at the college level composed the Task
Force charged with designing the VWIL program; Task Force members
were drawn from Mary Baldwin's own faculty and staff. Id., at 476.
Training its attention on methods of instruction appropriate for
"most women," the Task Force determined that a military model would
be "wholly inappropriate" for VWIL. Ibid.; see 44 F.3d 1229, 1233
(CA4 1995).
VWIL students would participate in ROTC programs and a newly
established, "largely ceremonial" Virginia Corps of Cadets, id., at
1234, but the VWIL House would not have a military format, 852 F.
Supp., at 477, and VWIL would not require its students to eat meals
together or to wear uniforms during the schoolday, id., at 495. In
lieu of VMI's adversative method, the VWIL Task Force favored "a
cooperative method which reinforces self-esteem." Id., at 476. In
addition to the standard bachelor of arts program offered at Mary
Baldwin, VWIL students would take courses in leadership, complete
an off-campus leadership externship, participate in community
service projects, and assist in arranging a speaker series. See 44
F.3d, at 1234.
Virginia represented that it will provide equal financial support
for in-state VWIL students and VMI cadets, 852 F. Supp., at 483,
and the VMI Foundation agreed to supply a $ 5.4625 million
endowment for the VWIL program, id., at 499. Mary Baldwin's own
endowment is about $ 19 million; VMI's is $ 131 million. Id., at
503. Mary Baldwin will add $ 35 million to its endowment based on
future commitments; VMI will add $ 220 million. Ibid. The VMI
Alumni Association has developed a network of employers interested
in hiring VMI graduates. The Association has agreed to open its
network to VWIL graduates, id., at 499, but those graduates will
not have the advantage afforded by a VMI degree.
D
Virginia returned to the District Court seeking approval of its
proposed remedial plan, and the court decided the plan met the
requirements of the Equal Protection Clause. Id., at 473. The
District Court again acknowledged evidentiary support for these
determinations: "The VMI methodology could be used to educate women
and, in fact, some women . . . may prefer the VMI methodology to
the VWIL methodology." Id., at 481. But the "controlling legal
principles," the District Court decided, "do not require the
Commonwealth to provide a mirror image VMI for women." Ibid. The
court anticipated that the two schools would "achieve substantially
similar outcomes." Ibid. It concluded: "If VMI marches to the beat
of a drum, then Mary Baldwin marches to the melody of a fife and
when the march is over, both will have arrived at the same
destination." Id., at 484.
A divided Court of Appeals affirmed the District Court's judgment.
44 F.3d 1229 (CA4 1995). This time, the appellate court determined
to give "greater scrutiny to the selection of means than to the
[Commonwealth's] proffered objective." Id., at 1236. The official
objective or purpose, the court said, should be reviewed
deferentially. Ibid. Respect for the "legislative will," the court
reasoned, meant that the judiciary should take a "cautious
approach," inquiring into the "legitimacy" of the governmental
objective and refusing approval for any purpose revealed to be
"pernicious." Ibid.
"Providing the option of a single-gender college education may be
considered a legitimate and important aspect of a public system of
higher education," the appeals court observed, id., at 1238; that
objective, the court added, is "not pernicious," id., at 1239.
Moreover, the court continued, the adversative method vital to a
VMI education "has never been tolerated in a sexually heterogeneous
environment." Ibid. The method itself "was not designed to exclude
women," the court noted, but women could not be accommodated in the
VMI program, the court believed, for female participation in VMI's
adversative training "would destroy . . . any sense of decency that
still permeates the relationship between the sexes." Ibid.
Having determined, deferentially, the legitimacy of Virginia's
purpose, the court considered the question of means. Exclusion of
"men at Mary Baldwin College and women at VMI," the court said, was
essential to Virginia's purpose, for without such exclusion, the
Commonwealth could not "accomplish [its] objective of providing
single-gender education." Ibid.
The court recognized that, as it analyzed the case, means merged
into end, and the merger risked "bypassing any equal protection
scrutiny." Id., at 1237. The court therefore added another inquiry,
a decisive test it called "substantive comparability." Ibid. The
key question, the court said, was whether men at VMI and women at
VWIL would obtain "substantively comparable benefits at their
institution or through other means offered by the State." Ibid.
Although the appeals court recognized that the VWIL degree "lacks
the historical benefit and prestige" of a VMI degree, it
nevertheless found the educational opportunities at the two schools
"sufficiently comparable." Id., at 1241.
Senior Circuit Judge Phillips dissented. The court, in his
judgment, had not held Virginia to the burden of showing an
"'exceedingly persuasive [justification]' " for the Commonwealth's
action. Id., at 1247 (quoting Mississippi Univ. for Women, 458 U.S.
at 724). In Judge Phillips' view, the court had accepted
"rationalizations compelled by the exigencies of this litigation,"
and had not confronted the Commonwealth's "actual overriding
purpose." 44 F.3d, at 1247. That purpose, Judge Phillips said, was
clear from the historical record; it was "not to create a new type
of educational opportunity for women, . . . nor to further
diversify the Commonwealth's higher education system[,] . . . but
[was] simply . . . to allow VMI to continue to exclude women in
order to preserve its historic character and mission." Ibid.
Judge Phillips suggested that the Commonwealth would satisfy the
Constitution's equal protection requirement if it "simultaneously
opened single-gender undergraduate institutions having
substantially comparable curricular and extra-curricular programs,
funding, physical plant, administration and support services, and
faculty and library resources." Id., at 1250. But he thought it
evident that the proposed VWIL program, in comparison to VMI, fell
"far short . . . from providing substantially equal tangible and
intangible educational benefits to men and women." Ibid.
The Fourth Circuit denied rehearing en banc. 52 F.3d 90 (1995).
Circuit Judge Motz, joined by Circuit Judges Hall, Murnaghan, and
Michael, filed a dissenting opinion. n4 Judge Motz agreed with
Judge Phillips that Virginia had not shown an "'exceedingly
persuasive justification'" for the disparate opportunities the
Commonwealth supported. Id., at 92 (quoting Mississippi Univ. for
Women, 458 U.S. at 724). She asked: "[H]ow can a degree from a yet
to be implemented supplemental program at Mary Baldwin be held
'substantively comparable' to a degree from a venerable Virginia
military institution that was established more than 150 years ago?"
52 F.3d, at 93. "Women need not be guaranteed equal 'results,'"
Judge Motz said, "but the Equal Protection Clause does require
equal opportunity . . . [and] that opportunity is being denied
here." Ibid.
III
The cross-petitions in this case present two ultimate issues.
First, does Virginia's exclusion of women from the educational
opportunities provided by VMI -- extraordinary opportunities for
military training and civilian leadership development -- deny to
women "capable of all of the individual activities required of VMI
cadets," 766 F. Supp., at 1412, the equal protection of the laws
guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment? Second, if VMI's "unique"
situation, id., at 1413 -- as Virginia's sole single-sex public
institution of higher education -- offends the Constitution's equal
protection principle, what is the remedial requirement?
IV
We note, once again, the core instruction of this Court's
pathmarking decisions in J. E. B. v. Alabama ex rel. T. B., 511
U.S. 127, 136-137, 128 L. Ed. 2d 89, 114 S. Ct. 1419, and n. 6
(1994), and Mississippi Univ. for Women, 458 U.S. at 724 (internal
quotation marks omitted): Parties who seek to defend gender-based
government action must demonstrate an "exceedingly persuasive
justification" for that action.
Today's skeptical scrutiny of official action denying rights or
opportunities based on sex responds to volumes of history. As a
plurality of this Court acknowledged a generation ago, "our Nation
has had a long and unfortunate history of sex discrimination."
Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U.S. 677, 684, 36 L. Ed. 2d 583, 93 S.
Ct. 1764 (1973). Through a century plus three decades and more of
that history, women did not count among voters composing "We the
People"; n5 not until 1920 did women gain a constitutional right to
the franchise. Id., at 685. And for a half century thereafter, it
remained the prevailing doctrine that government, both federal and
state, could withhold from women opportunities accorded men so long
as any "basis in reason" could be conceived for the discrimination.
See, e. g., Goesaert v. Cleary, 335 U.S. 464, 467, 93 L. Ed. 163,
69 S. Ct. 198 (1948) (rejecting challenge of female tavern owner
and her daughter to Michigan law denying bartender licenses to
females -- except for wives and daughters of male tavern owners;
Court would not "give ear" to the contention that "an unchivalrous
desire of male bartenders to . . . monopolize the calling" prompted
the legislation).
In 1971, for the first time in our Nation's history, this Court
ruled in favor of a woman who complained that her State had denied
her the equal protection of its laws. Reed v. Reed, 404 U.S. 71,
73, 30 L. Ed. 2d 225, 92 S. Ct. 251 (holding unconstitutional Idaho
Code prescription that, among "'several persons claiming and
equally entitled to administer [a decedent's estate], males must be
preferred to females'"). Since Reed, the Court has repeatedly
recognized that neither federal nor state government acts
compatibly with the equal protection principle when a law or
official policy denies to women, simply because they are women,
full citizenship stature -- equal opportunity to aspire, achieve,
participate in and contribute to society based on their individual
talents and capacities. See, e. g., Kirchberg v. Feenstra, 450 U.S.
455, 462-463, 67 L. Ed. 2d 428, 101 S. Ct. 1195 (1981) (affirming
invalidity of Louisiana law that made husband "head and master" of
property jointly owned with his wife, giving him unilateral right
to dispose of such property without his wife's consent); Stanton v.
Stanton, 421 U.S. 7, 43 L. Ed. 2d 688, 95 S. Ct. 1373 (1975)
(invalidating Utah requirement that parents support boys until age
21, girls only until age 18).
Without equating gender classifications, for all purposes, to
classifications based on race or national origin, n6 the Court, in
post-Reed decisions, has carefully inspected official action that
closes a door or denies opportunity to women (or to men). See J. E.
B., 511 U.S. at 152 (KENNEDY, J., concurring in judgment) (case law
evolving since 1971 "reveal[s] a strong presumption that gender
classifications are invalid"). To summarize the Court's current
directions for cases of official classification based on gender:
Focusing on the differential treatment or denial of opportunity for
which relief is sought, the reviewing court must determine whether
the proffered justification is "exceedingly persuasive." The burden
of justification is demanding and it rests entirely on the State.
See Mississippi Univ. for Women, 458 U.S. at 724. The State must
show "at least that the [challenged] classification serves
'important governmental objectives and that the discriminatory
means employed' are 'substantially related to the achievement of
those objectives.'" Ibid. (quoting Wengler v. Druggists Mut. Ins.
Co., 446 U.S. 142, 150, 64 L. Ed. 2d 107, 100 S. Ct. 1540 (1980)).
The justification must be genuine, not hypothesized or invented
post hoc in response to litigation. And it must not rely on
overbroad generalizations about the different talents, capacities,
or preferences of males and females. See Weinberger v. Wiesenfeld,
420 U.S. 636, 643, 648, 43 L. Ed. 2d 514, 95 S. Ct. 1225 (1975);
Califano v. Goldfarb, 430 U.S. 199, 223-224, 51 L. Ed. 2d 270, 97
S. Ct. 1021 (1977) (STEVENS, J., concurring in judgment).
The heightened review standard our precedent establishes does not
make sex a proscribed classification. Supposed "inherent
differences" are no longer accepted as a ground for race or
national origin classifications. See Loving v. Virginia, 388 U.S.
1, 18 L. Ed. 2d 1010, 87 S. Ct. 1817 (1967). Physical differences
between men and women, however, are enduring: "The two sexes are
not fungible; a community made up exclusively of one [sex] is
different from a community composed of both." Ballard v. United
States, 329 U.S. 187, 193, 91 L.
Ed. 181, 67 S. Ct. 261 (1946).
"Inherent differences" between men and women, we have come to
appreciate, remain cause for celebration, but not for denigration
of the members of either sex or for artificial constraints on an
individual's opportunity. Sex classifications may be used to
compensate women "for particular economic disabilities [they have]
suffered," Califano v. Webster, 430 U.S. 313, 320, 51 L. Ed. 2d
360, 97 S. Ct. 1192 (1977) (per curiam), to "promote equal
employment opportunity," see California Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn.
v. Guerra, 479 U.S. 272, 289, 93 L. Ed. 2d 613, 107 S. Ct. 683
(1987), to advance full development of the talent and capacities of
our Nation's people. n7 But such classifications may not be used,
as they once were, see Goesaert, 335 U.S. at 467, to create or
perpetuate the legal, social, and economic inferiority of
women.
Measuring the record in this case against the review standard just
described, we conclude that Virginia has shown no "exceedingly
persuasive justification" for excluding all women from the
citizen-soldier training afforded by VMI. We therefore affirm the
Fourth Circuit's initial judgment, which held that Virginia had
violated the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause.
Because the remedy proffered by Virginia -- the Mary Baldwin VWIL
program -- does not cure the constitutional violation, i.e., it
does not provide equal opportunity, we reverse the Fourth Circuit's
final judgment in this case.
V
The Fourth Circuit initially held that Virginia had advanced no
state policy by which it could justify, under equal protection
principles, its determination "to afford VMI's unique type of
program to men and not to women." 976 F.2d, at 892. Virginia
challenges that "liability" ruling and asserts two justifications
in defense of VMI's exclusion of women. First, the Commonwealth
contends, "single-sex education provides important educational
benefits," Brief for Cross-Petitioners 20, and the option of
single-sex education contributes to "diversity in educational
approaches," id., at 25. Second, the Commonwealth argues, "the
unique VMI method of character development and leadership
training," the school's adversative approach, would have to be
modified were VMI to admit women. Id., at 33-36 (internal quotation
marks omitted). We consider these two justifications in turn.
A
Single-sex education affords pedagogical benefits to at least some
students, Virginia emphasizes, and that reality is uncontested in
this litigation. n8 Similarly, it is not disputed that diversity
among public educational institutions can serve the public good.
But Virginia has not shown that VMI was established, or has been
maintained, with a view to diversifying, by its categorical
exclusion of women, educational opportunities within the
Commonwealth. In cases of this genre, our precedent instructs that
"benign" justifications proffered in defense of categorical
exclusions will not be accepted automatically; a tenable
justification must describe actual state purposes, not
rationalizations for actions in fact differently grounded. See
Wiesenfeld, 420 U.S. at 648, and n. 16 ("mere recitation of a
benign [or] compensatory purpose" does not block "inquiry into the
actual purposes" of government-maintained gender-based
classifications); Goldfarb, 430 U.S. at 212-213 (rejecting
government-proffered purposes after "inquiry into the actual
purposes") (internal quotation marks omitted).
Mississippi Univ. for Women is immediately in point. There the
State asserted, in justification of its exclusion of men from a
nursing school, that it was engaging in "educational affirmative
action" by "compensating for discrimination against women." 458
U.S. at 727. Undertaking a "searching analysis," id., at 728, the
Court found no close resemblance between "the alleged objective"
and "the actual purpose underlying the discriminatory
classification," id., at 730. Pursuing a similar inquiry here, we
reach the same conclusion.
Neither recent nor distant history bears out Virginia's alleged
pursuit of diversity through single-sex educational options. In
1839, when the Commonwealth established VMI, a range of educational
opportunities for men and women was scarcely contemplated. Higher
education at the time was considered dangerous for women; n9
reflecting widely held views about women's proper place, the
Nation's first universities and colleges -- for example, Harvard in
Massachusetts, William and Mary in Virginia -- admitted only men.
See E. Farello, A History of the Education of Women in the United
States 163 (1970). VMI was not at all novel in this respect: In
admitting no women, VMI followed the lead of the Commonwealth's
flagship school, the University of Virginia, founded in 1819.
"No struggle for the admission of women to a state university," a
historian has recounted, "was longer drawn out, or developed more
bitterness, than that at the University of Virginia." 2 T. Woody, A
History of Women's Education in the United States 254 (1929)
(History of Women's Education). In 1879, the State Senate resolved
to look into the possibility of higher education for women,
recognizing that Virginia "'has never, at any period of her
history,'" provided for the higher education of her daughters,
though she "'has liberally provided for the higher education of her
sons.'" Ibid. (quoting 10 Educ. J. Va. 212 (1879)). Despite this
recognition, no new opportunities were instantly open to women.
n10
Virginia eventually provided for several women's seminaries and
colleges. Farmville Female Seminary became a public institution in
1884. See supra, at 521, n. 2. Two women's schools, Mary Washington
College and James Madison University, were founded in 1908;
another, Radford University, was founded in 1910. 766 F. Supp., at
1418-1419. By the mid-1970's, all four schools had become
coeducational. Ibid.
Debate concerning women's admission as undergraduates at the main
university continued well past the century's midpoint. Familiar
arguments were rehearsed. If women were admitted, it was feared,
they "would encroach on the rights of men; there would be new
problems of government, perhaps scandals; the old honor system
would have to be changed; standards would be lowered to those of
other coeducational schools; and the glorious reputation of the
university, as a school for men, would be trailed in the dust." 2
History of Women's Education 255.
Ultimately, in 1970, "the most prestigious institution of higher
education in Virginia," the University of Virginia, introduced
coeducation and, in 1972, began to admit women on an equal basis
with men. See Kirstein v. Rector and Visitors of Univ. of Virginia,
309 F. Supp. 184, 186 (ED Va. 1970). A three-judge Federal District
Court confirmed: "Virginia may not now deny to women, on the basis
of sex, educational opportunities at the Charlottesville campus
that are not afforded in other institutions operated by the State."
Id., at 187.
Virginia describes the current absence of public single-sex higher
education for women as "an historical anomaly." Brief for
Cross-Petitioners 30. But the historical record indicates action
more deliberate than anomalous: First, protection of women against
higher education; next, schools for women far from equal in
resources and stature to schools for men; finally, conversion of
the separate schools to coeducation. The state legislature, prior
to the advent of this controversy, had repealed "all Virginia
statutes requiring individual institutions to admit only men or
women." 766 F. Supp., at 1419. And in 1990, an official commission,
"legislatively established to chart the future goals of higher
education in Virginia," reaffirmed the policy "'of affording broad
access" while maintaining "autonomy and diversity.'" 976 F.2d, at
898-899 (quoting Report of the Virginia Commission on the
University of the 21st Century). Significantly, the Commission
reported:"'Because colleges and universities provide opportunities
for students to develop values and learn from role models, it is
extremely important that they deal with faculty, staff, and
students without regard to sex, race, or ethnic origin.'" Id., at
899 (emphasis supplied by Court of Appeals deleted).This statement,
the Court of Appeals observed, "is the only explicit one that we
have found in the record in which the Commonwealth has expressed
itself with respect to gender distinctions." Ibid.
Our 1982 decision in Mississippi Univ. for Women prompted VMI to
reexamine its male-only admission policy. See 766 F. Supp., at
1427-1428. Virginia relies on that reexamination as a legitimate
basis for maintaining VMI's single-sex character. See Reply Brief
for Cross-Petitioners 6. A Mission Study Committee, appointed by
the VMI Board of Visitors, studied the problem from October 1983
until May 1986, and in that month counseled against "change of VMI
status as a single-sex college." See 766 F. Supp. at 1429 (internal
quotation marks omitted). Whatever internal purpose the Mission
Study Committee served -- and however well meaning the framers of
the report -- we can hardly extract from that effort any
commonwealth policy evenhandedly to advance diverse educational
options. As the District Court observed, the Committee's analysis
"primarily focused on anticipated difficulties in attracting
females to VMI," and the report, overall, supplied "very little
indication of how the conclusion was reached." Ibid.
In sum, we find no persuasive evidence in this record that VMI's
male-only admission policy "is in furtherance of a state policy of
'diversity.'" See 976 F.2d, at 899. No such policy, the Fourth
Circuit observed, can be discerned from the movement of all other
public colleges and universities in Virginia away from single-sex
education. See ibid. That court also questioned "how one
institution with autonomy, but with no authority over any other
state institution, can give effect to a state policy of diversity
among institutions." Ibid. A purpose genuinely to advance an array
of educational options, as the Court of Appeals recognized, is not
served by VMI's historic and constant plan -- a plan to "afford a
unique educational benefit only to males." Ibid. However
"liberally" this plan serves the Commonwealth's sons, it makes no
provision whatever for her daughters. That is not equal
protection.
B
Virginia next argues that VMI's adversative method of training
provides educational benefits that cannot be made available,
unmodified, to women. Alterations to accommodate women would
necessarily be "radical," so "drastic," Virginia asserts, as to
transform, indeed "destroy," VMI's program. See Brief for
Cross-Petitioners 34-36. Neither sex would be favored by the
transformation, Virginia maintains: Men would be deprived of the
unique opportunity currently available to them; women would not
gain that opportunity because their participation would "eliminate
the very aspects of [the] program that distinguish [VMI] from . . .
other institutions of higher education in Virginia." Id., at
34.
The District Court forecast from expert witness testimony, and the
Court of Appeals accepted, that coeducation would materially affect
"at least these three aspects of VMI's program -- physical
training, the absence of privacy, and the adversative approach."
976 F.2d, at 896-897. And it is uncontested that women's admission
would require accommodations, primarily in arranging housing
assignments and physical training programs for female cadets. See
Brief for Cross-Respondent 11, 29-30. It is also undisputed,
however, that "the VMI methodology could be used to educate women."
852 F. Supp., at 481. The District Court even allowed that some
women may prefer it to the methodology a women's college might
pursue. See ibid. "Some women, at least, would want to attend [VMI]
if they had the opportunity," the District Court recognized, 766 F.
Supp., at 1414, and "some women," the expert testimony established,
"are capable of all of the individual activities required of VMI
cadets," id., at 1412. The parties, furthermore, agree that "some
women can meet the physical standards [VMI] now impose[s] on men."
976 F.2d, at 896. In sum, as the Court of Appeals stated, "neither
the goal of producing citizen soldiers," VMI's raison d'etre, "nor
VMI's implementing methodology is inherently unsuitable to women."
Id., at 899.
In support of its initial judgment for Virginia, a judgment
rejecting all equal protection objections presented by the United
States, the District Court made "findings" on "gender-based
developmental differences." 766 F. Supp., at 1434-1435. These
"findings" restate the opinions of Virginia's expert witnesses,
opinions about typically male or typically female "tendencies."
Id., at 1434. For example, "males tend to need an atmosphere of
adversativeness," while "females tend to thrive in a cooperative
atmosphere." Ibid. "I'm not saying that some women don't do well
under [the] adversative model," VMI's expert on educational
institutions testified, "undoubtedly there are some [women] who
do"; but educational experiences must be designed "around the
rule," this expert maintained, and not "around the exception."
Ibid. (internal quotation marks omitted).
The United States does not challenge any expert witness estimation
on average capacities or preferences of men and women. Instead, the
United States emphasizes that time and again since this Court's
turning point decision in Reed v. Reed, 404 U.S. 71, 30 L. Ed. 2d
225, 92 S. Ct. 251 (1971), we have cautioned reviewing courts to
take a "hard look" at generalizations or "tendencies" of the kind
pressed by Virginia, and relied upon by the District Court. See
O'Connor, Portia's Progress, 66 N. Y. U. L. Rev. 1546, 1551 (1991).
State actors controlling gates to opportunity, we have instructed,
may not exclude qualified individuals based on "fixed notions
concerning the roles and abilities of males and females."
Mississippi Univ. for Women, 458 U.S. at 725; see J. E. B., 511
U.S. at 139, n. 11 (equal protection principles, as applied to
gender classifications, mean state actors may not rely on
"overbroad" generalizations to make "judgments about people that
are likely to . . . perpetuate historical patterns of
discrimination").
It may be assumed, for purposes of this decision, that most women
would not choose VMI's adversative method. As Fourth Circuit Judge
Motz observed, however, in her dissent from the Court of Appeals'
denial of rehearing en banc, it is also probable that "many men
would not want to be educated in such an environment." 52 F.3d, at
93. (On that point, even our dissenting colleague might agree.)
Education, to be sure, is not a "one size fits all" business. The
issue, however, is not whether "women -- or men -- should be forced
to attend VMI"; rather, the question is whether the Commonwealth
can constitutionally deny to women who have the will and capacity,
the training and attendant opportunities that VMI uniquely affords.
Ibid.
The notion that admission of women would downgrade VMI's stature,
destroy the adversative system and, with it, even the school, n11
is a judgment hardly proved, n12 a prediction hardly different from
other "self-fulfilling prophec[ies]," see Mississippi Univ. for
Women, 458 U.S. at 730, once routinely used to deny rights or
opportunities. When women first sought admission to the bar and
access to legal education, concerns of the same order were
expressed. For example, in 1876, the Court of Common Pleas of
Hennepin County, Minnesota, explained why women were thought
ineligible for the practice of law. Women train and educate the
young, the court said, which"forbids that they shall bestow that
time (early and late) and labor, so essential in attaining to the
eminence to which the true lawyer should ever aspire. It cannot
therefore be said that the opposition of courts to the admission of
females to practice . . . is to any extent the outgrowth of . . .
'old fogyism[.]' . . . It arises rather from a comprehension of the
magnitude of the responsibilities connected with the successful
practice of law, and a desire to grade up the profession." In re
Application of Martha Angle Dorsett to Be Admitted to Practice as
Attorney and Counselor at Law (Minn. C. P. Hennepin Cty., 1876), in
The Syllabi, Oct. 21, 1876, pp. 5, 6 (emphasis added).A like fear,
according to a 1925 report, accounted for Columbia Law School's
resistance to women's admission, although"the faculty . . . never
maintained that women could not master legal learning . . . . No,
its argument has been . . . more practical. If women were admitted
to the Columbia Law School, [the faculty] said, then the choicer,
more manly and red-blooded graduates of our great universities
would go to the Harvard Law School!" The Nation, Feb. 18, 1925, p.
173.
Medical faculties similarly resisted men and women as partners in
the study of medicine. See R. Morantz-Sanchez, Sympathy and
Science: Women Physicians in American Medicine 51-54, 250 (1985);
see also M. Walsh, "Doctors Wanted: No Women Need Apply" 121-122
(1977) (quoting E. Clarke, Medical Education of Women, 4 Boston
Med. & Surg. J. 345, 346 (1869) ("'God forbid that I should
ever see men and women aiding each other to display with the
scalpel the secrets of the reproductive system . . . .'")); cf.
supra, at 536-537, n. 9. More recently, women seeking careers in
policing encountered resistance based on fears that their presence
would "undermine male solidarity," see F. Heidensohn, Women in
Control? 201 (1992); deprive male partners of adequate assistance,
see id., at 184-185; and lead to sexual misconduct, see C. Milton
et al., Women in Policing 32-33 (1974). Field studies did not
confirm these fears. See Heidensohn, supra, at 92-93; P. Bloch
& D. Anderson, Policewomen on Patrol: Final Report
(1974).
Women's successful entry into the federal military academies, n13
and their participation in the Nation's military forces, n14
indicate that Virginia's fears for the future of VMI may not be
solidly grounded. n15 The Commonwealth's justification for
excluding all women from "citizen-soldier" training for which some
are qualified, in any event, cannot rank as "exceedingly
persuasive," as we have explained and applied that standard.
Virginia and VMI trained their argument on "means" rather than
"end," and thus misperceived our precedent. Single-sex education at
VMI serves an "important governmental objective," they maintained,
and exclusion of women is not only "substantially related," it is
essential to that objective. By this notably circular argument, the
"straightforward" test Mississippi Univ. for Women described, see
458 U.S. at 724-725, was bent and bowed.
The Commonwealth's misunderstanding and, in turn, the District
Court's, is apparent from VMI's mission: to produce
"citizen-soldiers," individuals"'imbued with love of learning,
confident in the functions and attitudes of leadership, possessing
a high sense of public service, advocates of the American democracy
and free enterprise system, and ready . . . to defend their country
in time of national peril.'" 766 F. Supp., at 1425 (quoting Mission
Study Committee of the VMI Board of Visitors, Report, May 16,
1986).Surely that goal is great enough to accommodate women, who
today count as citizens in our American democracy equal in stature
to men. Just as surely, the Commonwealth's great goal is not
substantially advanced by women's categorical exclusion, in total
disregard of their individual merit, from the Commonwealth's
premier "citizen-soldier" corps. n16 Virginia, in sum, "has fallen
far short of establishing the 'exceedingly persuasive
justification,'" Mississippi Univ. for Women, 458 U.S. at 731, that
must be the solid base for any gender-defined classification.
VI
In the second phase of the litigation, Virginia presented its
remedial plan -- maintain VMI as a male-only college and create
VWIL as a separate program for women. The plan met District Court
approval. The Fourth Circuit, in turn, deferentially reviewed the
Commonwealth's proposal and decided that the two single-sex
programs directly served Virginia's reasserted purposes:
single-gender education, and "achieving the results of an
adversative method in a military environment." See 44 F.3d, at
1236, 1239. Inspecting the VMI and VWIL educational programs to
determine whether they "afforded to both genders benefits
comparable in substance, [if] not in form and detail," id., at
1240, the Court of Appeals concluded that Virginia had arranged for
men and women opportunities "sufficiently comparable" to survive
equal protection evaluation, id., at 1240-1241. The United States
challenges this "remedial" ruling as pervasively misguided.
A
A remedial decree, this Court has said, must closely fit the
constitutional violation; it must be shaped to place persons
unconstitutionally denied an opportunity or advantage in "the
position they would have occupied in the absence of
[discrimination]. " See Milliken v. Bradley, 433 U.S. 267, 280, 53
L. Ed. 2d 745, 97 S. Ct. 2749 (1977) (internal quotation marks
omitted). The constitutional violation in this case is the
categorical exclusion of women from an extraordinary educational
opportunity afforded men. A proper remedy for an unconstitutional
exclusion, we have explained, aims to "eliminate [so far as
possible] the discriminatory effects of the past" and to "bar like
discrimination in the future." Louisiana v. United States, 380 U.S.
145, 154, 13 L. Ed. 2d 709, 85 S. Ct. 817 (1965).
Virginia chose not to eliminate, but to leave untouched, VMI's
exclusionary policy. For women only, however, Virginia proposed a
separate program, different in kind from VMI and unequal in
tangible and intangible facilities. n17 Having violated the
Constitution's equal protection requirement, Virginia was obliged
to show that its remedial proposal "directly addressed and related
to" the violation, see Milliken, 433 U.S. at 282, i. e., the equal
protection denied to women ready, willing, and able to benefit from
educational opportunities of the kind VMI offers. Virginia
described VWIL as a "parallel program," and asserted that VWIL
shares VMI's mission of producing "citizen-soldiers" and VMI's
goals of providing "education, military training, mental and
physical discipline, character . . . and leadership development."
Brief for Respondents 24 (internal quotation marks omitted). If the
VWIL program could not "eliminate the discriminatory effects of the
past," could it at least "bar like discrimination in the future"?
See Louisiana, 380 U.S. at 154. A comparison of the programs said
to be "parallel" informs our answer. In exposing the character of,
and differences in, the VMI and VWIL programs, we recapitulate
facts earlier presented. See supra, at 520-523, 526-527.
VWIL affords women no opportunity to experience the rigorous
military training for which VMI is famed. See 766 F. Supp., at
1413-1414 ("No other school in Virginia or in the United States,
public or private, offers the same kind of rigorous military
training as is available at VMI."); id., at 1421 (VMI "is known to
be the most challenging military school in the United States").
Instead, the VWIL program "deemphasize[s]" military education, 44
F.3d, at 1234, and uses a "cooperative method" of education "which
reinforces self-esteem," 852 F. Supp., at 476.
VWIL students participate in ROTC and a "largely ceremonial"
Virginia Corps of Cadets, see 44 F.3d, at 1234, but Virginia
deliberately did not make VWIL a military institute. The VWIL House
is not a military-style residence and VWIL students need not live
together throughout the 4-year program, eat meals together, or wear
uniforms during the school day. See 852 F. Supp., at 477, 495. VWIL
students thus do not experience the "barracks" life "crucial to the
VMI experience," the spartan living arrangements designed to foster
an "egalitarian ethic." See 766 F. Supp., at 1423-1424. "The most
important aspects of the VMI educational experience occur in the
barracks," the District Court found, id., at 1423, yet Virginia
deemed that core experience nonessential, indeed inappropriate, for
training its female citizen-soldiers.
VWIL students receive their "leadership training" in seminars,
externships, and speaker series, see 852 F. Supp., at 477, episodes
and encounters lacking the "physical rigor, mental stress, . . .
minute regulation of behavior, and indoctrination in desirable
values" made hallmarks of VMI's citizen-soldier training, see 766
F. Supp., at 1421. n18 Kept away from the pressures, hazards, and
psychological bonding characteristic of VMI's adversative training,
see id., at 1422, VWIL students will not know the "feeling of
tremendous accomplishment" commonly experienced by VMI's successful
cadets, id., at 1426.
Virginia maintains that these methodological differences are
"justified pedagogically," based on "important differences between
men and women in learning and developmental needs," "psychological
and sociological differences" Virginia describes as "real" and "not
stereotypes." Brief for Respondents 28 (internal quotation marks
omitted). The Task Force charged with developing the leadership
program for women, drawn from the staff and faculty at Mary Baldwin
College, "determined that a military model and, especially VMI's
adversative method, would be wholly inappropriate for educating and
training most women." 852 F. Supp., at 476 (emphasis added). See
also 44 F.3d, at 1233-1234 (noting Task Force conclusion that,
while "some women would be suited to and interested in [a VMI-style
experience]," VMI's adversative method "would not be effective for
women as a group") (emphasis added). The Commonwealth embraced the
Task Force view, as did expert witnesses who testified for
Virginia. See 852 F. Supp., at 480-481.
As earlier stated, see supra, at 541-542, generalizations about
"the way women are," estimates of what is appropriate for most
women, no longer justify denying opportunity to women whose talent
and capacity place them outside the average description. Notably,
Virginia never asserted that VMI's method of education suits most
men. It is also revealing that Virginia accounted for its failure
to make the VWIL experience "the entirely militaristic experience
of VMI" on the ground that VWIL "is planned for women who do not
necessarily expect to pursue military careers." 852 F. Supp., at
478. By that reasoning, VMI's "entirely militaristic" program would
be inappropriate for men in general or as a group, for "only about
15% of VMI cadets enter career military service." See 766 F. Supp.,
at 1432.
In contrast to the generalizations about women on which Virginia
rests, we note again these dispositive realities: VMI's
"implementing methodology" is not "inherently unsuitable to women,"
976 F.2d, at 899; "some women . . . do well under [the] adversative
model," 766 F. Supp., at 1434 (internal quotation marks omitted);
"some women, at least, would want to attend [VMI] if they had the
opportunity," id., at 1414; "some women are capable of all of the
individual activities required of VMI cadets," id., at 1412, and
"can meet the physical standards [VMI] now impose[s] on men," 976
F.2d, at 896. It is on behalf of these women that the United States
has instituted this suit, and it is for them that a remedy must be
crafted, n19 a remedy that will end their exclusion from a
state-supplied educational opportunity for which they are fit, a
decree that will "bar like discrimination in the future."
Louisiana, 380 U.S. at 154.
B
In myriad respects other than military training, VWIL does not
qualify as VMI's equal. VWIL's student body, faculty, course
offerings, and facilities hardly match VMI's. Nor can the VWIL
graduate anticipate the benefits associated with VMI's 157-year
history, the school's prestige, and its influential alumni
network.
Mary Baldwin College, whose degree VWIL students will gain, enrolls
first-year women with an average combined SAT score about 100
points lower than the average score for VMI freshmen. 852 F. Supp.,
at 501. The Mary Baldwin faculty holds "significantly fewer Ph.
D.'s," id., at 502, and receives substantially lower salaries, see
Tr. 158 (testimony of James Lott, Dean of Mary Baldwin College),
than the faculty at VMI.
Mary Baldwin does not offer a VWIL student the range of curricular
choices available to a VMI cadet. VMI awards baccalaureate degrees
in liberal arts, biology, chemistry, civil engineering, electrical
and computer engineering, and mechanical engineering. See 852 F.
Supp., at 503; Virginia Military Institute: More than an Education
11 (Govt. exh. 75, lodged with Clerk of this Court). VWIL students
attend a school that "does not have a math and science focus," 852
F. Supp., at 503; they cannot take at Mary Baldwin any courses in
engineering or the advanced math and physics courses VMI offers,
see id., at 477.
For physical training, Mary Baldwin has "two multi-purpose fields"
and "one gymnasium." Id., at 503. VMI has "an NCAA competition
level indoor track and field facility; a number of multi-purpose
fields; baseball, soccer and lacrosse fields; an obstacle course;
large boxing, wrestling and martial arts facilities; an
11-laps-to-the-mile indoor running course; an indoor pool; indoor
and outdoor rifle ranges; and a football stadium that also contains
a practice field and outdoor track." Ibid.
Although Virginia has represented that it will provide equal
financial support for in-state VWIL students and VMI cadets, id.,
at 483, and the VMI Foundation has agreed to endow VWIL with $
5.4625 million, id., at 499, the difference between the two
schools' financial reserves is pronounced. Mary Baldwin's
endowment, currently about $ 19 million, will gain an additional $
35 million based on future commitments; VMI's current endowment, $
131 million -- the largest public college per-student endowment in
the Nation -- will gain $ 220 million. Id., at 503.
The VWIL student does not graduate with the advantage of a VMI
degree. Her diploma does not unite her with the legions of VMI
"graduates [who] have distinguished themselves" in military and
civilian life. See 976 F.2d, at 892-893. "[VMI] alumni are
exceptionally close to the school," and that closeness accounts, in
part, for VMI's success in attracting applicants. See 766 F. Supp.,
at 1421. A VWIL graduate cannot assume that the "network of
business owners, corporations, VMI graduates and non-graduate
employers . . . interested in hiring VMI graduates," 852 F. Supp.,
at 499, will be equally responsive to her search for employment,
see 44 F.3d, at 1250 (Phillips, J., dissenting) ("the powerful
political and economic ties of the VMI alumni network cannot be
expected to open" for graduates of the fledgling VWIL
program).
Virginia, in sum, while maintaining VMI for men only, has failed to
provide any "comparable single-gender women's institution." Id., at
1241. Instead, the Commonwealth has created a VWIL program fairly
appraised as a "pale shadow" of VMI in terms of the range of
curricular choices and faculty stature, funding, prestige, alumni
support and influence. See id., at 1250 (Phillips, J.,
dissenting).
Virginia's VWIL solution is reminiscent of the remedy Texas
proposed 50 years ago, in response to a state trial court's 1946
ruling that, given the equal protection guarantee, African
Americans could not be denied a legal education at a state
facility. See Sweatt v. Painter, 339 U.S. 629, 94 L. Ed. 1114, 70
S. Ct. 848 (1950). Reluctant to admit African Americans to its
flagship University of Texas Law School, the State set up a
separate school for Heman Sweatt and other black law students. Id.,
at 632. As originally opened, the new school had no independent
faculty or library, and it lacked accreditation. Id., at 633.
Nevertheless, the state trial and appellate courts were satisfied
that the new school offered Sweatt opportunities for the study of
law "substantially equivalent to those offered by the State to
white students at the University of Texas." Id., at 632 (internal
quotation marks omitted).
Before this Court considered the case, the new school had gained "a
faculty of five full-time professors; a student body of 23; a
library of some 16,500 volumes serviced by a full-time staff; a
practice court and legal aid association; and one alumnus who had
become a member of the Texas Bar." Id., at 633. This Court
contrasted resources at the new school with those at the school
from which Sweatt had been excluded. The University of Texas Law
School had a full-time faculty of 16, a student body of 850, a
library containing over 65,000 volumes, scholarship funds, a law
review, and moot court facilities. Id., at 632-633.
More important than the tangible features, the Court emphasized,
are "those qualities which are incapable of objective measurement
but which make for greatness" in a school, including "reputation of
the faculty, experience of the administration, position and
influence of the alumni, standing in the community, traditions and
prestige." Id., at 634. Facing the marked differences reported in
the Sweatt opinion, the Court unanimously ruled that Texas had not
shown "substantial equality in the [separate] educational
opportunities" the State offered. Id., at 633. Accordingly, the
Court held, the Equal Protection Clause required Texas to admit
African Americans to the University of Texas Law School. Id., at
636. In line with Sweatt, we rule here that Virginia has not shown
substantial equality in the separate educational opportunities the
Commonwealth supports at VWIL and VMI.
C
When Virginia tendered its VWIL plan, the Fourth Circuit did not
inquire whether the proposed remedy, approved by the District
Court, placed women denied the VMI advantage in "the position they
would have occupied in the absence of [discrimination]." Milliken,
433 U.S. at 280 (internal quotation marks omitted). Instead, the
Court of Appeals considered whether the Commonwealth could provide,
with fidelity to the equal protection principle, separate and
unequal educational programs for men and women.
The Fourth Circuit acknowledged that "the VWIL degree from Mary
Baldwin College lacks the historical benefit and prestige of a
degree from VMI." 44 F.3d, at 1241. The Court of Appeals further
observed that VMI is "an ongoing and successful institution with a
long history," and there remains no "comparable single-gender
women's institution." Ibid. Nevertheless, the appeals court
declared the substantially different and significantly unequal VWIL
program satisfactory. The court reached that result by revising the
applicable standard of review. The Fourth Circuit displaced the
standard developed in our precedent, see supra, at 532-534, and
substituted a standard of its own invention.
We have earlier described the deferential review in which the Court
of Appeals engaged, see supra, at 528-529, a brand of review
inconsistent with the more exacting standard our precedent
requires, see supra, at 532-534. Quoting in part from Mississippi
Univ. for Women, the Court of Appeals candidly described its own
analysis as one capable of checking a legislative purpose ranked as
"pernicious," but generally according "deference to [the]
legislative will." 44 F.3d, at 1235, 1236. Recognizing that it had
extracted from our decisions a test yielding "little or no scrutiny
of the effect of a classification directed at [single-gender
education]," the Court of Appeals devised another test, a
"substantive comparability" inquiry, id., at 1237, and proceeded to
find that new test satisfied, id., at 1241.
The Fourth Circuit plainly erred in exposing Virginia's VWIL plan
to a deferential analysis, for "all gender-based classifications
today" warrant "heightened scrutiny." See J. E. B., 511 U.S. at
136. Valuable as VWIL may prove for students who seek the program
offered, Virginia's remedy affords no cure at all for the
opportunities and advantages withheld from women who want a VMI
education and can make the grade. See supra, at 549-554. n20 In
sum, Virginia's remedy does not match the constitutional violation;
the Commonwealth has shown no "exceedingly persuasive
justification" for withholding from women qualified for the
experience premier training of the kind VMI affords.
VII
A generation ago, "the authorities controlling Virginia higher
education," despite long established tradition, agreed "to innovate
and favorably entertained the [then] relatively new idea that there
must be no discrimination by sex in offering educational
opportunity." Kirstein, 309 F. Supp., at 186. Commencing in 1970,
Virginia opened to women "educational opportunities at the
Charlottesville campus that [were] not afforded in other
[state-operated] institutions." Id., at 187; see supra, at 538. A
federal court approved the Commonwealth's innovation, emphasizing
that the University of Virginia "offered courses of instruction . .
. not available elsewhere." 309 F. Supp., at 187. The court further
noted: "There exists at Charlottesville a 'prestige' factor [not
paralleled in] other Virginia educational institutions."
Ibid.
VMI, too, offers an educational opportunity no other Virginia
institution provides, and the school's "prestige" -- associated
with its success in developing "citizen-soldiers" -- is unequaled.
Virginia has closed this facility to its daughters and, instead,
has devised for them a "parallel program," with a faculty less
impressively credentialed and less well paid, more limited course
offerings, fewer opportunities for military training and for
scientific specialization. Cf. Sweatt, 339 U.S. at 633. VMI, beyond
question, "possesses to a far greater degree" than the VWIL program
"those qualities which are incapable of objective measurement but
which make for greatness in a . . . school," including "position
and influence of the alumni, standing in the community, traditions
and prestige." Id., at 634. Women seeking and fit for a VMI-quality
education cannot be offered anything less, under the Commonwealth's
obligation to afford them genuinely equal protection.
A prime part of the history of our Constitution, historian Richard
Morris recounted, is the story of the extension of constitutional
rights and protections to people once ignored or excluded. n21
VMI's story continued as our comprehension of "We the People"
expanded. See supra, at 546, n. 16. There is no reason to believe
that the admission of women capable of all the activities required
of VMI cadets would destroy the Institute rather than enhance its
capacity to serve the "more perfect Union."
* * *
For the reasons stated, the initial judgment of the Court of
Appeals, 976 F.2d 890 (CA4 1992), is affirmed, the final judgment
of the Court of Appeals, 44 F.3d 1229 (CA4 1995), is reversed, and
the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
JUSTICE THOMAS took no part in the consideration or decision of
this case.
CHIEF JUSTICE REHNQUIST, concurring in the judgment.
The Court holds first that Virginia violates the Equal Protection
Clause by maintaining the Virginia Military Institute's (VMI's)
all-male admissions policy, and second that establishing the
Virginia Women's Institute for Leadership (VWIL) program does not
remedy that violation. While I agree with these conclusions, I
disagree with the Court's analysis and so I write separately.
I
Two decades ago in Craig v. Boren, 429 U.S. 190, 197, 50 L. Ed. 2d
397, 97 S. Ct. 451 (1976), we announced that "to withstand
constitutional challenge, . . . classifications by gender must
serve important governmental objectives and must be substantially
related to achievement of those objectives." We have adhered to
that standard of scrutiny ever since. See Califano v. Goldfarb, 430
U.S. 199, 210-211, 51 L. Ed. 2d 270, 97 S. Ct. 1021 (1977);
Califano v. Webster, 430 U.S. 313, 316-317, 51 L. Ed. 2d 360, 97 S.
Ct. 1192 (1977); Orr v. Orr, 440 U.S. 268, 279, 59 L. Ed. 2d 306,
99 S. Ct. 1102 (1979); Caban v. Mohammed, 441 U.S. 380, 388, 60 L.
Ed. 2d 297, 99 S. Ct. 1760 (1979); Davis v. Passman, 442 U.S. 228,
234-235, 235, n. 9, 60 L. Ed. 2d 846, 99 S. Ct. 2264 (1979);
Personnel Administrator of Mass. v. Feeney, 442 U.S. 256, 273, 60
L. Ed. 2d 870, 99 S. Ct. 2282 (1979); Califano v. Westcott, 443
U.S. 76, 85, 61 L. Ed. 2d 382, 99 S. Ct. 2655 (1979); Wengler v.
Druggists Mut. Ins. Co., 446 U.S. 142, 150, 64 L. Ed. 2d 107, 100
S. Ct. 1540 (1980); Kirchberg v. Feenstra, 450 U.S. 455, 459-460,
67 L. Ed. 2d 428, 101 S. Ct. 1195 (1981); Michael M. v. Superior
Court, Sonoma Cty., 450 U.S. 464, 469, 67 L. Ed. 2d 437, 101 S. Ct.
1200 (1981); Mississippi Univ. for Women v. Hogan, 458 U.S. 718,
724, 73 L. Ed. 2d 1090, 102 S. Ct. 3331 (1982); Heckler v. Mathews,
465 U.S. 728, 744, 79 L. Ed. 2d 646, 104 S. Ct. 1387 (1984); J. E.
B. v. Alabama ex rel. T. B., 511 U.S. 127, 137, n. 6, 128 L. Ed. 2d
89, 114 S. Ct. 1419 (1994). While the majority adheres to this test
today, ante, at 524, 533, it also says that the Commonwealth must
demonstrate an "'exceedingly persuasive justification'" to support
a gender-based classification. See ante, at 524, 529, 530, 531,
533, 534, 545, 546, 556. It is unfortunate that the Court thereby
introduces an element of uncertainty respecting the appropriate
test.
While terms like "important governmental objective" and
"substantially related" are hardly models of precision, they have
more content and specificity than does the phrase "exceedingly
persuasive justification." That phrase is best confined, as it was
first used, as an observation on the difficulty of meeting the
applicable test, not as a formulation of the test itself. See, e.
g., Feeney, supra, at 273 ("These precedents dictate that any state
law overtly or covertly designed to prefer males over females in
public employment require an exceedingly persuasive
justification"). To avoid introducing potential confusion, I would
have adhered more closely to our traditional, "firmly established,"
Hogan, supra, at 723; Heckler, supra, at 744, standard that a
gender-based classification "must bear a close and substantial
relationship to important governmental objectives." Feeney, supra,
at 273.
Our cases dealing with gender discrimination also require that the
proffered purpose for the challenged law be the actual purpose. See
ante, at 533, 535-536. It is on this ground that the Court rejects
the first of two justifications Virginia offers for VMI's
single-sex admissions policy, namely, the goal of diversity among
its public educational institutions. While I ultimately agree that
the Commonwealth has not carried the day with this justification, I
disagree with the Court's method of analyzing the issue.
VMI was founded in 1839, and, as the Court notes, ante, at 536-537,
admission was limited to men because under the then-prevailing view
men, not women, were destined for higher education. However
misguided this point of view may be by present-day standards, it
surely was not unconstitutional in 1839. The adoption of the
Fourteenth Amendment, with its Equal Protection Clause, was nearly
30 years in the future. The interpretation of the Equal Protection
Clause to require heightened scrutiny for gender discrimination was
yet another century away.
Long after the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment, and well into
this century, legal distinctions between men and women were thought
to raise no question under the Equal Protection Clause. The Court
refers to our decision in Goesaert v. Cleary, 335 U.S. 464, 93 L.
Ed. 163, 69 S. Ct. 198 (1948). Likewise representing that now
abandoned view was Hoyt v. Florida, 368 U.S. 57, 7 L. Ed. 2d 118,
82 S. Ct. 159 (1961), where the Court upheld a Florida system of
jury selection in which men were automatically placed on jury
lists, but women were placed there only if they expressed an
affirmative desire to serve. The Court noted that despite advances
in women's opportunities, the "woman is still regarded as the
center of home and family life." Id., at 62.
Then, in 1971, we decided Reed v. Reed, 404 U.S. 71, 30 L. Ed. 2d
225, 92 S. Ct. 251, which the Court correctly refers to as a
seminal case. But its facts have nothing to do with admissions to
any sort of educational institution. An Idaho statute governing the
administration of estates and probate preferred men to women if the
other statutory qualifications were equal. The statute's purpose,
according to the Idaho Supreme Court, was to avoid hearings to
determine who was better qualified as between a man and a woman
both applying for letters of administration. This Court held that
such a rule violated the Fourteenth Amendment because "a mandatory
preference to members of either sex over members of the other,
merely to accomplish the elimination of hearings," was an
"arbitrary legislative choice forbidden by the Equal Protection
Clause." Id., at 76. The brief opinion in Reed made no mention of
either Goesaert or Hoyt.
Even at the time of our decision in Reed v. Reed, therefore,
Virginia and VMI were scarcely on notice that its holding would be
extended across the constitutional board. They were entitled to
believe that "one swallow doesn't make a summer" and await further
developments. Those developments were 11 years in coming. In
Mississippi Univ. for Women v. Hogan, supra, a case actually
involving a single-sex admissions policy in higher education, the
Court held that the exclusion of men from a nursing program
violated the Equal Protection Clause. This holding did place
Virginia on notice that VMI's men-only admissions policy was open
to serious question.
The VMI Board of Visitors, in response, appointed a Mission Study
Committee to examine "the legality and wisdom of VMI's single-sex
policy in light of" Hogan. 766 F. Supp. 1407, 1427 (WD Va. 1991).
But the committee ended up cryptically recommending against
changing VMI's status as a single-sex college. After three years of
study, the committee found "'no information'" that would warrant a
change in VMI's status. Id., at 1429. Even the District Court,
ultimately sympathetic to VMI's position, found that "the Report
provided very little indication of how [its] conclusion was
reached" and that "the one and one-half pages in the committee's
final report devoted to analyzing the information it obtained
primarily focuses on anticipated difficulties in attracting females
to VMI." Ibid. The reasons given in the report for not changing the
policy were the changes that admission of women to VMI would
require, and the likely effect of those changes on the institution.
That VMI would have to change is simply not helpful in addressing
the constitutionality of the status after Hogan.
Before this Court, Virginia has sought to justify VMI's single-sex
admissions policy primarily on the basis that diversity in
education is desirable, and that while most of the public
institutions of higher learning in the Commonwealth are
coeducational, there should also be room for single-sex
institutions. I agree with the Court that there is scant evidence
in the record that this was the real reason that Virginia decided
to maintain VMI as men only. * But, unlike the majority, I would
consider only evidence that postdates our decision in Hogan, and
would draw no negative inferences from the Commonwealth's actions
before that time. I think that after Hogan, the Commonwealth was
entitled to reconsider its policy with respect to VMI, and not to
have earlier justifications, or lack thereof, held against
it.
Even if diversity in educational opportunity were the
Commonwealth's actual objective, the Commonwealth's position would
still be problematic. The difficulty with its position is that the
diversity benefited only one sex; there was single-sex public
education available for men at VMI, but no corresponding single-sex
public education available for women. When Hogan placed Virginia on
notice that VMI's admissions policy possibly was unconstitutional,
VMI could have dealt with the problem by admitting women; but its
governing body felt strongly that the admission of women would have
seriously harmed the institution's educational approach. Was there
something else the Commonwealth could have done to avoid an equal
protection violation? Since the Commonwealth did nothing, we do not
have to definitively answer that question.
I do not think, however, that the Commonwealth's options were as
limited as the majority may imply. The Court cites, without
expressly approving it, a statement from the opinion of the
dissenting judge in the Court of Appeals, to the effect that the
Commonwealth could have "simultaneously opened single-gender
undergraduate institutions having substantially comparable
curricular and extra-curricular programs, funding, physical plant,
administration and support services, and faculty and library
resources." Ante, at 529-530 (internal quotation marks omitted). If
this statement is thought to exclude other possibilities, it is too
stringent a requirement. VMI had been in operation for over a
century and a half, and had an established, successful, and devoted
group of alumni. No legislative wand could instantly call into
existence a similar institution for women; and it would be a
tremendous loss to scrap VMI's history and tradition. In the words
of Grover Cleveland's second inaugural address, the Commonwealth
faced a condition, not a theory. And it was a condition that had
been brought about, not through defiance of decisions construing
gender bias under the Equal Protection Clause, but, until the
decision in Hogan, a condition that had not appeared to offend the
Constitution. Had Virginia made a genuine effort to devote
comparable public resources to a facility for women, and followed
through on such a plan, it might well have avoided an equal
protection violation. I do not believe the Commonwealth was faced
with the stark choice of either admitting women to VMI, on the one
hand, or abandoning VMI and starting from scratch for both men and
women, on the other.
But, as I have noted, neither the governing board of VMI nor the
Commonwealth took any action after 1982. If diversity in the form
of single-sex, as well as coeducational, institutions of higher
learning were to be available to Virginians, that diversity had to
be available to women as well as to men.
The dissent criticizes me for "disregarding the four all-women's
private colleges in Virginia (generously assisted by public
funds)." Post, at 595. The private women's colleges are treated by
the Commonwealth exactly as all other private schools are treated,
which includes the provision of tuition-assistance grants to
Virginia residents. Virginia gives no special support to the
women's single-sex education. But obviously, the same is not true
for men's education. Had the Commonwealth provided the kind of
support for the private women's schools that it provides for VMI,
this may have been a very different case. For in so doing, the
Commonwealth would have demonstrated that its interest in providing
a single-sex education for men was to some measure matched by an
interest in providing the same opportunity for women.
Virginia offers a second justification for the single-sex
admissions policy: maintenance of the adversative method. I agree
with the Court that this justification does not serve an important
governmental objective. A State does not have substantial interest
in the adversative methodology unless it is pedagogically
beneficial. While considerable evidence shows that a single-sex
education is pedagogically beneficial for some students, see 766 F.
Supp., at 1414, and hence a State may have a valid interest in
promoting that methodology, there is no similar evidence in the
record that an adversative method is pedagogically beneficial or is
any more likely to produce character traits than other
methodologies.
II
The Court defines the constitutional violation in these cases as
"the categorical exclusion of women from an extraordinary
educational opportunity afforded to men." Ante, at 547. By defining
the violation in this way, and by emphasizing that a remedy for a
constitutional violation must place the victims of discrimination
in "'the position they would have occupied in the absence of
[discrimination],'" ibid., the Court necessarily implies that the
only adequate remedy would be the admission of women to the
all-male institution. As the foregoing discussion suggests, I would
not define the violation in this way; it is not the "exclusion of
women" that violates the Equal Protection Clause, but the
maintenance of an all-men school without providing any -- much less
a comparable -- institution for women.
Accordingly, the remedy should not necessarily require either the
admission of women to VMI or the creation of a VMI clone for women.
An adequate remedy in my opinion might be a demonstration by
Virginia that its interest in educating men in a single-sex
environment is matched by its interest in educating women in a
single-sex institution. To demonstrate such, the Commonwealth does
not need to create two institutions with the same number of faculty
Ph. D.'s, similar SAT scores, or comparable athletic fields. See
ante, at 551-552. Nor would it necessarily require that the women's
institution offer the same curriculum as the men's; one could be
strong in computer science, the other could be strong in liberal
arts. It would be a sufficient remedy, I think, if the two
institutions offered the same quality of education and were of the
same overall caliber.
If a State decides to create single-sex programs, the State would,
I expect, consider the public's interest and demand in designing
curricula. And rightfully so. But the State should avoid assuming
demand based on stereotypes; it must not assume a priori, without
evidence, that there would be no interest in a women's school of
civil engineering, or in a men's school of nursing.
In the end, the women's institution Virginia proposes, VWIL, fails
as a remedy, because it is distinctly inferior to the existing
men's institution and will continue to be for the foreseeable
future. VWIL simply is not, in any sense, the institution that VMI
is. In particular, VWIL is a program appended to a private college,
not a self-standing institution; and VWIL is substantially
underfunded as compared to VMI. I therefore ultimately agree with
the Court that Virginia has not provided an adequate remedy.
JUSTICE SCALIA, dissenting.
Today the Court shuts down an institution that has served the
people of the Commonwealth of Virginia with pride and distinction
for over a century and a half. To achieve that desired result, it
rejects (contrary to our established practice) the factual findings
of two courts below, sweeps aside the precedents of this Court, and
ignores the history of our people. As to facts: It explicitly
rejects the finding that there exist "gender-based developmental
differences" supporting Virginia's restriction of the "adversative"
method to only a men's institution, and the finding that the
all-male composition of the Virginia Military Institute (VMI) is
essential to that institution's character. As to precedent: It
drastically revises our established standards for reviewing
sex-based classifications. And as to history: It counts for nothing
the long tradition, enduring down to the present, of men's military
colleges supported by both States and the Federal Government.
Much of the Court's opinion is devoted to deprecating the
closed-mindedness of our forebears with regard to women's
education, and even with regard to the treatment of women in areas
that have nothing to do with education. Closed minded they were --
as every age is, including our own, with regard to matters it
cannot guess, because it simply does not consider them debatable.
The virtue of a democratic system with a First Amendment is that it
readily enables the people, over time, to be persuaded that what
they took for granted is not so, and to change their laws
accordingly. That system is destroyed if the smug assurances of
each age are removed from the democratic process and written into
the Constitution. So to counterbalance the Court's criticism of our
ancestors, let me say a word in their praise: They left us free to
change. The same cannot be said of this most illiberal Court, which
has embarked on a course of inscribing one after another of the
current preferences of the society (and in some cases only the
counter majoritarian preferences of the society's law-trained
elite) into our Basic Law. Today it enshrines the notion that no
substantial educational value is to be served by an all-men's
military academy -- so that the decision by the people of Virginia
to maintain such an institution denies equal protection to women
who cannot attend that institution but can attend others. Since it
is entirely clear that the Constitution of the United States -- the
old one -- takes no sides in this educational debate, I
dissent.
I
I shall devote most of my analysis to evaluating the Court's
opinion on the basis of our current equal protection jurisprudence,
which regards this Court as free to evaluate everything under the
sun by applying one of three tests: "rational basis" scrutiny,
intermediate scrutiny, or strict scrutiny. These tests are no more
scientific than their names suggest, and a further element of
randomness is added by the fact that it is largely up to us which
test will be applied in each case. Strict scrutiny, we have said,
is reserved for state "classifications based on race or national
origin and classifications affecting fundamental rights," Clark v.
Jeter, 486 U.S. 456, 461, 100 L. Ed. 2d 465, 108 S. Ct. 1910 (1988)
(citation omitted). It is my position that the term "fundamental
rights" should be limited to "interest[s] traditionally protected
by our society," Michael H. v. Gerald D., 491 U.S. 110, 122, 105 L.
Ed. 2d 91, 109 S. Ct. 2333 (1989) (plurality opinion of SCALIA,
J.); but the Court has not accepted that view, so that strict
scrutiny will be applied to the deprivation of whatever sort of
right we consider "fundamental." We have no established criterion
for "intermediate scrutiny" either, but essentially apply it when
it seems like a good idea to load the dice. So far it has been
applied to content-neutral restrictions that place an incidental
burden on speech, to disabilities attendant to illegitimacy, and to
discrimination on the basis of sex. See, e. g., Turner Broadcasting
System, Inc. v. FCC, 512 U.S. 622, 662, 129 L. Ed. 2d 497, 114 S.
Ct. 2445 (1994); Mills v. Habluetzel, 456 U.S. 91, 98-99, 71 L. Ed.
2d 770, 102 S. Ct. 1549 (1982); Craig v. Boren, 429 U.S. 190, 197,
50 L. Ed. 2d 397, 97 S. Ct. 451 (1976).
I have no problem with a system of abstract tests such as rational
basis, intermediate, and strict scrutiny (though I think we can do
better than applying strict scrutiny and intermediate scrutiny
whenever we feel like it). Such formulas are essential to
evaluating whether the new restrictions that a changing society
constantly imposes upon private conduct comport with that "equal
protection" our society has always accorded in the past. But in my
view the function of this Court is to preserve our society's values
regarding (among other things) equal protection, not to revise
them; to prevent backsliding from the degree of restriction the
Constitution imposed upon democratic government, not to prescribe,
on our own authority, progressively higher degrees. For that reason
it is my view that, whatever abstract tests we may choose to
devise, they cannot supersede -- and indeed ought to be crafted so
as to reflect -- those constant and unbroken national traditions
that embody the people's understanding of ambiguous constitutional
texts. More specifically, it is my view that "when a practice not
expressly prohibited by the text of the Bill of Rights bears the
endorsement of a long tradition of open, widespread, and
unchallenged use that dates back to the beginning of the Republic,
we have no proper basis for striking it down." Rutan v. Republican
Party of Ill., 497 U.S. 62, 95, 111 L. Ed. 2d 52, 110 S. Ct. 2729
(1990) (SCALIA, J., dissenting). The same applies, mutatis
mutandis, to a practice asserted to be in violation of the
post-Civil War Fourteenth Amendment. See, e. g., Burnham v.
Superior Court of Cal., County of Marin, 495 U.S. 604, 109 L. Ed.
2d 631, 110 S. Ct. 2105 (1990) (plurality opinion of SCALIA, J.)
(Due Process Clause); J. E. B. v. Alabama ex rel. T. B., 511 U.S.
127, 156-163, 128 L. Ed. 2d 89, 114 S. Ct. 1419 (1994) (SCALIA, J.,
dissenting) (Equal Protection Clause); Planned Parenthood of
Southeastern Pa. v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833, 979-984, 1000-1001, 120 L.
Ed. 2d 674, 112 S. Ct. 2791 (1992) (SCALIA, J., dissenting)
(various alleged "penumbras").
The all-male constitution of VMI comes squarely within such a
governing tradition. Founded by the Commonwealth of Virginia in
1839 and continuously maintained by it since, VMI has always
admitted only men. And in that regard it has not been unusual. For
almost all of VMI's more than a century and a half of existence,
its single-sex status reflected the uniform practice for
government-supported military colleges. Another famous Southern
institution, The Citadel, has existed as a state-funded school of
South Carolina since 1842. And all the federal military colleges --
West Point, the Naval Academy at Annapolis, and even the Air Force
Academy, which was not established until 1954 -- admitted only
males for most of their history. Their admission of women in 1976
(upon which the Court today relies, see ante, at 544-545, nn. 13,
15) came not by court decree, but because the people, through their
elected representatives, decreed a change. See, e. g.,
§ 803(a), 89 Stat. 537, note following 10 U.S.C.
§ 4342. In other words, the tradition of having
government-funded military schools for men is as well rooted in the
traditions of this country as the tradition of sending only men
into military combat. The people may decide to change the one
tradition, like the other, through democratic processes; but the
assertion that either tradition has been unconstitutional through
the centuries is not law, but politics-smuggled-into-law.
And the same applies, more broadly, to single-sex education in
general, which, as I shall discuss, is threatened by today's
decision with the cutoff of all state and federal support.
Government-run nonmilitary educational institutions for the two
sexes have until very recently also been part of our national
tradition. "[It is] coeducation, historically, [that] is a novel
educational theory. From grade school through high school, college,
and graduate and professional training, much of the Nation's
population during much of our history has been educated in sexually
segregated classrooms." Mississippi Univ. for Women v. Hogan, 458
U.S. 718, 736, 73 L. Ed. 2d 1090, 102 S. Ct. 3331 (1982) (Powell,
J., dissenting); see id., at 736-739. These traditions may of
course be changed by the democratic decisions of the people, as
they largely have been.
Today, however, change is forced upon Virginia, and reversion to
single-sex education is prohibited nationwide, not by democratic
processes but by order of this Court. Even while bemoaning the
sorry, bygone days of "fixed notions" concerning women's education,
see ante, at 536-537, and n. 10, 537-539, 542-545, the Court favors
current notions so fixedly that it is willing to write them into
the Constitution of the United States by application of
custom-built "tests." This is not the interpretation of a
Constitution, but the creation of one.
II
To reject the Court's disposition today, however, it is not
necessary to accept my view that the Court's made-up tests cannot
displace longstanding national traditions as the primary
determinant of what the Constitution means. It is only necessary to
apply honestly the test the Court has been applying to sex-based
classifications for the past two decades. It is well settled, as
JUSTICE O'CONNOR stated some time ago for a unanimous Court, that
we evaluate a statutory classification based on sex under a
standard that lies "between the extremes of rational basis review
and strict scrutiny." Clark v. Jeter, 486 U.S. at 461. We have
denominated this standard "intermediate scrutiny" and under it have
inquired whether the statutory classification is "substantially
related to an important governmental objective." Ibid. See, e. g.,
Heckler v. Mathews, 465 U.S. 728, 744, 79 L. Ed. 2d 646, 104 S. Ct.
1387 (1984); Wengler v. Druggists Mut. Ins. Co., 446 U.S. 142, 150,
64 L. Ed. 2d 107, 100 S. Ct. 1540 (1980); Craig v. Boren, 429 U.S.
at 197.
Before I proceed to apply this standard to VMI, I must comment upon
the manner in which the Court avoids doing so. Notwithstanding our
above-described precedents and their "'firmly established
principles,'" Heckler, supra, at 744 (quoting Hogan, supra, at
723), the United States urged us to hold in this litigation "that
strict scrutiny is the correct constitutional standard for
evaluating classifications that deny opportunities to individuals
based on their sex." Brief for United States in No. 94-2107, p. 16.
(This was in flat contradiction of the Government's position below,
which was, in its own words, to "state unequivocally that the
appropriate standard in this case is 'intermediate scrutiny.'" 2
Record, Doc. No. 88, p. 3 (emphasis added).) The Court, while
making no reference to the Government's argument, effectively
accepts it.
Although the Court in two places recites the test as stated in
Hogan, see ante, at 524, 532-533, which asks whether the State has
demonstrated "that the classification serves important governmental
objectives and that the discriminatory means employed are
substantially related to the achievement of those objectives," 458
U.S. at 724 (internal quotation marks omitted), the Court never
answers the question presented in anything resembling that form.
When it engages in analysis, the Court instead prefers the phrase
"exceedingly persuasive justification" from Hogan. The Court's nine
invocations of that phrase, see ante, at 524, 529, 530, 531, 533,
534, 545, 546, 556, and even its fanciful description of that
imponderable as "the core instruction" of the Court's decisions in
J. E. B. v. Alabama ex rel. T. B., 511 U.S. 127, 128 L. Ed. 2d 89,
114 S. Ct. 1419 (1994), and Hogan, supra, see ante, at 531, would
be unobjectionable if the Court acknowledged that whether a
"justification" is "exceedingly persuasive" must be assessed by
asking "[whether] the classification serves important governmental
objectives and [whether] the discriminatory means employed are
substantially related to the achievement of those objectives."
Instead, however, the Court proceeds to interpret "exceedingly
persuasive justification" in a fashion that contradicts the
reasoning of Hogan and our other precedents.
That is essential to the Court's result, which can only be achieved
by establishing that intermediate scrutiny is not survived if there
are some women interested in attending VMI, capable of undertaking
its activities, and able to meet its physical demands. Thus, the
Court summarizes its holding as follows:
"In contrast to the generalizations about women on which Virginia
rests, we note again these dispositive realities: VMI's
implementing methodology is not inherently unsuitable to women;
some women do well under the adversative model; some women, at
least, would want to attend VMI if they had the opportunity; some
women are capable of all of the individual activities required of
VMI cadets and can meet the physical standards VMI now imposes on
men." Ante, at 550 (internal quotation marks, citations, and
punctuation omitted; emphasis added). Similarly, the Court states
that "the Commonwealth's justification for excluding all women from
'citizen-soldier' training for which some are qualified . . .
cannot rank as 'exceedingly persuasive' . . . ." Ante, at 545.
n1
-----------------------------------
Footnotes
n1 Accord, ante, at 541 ("In sum . . ., neither the goal of
producing citizen-soldiers, VMI's raison d'etre, nor VMI's
implementing methodology is inherently unsuitable to women")
(internal quotation marks omitted; emphasis added); ante, at 542
("The question is whether the Commonwealth can constitutionally
deny to women who have the will and capacity, the training and
attendant opportunities that VMI uniquely affords"); ante, at
547-548 (the "violation" is that "equal protection [has been]
denied to women ready, willing, and able to benefit from
educational opportunities of the kind VMI offers"); ante, at 550
("As earlier stated, see supra, at 541-542, generalizations about
'the way women are,' estimates of what is appropriate for most
women, no longer justify denying opportunity to women whose talent
and capacity place them outside the average description").
Only the amorphous "exceedingly persuasive justification" phrase,
and not the standard elaboration of intermediate scrutiny, can be
made to yield this conclusion that VMI's single-sex composition is
unconstitutional because there exist several women (or, one would
have to conclude under the Court's reasoning, a single woman)
willing and able to undertake VMI's program. Intermediate scrutiny
has never required a least-restrictive-means analysis, but only a
"substantial relation" between the classification and the state
interests that it serves. Thus, in Califano v. Webster, 430 U.S.
313, 51 L. Ed. 2d 360, 97 S. Ct. 1192 (1977) (per curiam), we
upheld a congressional statute that provided higher Social Security
benefits for women than for men. We reasoned that "women . . . as
such have been unfairly hindered from earning as much as men," but
we did not require proof that each woman so benefited had suffered
discrimination or that each disadvantaged man had not; it was
sufficient that even under the former congressional scheme "women
on the average received lower retirement benefits than men." Id.,
at 318, and n. 5 (emphasis added). The reasoning in our other
intermediate-scrutiny cases has similarly required only a
substantial relation between end and means, not a perfect fit. In
Rostker v. Goldberg, 453 U.S. 57, 69 L. Ed. 2d 478, 101 S. Ct. 2646
(1981), we held that selective-service registration could
constitutionally exclude women, because even "assuming that a small
number of women could be drafted for noncombat roles, Congress
simply did not consider it worth the added burdens of including
women in draft and registration plans." Id., at 81. In Metro
Broadcasting, Inc. v. FCC, 497 U.S. 547, 579, 582-583, 111 L. Ed.
2d 445, 110 S. Ct. 2997 (1990), overruled on other grounds, Adarand
Constructors, Inc. v. Pena, 515 U.S. 200, 227, 132 L. Ed. 2d 158,
115 S. Ct. 2097 (1995), we held that a classification need not be
accurate "in every case" to survive intermediate scrutiny so long
as, "in the aggregate," it advances the underlying objective. There
is simply no support in our cases for the notion that a sex-based
classification is invalid unless it relates to characteristics that
hold true in every instance.
Not content to execute a de facto abandonment of the intermediate
scrutiny that has been our standard for sex-based classifications
for some two decades, the Court purports to reserve the question
whether, even in principle, a higher standard (i. e., strict
scrutiny) should apply. "The Court has," it says, "thus far
reserved most stringent judicial scrutiny for classifications based
on race or national origin . . .," ante, at 532, n. 6 (emphasis
added); and it describes our earlier cases as having done no more
than decline to "equate gender classifications, for all purposes,
to classifications based on race or national origin," ante, at 532
(emphasis added). The wonderful thing about these statements is
that they are not actually false -- just as it would not be
actually false to say that "our cases have thus far reserved the
'beyond a reasonable doubt' standard of proof for criminal cases,"
or that "we have not equated tort actions, for all purposes, to
criminal prosecutions." But the statements are misleading, insofar
as they suggest that we have not already categorically held strict
scrutiny to be inapplicable to sex-based classifications. See, e.
g., Heckler v. Mathews, 465 U.S. 728, 79 L. Ed. 2d 646, 104 S. Ct.
1387 (1984) (upholding state action after applying only
intermediate scrutiny); Michael M. v. Superior Court, Sonoma Cty.,
450 U.S. 464, 67 L. Ed. 2d 437, 101 S. Ct. 1200 (1981) (same)
(plurality and both concurring opinions); Califano v. Webster,
supra (same) (per curiam). And the statements are irresponsible,
insofar as they are calculated to destabilize current law. Our task
is to clarify the law -- not to muddy the waters, and not to exact
overcompliance by intimidation. The States and the Federal
Government are entitled to know before they act the standard to
which they will be held, rather than be compelled to guess about
the outcome of Supreme Court peek-a-boo.
The Court's intimations are particularly out of place because it is
perfectly clear that, if the question of the applicable standard of
review for sex-based classifications were to be regarded as an
appropriate subject for reconsideration, the stronger argument
would be not for elevating the standard to strict scrutiny, but for
reducing it to rational-basis review. The latter certainly has a
firmer foundation in our past jurisprudence: Whereas no majority of
the Court has ever applied strict scrutiny in a case involving
sex-based classifications, we routinely applied rational-basis
review until the 1970's, see, e. g., Hoyt v. Florida, 368 U.S. 57,
7 L. Ed. 2d 118, 82 S. Ct. 159 (1961); Goesaert v. Cleary, 335 U.S.
464, 93 L. Ed. 163, 69 S. Ct. 198 (1948). And of course normal,
rational-basis review of sex-based classifications would be much
more in accord with the genesis of heightened standards of judicial
review, the famous footnote in United States v. Carolene Products
Co., 304 U.S. 144, 82 L. Ed. 1234, 58 S. Ct. 778 (1938), which said
(intimatingly) that we did not have to inquire in the case at
hand"whether prejudice against discrete and insular minorities may
be a special condition, which tends seriously to curtail the
operation of those political processes ordinarily to be relied upon
to protect minorities, and which may call for a correspondingly
more searching judicial inquiry." Id., at 152-153, n. 4.It is hard
to consider women a "discrete and insular minority" unable to
employ the "political processes ordinarily to be relied upon," when
they constitute a majority of the electorate. And the suggestion
that they are incapable of exerting that political power smacks of
the same paternalism that the Court so roundly condemns. See, e.
g., ante, at 536-537, 542-545 (and accompanying notes). Moreover, a
long list of legislation proves the proposition false. See, e. g.,
Equal Pay Act of 1963, 29 U.S.C. § 206(d); Title VII of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2;
Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, 20 U.S.C.
§ 1681; Women's Business Ownership Act of 1988, Pub. L.
100-533, 102 Stat. 2689; Violence Against Women Act of 1994, Pub.
L. 103-322, Title IV, 108 Stat. 1902.
III
With this explanation of how the Court has succeeded in making its
analysis seem orthodox -- and indeed, if intimations are to be
believed, even overly generous to VMI -- I now proceed to describe
how the analysis should have been conducted. The question to be
answered, I repeat, is whether the exclusion of women from VMI is
"substantially related to an important governmental
objective."
A
It is beyond question that Virginia has an important state interest
in providing effective college education for its citizens. That
single-sex instruction is an approach substantially related to that
interest should be evident enough from the long and continuing
history in this country of men's and women's colleges. But beyond
that, as the Court of Appeals here stated: "That single-gender
education at the college level is beneficial to both sexes is a
fact established in this case." 44 F.3d 1229, 1238 (CA4 1995)
(emphasis added).
The evidence establishing that fact was overwhelming -- indeed,
"virtually uncontradicted" in the words of the court that received
the evidence, 766 F. Supp. 1407, 1415 (WD Va. 1991). As an initial
matter, Virginia demonstrated at trial that "[a] substantial body
of contemporary scholarship and research supports the proposition
that, although males and females have significant areas of
developmental overlap, they also have differing developmental needs
that are deep-seated." Id., at 1434. While no one questioned that
for many students a coeducational environment was nonetheless not
inappropriate, that could not obscure the demonstrated benefits of
single-sex colleges. For example, the District Court stated as
follows:
"One empirical study in evidence, not questioned by any expert,
demonstrates that single-sex colleges provide better educational
experiences than coeducational institutions. Students of both sexes
become more academically involved, interact with faculty
frequently, show larger increases in intellectual self-esteem and
are more satisfied with practically all aspects of college
experience (the sole exception is social life) compared with their
counterparts in coeducational institutions. Attendance at an
all-male college substantially increases the likelihood that a
student will carry out career plans in law, business and college
teaching, and also has a substantial positive effect on starting
salaries in business. Women's colleges increase the chances that
those who attend will obtain positions of leadership, complete the
baccalaureate degree, and aspire to higher degrees." Id., at
1412.See also id., at 1434-1435 (factual findings). "In the light
of this very substantial authority favoring single-sex education,"
the District Court concluded that "the VMI Board's decision to
maintain an all-male institution is fully justified even without
taking into consideration the other unique features of VMI's
teaching and training." Id., at 1412. This finding alone, which
even this Court cannot dispute, see ante, at 535, should be
sufficient to demonstrate the constitutionality of VMI's all-male
composition.
But besides its single-sex constitution, VMI is different from
other colleges in another way. It employs a "distinctive
educational method," sometimes referred to as the "adversative, or
doubting, model of education." 766 F. Supp., at 1413, 1421.
"Physical rigor, mental stress, absolute equality of treatment,
absence of privacy, minute regulation of behavior, and
indoctrination in desirable values are the salient attributes of
the VMI educational experience." Id., at 1421. No one contends that
this method is appropriate for all individuals; education is not a
"one size fits all" business. Just as a State may wish to support
junior colleges, vocational institutes, or a law school that
emphasizes case practice instead of classroom study, so too a
State's decision to maintain within its system one school that
provides the adversative method is "substantially related" to its
goal of good education. Moreover, it was uncontested that "if the
state were to establish a women's VMI-type [i. e., adversative]
program, the program would attract an insufficient number of
participants to make the program work," 44 F.3d, at 1241; and it
was found by the District Court that if Virginia were to include
women in VMI, the school "would eventually find it necessary to
drop the adversative system altogether," 766 F. Supp., at 1413.
Thus, Virginia's options were an adversative method that excludes
women or no adversative method at all.
There can be no serious dispute that, as the District Court found,
single-sex education and a distinctive educational method
"represent legitimate contributions to diversity in the Virginia
higher education system." Ibid. As a theoretical matter, Virginia's
educational interest would have been best served (insofar as the
two factors we have mentioned are concerned) by six different types
of public colleges -- an all-men's, an all-women's, and a
coeducational college run in the "adversative method," and an
all-men's, an all-women's, and a coeducational college run in the
"traditional method." But as a practical matter, of course,
Virginia's financial resources, like any State's, are not
limitless, and the Commonwealth must select among the available
options. Virginia thus has decided to fund, in addition to some 14
coeducational 4-year colleges, one college that is run as an
all-male school on the adversative model: the Virginia Military
Institute.
Virginia did not make this determination regarding the make-up of
its public college system on the unrealistic assumption that no
other colleges exist. Substantial evidence in the District Court
demonstrated that the Commonwealth has long proceeded on the
principle that "'higher education resources should be viewed as a
whole -- public and private'" -- because such an approach enhances
diversity and because "'it is academic and economic waste to permit
unwarranted duplication.'" Id., at 1420-1421 (quoting 1974 Report
of the General Assembly Commission on Higher Education to the
General Assembly of Virginia). It is thus significant that, whereas
there are "four all-female private [colleges] in Virginia," there
is only "one private all-male college," which "indicates that the
private sector is providing for the [former] form of education to a
much greater extent that it provides for all-male education." 766
F. Supp., at 1420-1421. In these circumstances, Virginia's election
to fund one public all-male institution and one on the adversative
model -- and to concentrate its resources in a single entity that
serves both these interests in diversity -- is substantially
related to the Commonwealth's important educational
interests.
B
The Court today has no adequate response to this clear
demonstration of the conclusion produced by application of
intermediate scrutiny. Rather, it relies on a series of contentions
that are irrelevant or erroneous as a matter of law, foreclosed by
the record in this litigation, or both.
1. I have already pointed out the Court's most fundamental error,
which is its reasoning that VMI's all-male composition is
unconstitutional because "some women are capable of all of the
individual activities required of VMI cadets," 766 F. Supp., at
1412, and would prefer military training on the adversative model.
See supra, at 571-574. This unacknowledged adoption of what amounts
to (at least) strict scrutiny is without antecedent in our
sex-discrimination cases and by itself discredits the Court's
decision.
2. The Court suggests that Virginia's claimed purpose in
maintaining VMI as an all-male institution -- its asserted interest
in promoting diversity of educational options -- is not "genuine,"
but is a pretext for discriminating against women. Ante, at 539;
see ante, at 535-540. To support this charge, the Court would have
to impute that base motive to VMI's Mission Study Committee, which
conducted a 3-year study from 1983 to 1986 and recommended to VMI's
Board of Visitors that the school remain all male. The committee, a
majority of whose members consisted of non-VMI graduates, "read
materials on education and on women in the military," "made site
visits to single-sex and newly coeducational institutions"
including West Point and the Naval Academy, and "considered the
reasons that other institutions had changed from single-sex to
coeducational status"; its work was praised as "thorough" in the
accreditation review of VMI conducted by the Southern Association
of Colleges and Schools. See 766 F. Supp., at 1413, 1428; see also
id., at 1427-1430 (detailed findings of fact concerning the Mission
Study Committee). The Court states that "whatever internal purpose
the Mission Study Committee served -- and however well meaning the
framers of the report -- we can hardly extract from that effort any
commonwealth policy evenhandedly to advance diverse educational
options." Ante, at 539. But whether it is part of the evidence to
prove that diversity was the Commonwealth's objective (its short
report said nothing on that particular subject) is quite separate
from whether it is part of the evidence to prove that antifeminism
was not. The relevance of the Mission Study Committee is that its
very creation, its sober 3-year study, and the analysis it produced
utterly refute the claim that VMI has elected to maintain its
all-male student-body composition for some misogynistic
reason.
The Court also supports its analysis of Virginia's "actual state
purposes" in maintaining VMI's student body as all male by stating
that there is no explicit statement in the record "'in which the
Commonwealth has expressed itself'" concerning those purposes.
Ante, at 535, 539 (quoting 976 F.2d 890, 899 (CA4 1992)); see also
ante, at 525. That is wrong on numerous grounds. First and
foremost, in its implication that such an explicit statement of
"actual purposes" is needed. The Court adopts, in effect, the
argument of the United States that since the exclusion of women
from VMI in 1839 was based on the "assumptions" of the time "that
men alone were fit for military and leadership roles," and since
"before this litigation was initiated, Virginia never sought to
supply a valid, contemporary rationale for VMI's exclusionary
policy," "that failure itself renders the VMI policy invalid."
Brief for United States in No. 94-2107, at 10. This is an
unheard-of doctrine. Each state decision to adopt or maintain a
governmental policy need not be accompanied -- in anticipation of
litigation and on pain of being found to lack a relevant state
interest -- by a lawyer's contemporaneous recitation of the State's
purposes. The Constitution is not some giant Administrative
Procedure Act, which imposes upon the States the obligation to set
forth a "statement of basis and purpose" for their sovereign Acts,
see 5 U.S.C. § 553(c). The situation would be different
if what the Court assumes to have been the 1839 policy had been
enshrined and remained enshrined in legislation -- a VMI charter,
perhaps, pronouncing that the institution's purpose is to keep
women in their place. But since the 1839 policy was no more
explicitly recorded than the Court contends the present one is, the
mere fact that today's Commonwealth continues to fund VMI "is
enough to answer [the United States'] contention that the
[classification] was the 'accidental by-product of a traditional
way of thinking about females.'" Michael M., 450 U.S. at 471, n. 6
(plurality opinion) (quoting Califano v. Webster, 430 U.S. at 320)
(internal quotation marks omitted).
It is, moreover, not true that Virginia's contemporary reasons for
maintaining VMI are not explicitly recorded. It is hard to imagine
a more authoritative source on this subject than the 1990 Report of
the Virginia Commission on the University of the 21st Century (1990
Report). As the parties stipulated, that report "notes that the
hallmarks of Virginia's educational policy are 'diversity and
autonomy.'" Stipulations of Fact 37, reprinted in Lodged Materials
from the Record 64 (Lodged Materials). It said: "The formal system
of higher education in Virginia includes a great array of
institutions: state-supported and independent, two-year and senior,
research and highly specialized, traditionally black and
single-sex." 1990 Report, quoted in relevant part at Lodged
Materials 64-65 (emphasis added). n2 The Court's only response to
this is repeated reliance on the Court of Appeals' assertion that
"'the only explicit [statement] that we have found in the record in
which the Commonwealth has expressed itself with respect to gender
distinctions'" (namely, the statement in the 1990 Report that the
Commonwealth's institutions must "deal with faculty, staff, and
students without regard to sex") had nothing to do with the purpose
of diversity. Ante, at 525, 539 (quoting 976 F.2d, at 899). This
proves, I suppose, that the Court of Appeals did not find a
statement dealing with sex and diversity in the record; but the
pertinent question (accepting the need for such a statement) is
whether it was there. And the plain fact, which the Court does not
deny, is that it was.
n2 This statement is supported by other evidence in the record
demonstrating, by reference to both public and private
institutions, that Virginia actively seeks to foster its "'rich
heritage of pluralism and diversity in higher education,'" 1969
Report of the Virginia Commission on Constitutional Revision,
quoted in relevant part at Lodged Materials 53; that Virginia views
"'one special characteristic of the Virginia system [as being] its
diversity,'" 1989 Virginia Plan for Higher Education, quoted in
relevant part at Lodged Materials 64; and that in the
Commonwealth's view "higher education resources should be viewed as
a whole -- public and private" because "'Virginia needs the
diversity inherent in a dual system of higher education,'" 1974
Report of the General Assembly Commission on Higher Education to
the General Assembly of Virginia, quoted in 766 F. Supp. 1407, 1420
(WD Va. 1991). See also Budget Initiatives for 1990-1992 of State
Council of Higher Education for Virginia 10 (June 21, 1989) (Budget
Initiatives), quoted at n. 3, infra. It should be noted (for this
point will be crucial to my later discussion) that these official
reports quoted here, in text and footnote, regard the
Commonwealth's educational system -- public and private -- as a
unitary one.
The Court contends that "[a] purpose genuinely to advance an array
of educational options . . . is not served" by VMI. Ante, at
539-540. It relies on the fact that all of Virginia's other public
colleges have become coeducational. Ibid.; see also ante, at 521,
n. 2. The apparent theory of this argument is that unless Virginia
pursues a great deal of diversity, its pursuit of some diversity
must be a sham. This fails to take account of the fact that
Virginia's resources cannot support all possible permutations of
schools, see supra, at 578, and of the fact that Virginia
coordinates its public educational offerings with the offerings of
in-state private educational institutions that the Commonwealth
provides money for its residents to attend and otherwise assists --
which include four women's colleges. n3
n3 The Commonwealth provides tuition assistance, scholarship
grants, guaranteed loans, and work-study funds for residents of
Virginia who attend private colleges in the Commonwealth. See, e.
g., Va. Code Ann. §§ 23-38.11 to 23-38.19
(1993 and Supp. 1995) (Tuition Assistance Grant Act);
§§ 23-38.30 to 23-38.44:3 (Virginia Student
Assistance Authorities); Va. Code Ann. §§
23-38.45 to 23-38.53 (1993) (College Scholarship Assistance Act);
§§ 23-38.53:1 to 23-38.53:3 (Virginia
Scholars Program); §§ 23-38.70, 23-38.71
(Virginia Work-Study Program). These programs involve substantial
expenditures: for example, Virginia appropriated $ 4,413,750 (not
counting federal funds it also earmarked) for the College
Scholarship Assistance Program for both 1996 and 1997, and for the
Tuition Assistance Grant Program appropriated $ 21,568,000 for 1996
and $ 25,842,000 for 1997. See 1996 Va. Appropriations Act, ch.
912, pt. 1, § 160.
In addition, as the parties stipulated in the District Court, the
Commonwealth provides other financial support and assistance to
private institutions -- including single-sex colleges -- through
low-cost building loans, state-funded services contracts, and other
programs. See, e. g., Va. Code Ann. §§
23-30.39 to 23.30.58 (1993) (Educational Facilities Authority Act).
The State Council of Higher Education for Virginia, in a 1989
document not created for purposes of this litigation but introduced
into evidence, has described these various programs as a "means by
which the Commonwealth can provide funding to its independent
institutions, thereby helping to maintain a diverse system of
higher education." Budget Initiatives 10.
Finally, the Court unreasonably suggests that there is some pretext
in Virginia's reliance upon decentralized decisionmaking to achieve
diversity -- its granting of substantial autonomy to each
institution with regard to student-body composition and other
matters, see 766 F. Supp., at 1419. The Court adopts the suggestion
of the Court of Appeals that it is not possible for "one
institution with autonomy, but with no authority over any other
state institution, [to] give effect to a state policy of diversity
among institutions." Ante, at 539 (internal quotation marks
omitted). If it were impossible for individual human beings (or
groups of human beings) to act autonomously in effective pursuit of
a common goal, the game of soccer would not exist. And where the
goal is diversity in a free market for services, that tends to be
achieved even by autonomous actors who act out of entirely selfish
interests and make no effort to cooperate. Each Virginia
institution, that is to say, has a natural incentive to make itself
distinctive in order to attract a particular segment of student
applicants. And of course none of the institutions is entirely
autonomous; if and when the legislature decides that a particular
school is not well serving the interest of diversity -- if it
decides, for example, that a men's school is not much needed --
funding will cease. n4
n4 The Court, unfamiliar with the Commonwealth's policy of diverse
and independent institutions, and in any event careless of state
and local traditions, must be forgiven by Virginians for quoting a
reference to "'the Charlottesville campus'" of the University of
Virginia. See ante, at 538. The University of Virginia, an
institution even older than VMI, though not as old as another of
the Commonwealth's universities, the College of William and Mary,
occupies the portion of Charlottesville known, not as the "campus,"
but as "the grounds." More importantly, even if it were a "campus,"
there would be no need to specify "the Charlottesville campus," as
one might refer to the Bloomington or Indianapolis campus of
Indiana University. Unlike university systems with which the Court
is perhaps more familiar, such as those in New York (e. g., the
State University of New York at Binghamton or Buffalo), Illinois
(University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign or at Chicago), and
California (University of California, Los Angeles, or University of
California, Berkeley), there is only one University of Virginia. It
happens (because Thomas Jefferson lived near there) to be located
at Charlottesville. To many Virginians it is known, simply, as "the
University," which suffices to distinguish it from the
Commonwealth's other institutions offering 4-year college
instruction, which include Christopher Newport College, Clinch
Valley College, the College of William and Mary, George Mason
University, James Madison University, Longwood College, Mary
Washington University, Norfolk State University, Old Dominion
University, Radford University, Virginia Commonwealth University,
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Virginia State
University -- and, of course, VMI.
3. In addition to disparaging Virginia's claim that VMI's
single-sex status serves a state interest in diversity, the Court
finds fault with Virginia's failure to offer education based on the
adversative training method to women. It dismisses the District
Court's "'findings' on 'gender-based developmental differences'" on
the ground that "these 'findings' restate the opinions of
Virginia's expert witnesses, opinions about typically male or
typically female 'tendencies.'" Ante, at 541 (quoting 766 F. Supp.,
at 1434-1435). How remarkable to criticize the District Court on
the ground that its findings rest on the evidence (i. e., the
testimony of Virginia's witnesses)! That is what findings are
supposed to do. It is indefensible to tell the Commonwealth that
"the burden of justification is demanding and it rests entirely on
[you]," ante, at 533, and then to ignore the District Court's
findings because they rest on the evidence put forward by the
Commonwealth -- particularly when, as the District Court said, "the
evidence in the case . . . is virtually uncontradicted," 766 F.
Supp., at 1415 (emphasis added).
Ultimately, in fact, the Court does not deny the evidence
supporting these findings. See ante, at 541-546. It instead makes
evident that the parties to this litigation could have saved
themselves a great deal of time, trouble, and expense by omitting a
trial. The Court simply dispenses with the evidence submitted at
trial -- it never says that a single finding of the District Court
is clearly erroneous -- in favor of the Justices' own view of the
world, which the Court proceeds to support with (1) references to
observations of someone who is not a witness, nor even an
educational expert, nor even a judge who reviewed the record or
participated in the judgment below, but rather a judge who merely
dissented from the Court of Appeals' decision not to rehear this
litigation en banc, see ante, at 542, (2) citations of
nonevidentiary materials such as amicus curiae briefs filed in this
Court, see ante, at 544-545, nn. 13, 14, and (3) various historical
anecdotes designed to demonstrate that Virginia's support for VMI
as currently constituted reminds the Justices of the "bad old
days," see ante, at 542-544.
It is not too much to say that this approach to the litigation has
rendered the trial a sham. But treating the evidence as irrelevant
is absolutely necessary for the Court to reach its conclusion. Not
a single witness contested, for example, Virginia's "substantial
body of 'exceedingly persuasive' evidence . . . that some students,
both male and female, benefit from attending a single-sex college"
and "[that] for those students, the opportunity to attend a
single-sex college is a valuable one, likely to lead to better
academic and professional achievement." 766 F. Supp., at 1411-1412.
Even the United States' expert witness "called himself a 'believer
in single-sex education,'" although it was his "personal,
philosophical preference," not one "born of educational-benefit
considerations," "that single-sex education should be provided only
by the private sector." Id., at 1412.
4. The Court contends that Virginia, and the District Court, erred,
and "misperceived our precedent," by "training their argument on
'means' rather than 'end,'" ante, at 545. The Court focuses on
"VMI's mission," which is to produce individuals "imbued with love
of learning, confident in the functions and attitudes of
leadership, possessing a high sense of public service, advocates of
the American democracy and free enterprise system, and ready . . .
to defend their country in time of national peril." 766 F. Supp.,
at 1425 (quoting Mission Study Committee of the VMI Board of
Visitors, Report, May 16, 1986). "Surely," the Court says, "that
goal is great enough to accommodate women." Ante, at 545.
This is lawmaking by indirection. What the Court describes as
"VMI's mission" is no less the mission of all Virginia colleges.
Which of them would the Old Dominion continue to fund if they did
not aim to create individuals "imbued with love of learning, etc.,"
right down to being ready "to defend their country in time of
national peril"? It can be summed up as "learning, leadership, and
patriotism." To be sure, those general educational values are
described in a particularly martial fashion in VMI's mission
statement, in accordance with the military, adversative, and
all-male character of the institution. But imparting those values
in that fashion -- i. e., in a military, adversative, all-male
environment -- is the distinctive mission of VMI. And as I have
discussed (and both courts below found), that mission is not "great
enough to accommodate women."
The Court's analysis at least has the benefit of producing
foreseeable results. Applied generally, it means that whenever a
State's ultimate objective is "great enough to accommodate women"
(as it always will be), then the State will be held to have
violated the Equal Protection Clause if it restricts to men even
one means by which it pursues that objective -- no matter how few
women are interested in pursuing the objective by that means, no
matter how much the single-sex program will have to be changed if
both sexes are admitted, and no matter how beneficial that program
has theretofore been to its participants.
5. The Court argues that VMI would not have to change very much if
it were to admit women. See, e. g., ante, at 540-542. The principal
response to that argument is that it is irrelevant: If VMI's
single-sex status is substantially related to the government's
important educational objectives, as I have demonstrated above and
as the Court refuses to discuss, that concludes the inquiry. There
should be no debate in the federal judiciary over "how much" VMI
would be required to change if it admitted women and whether that
would constitute "too much" change.
But if such a debate were relevant, the Court would certainly be on
the losing side. The District Court found as follows: "The evidence
establishes that key elements of the adversative VMI educational
system, with its focus on barracks life, would be fundamentally
altered, and the distinctive ends of the system would be thwarted,
if VMI were forced to admit females and to make changes necessary
to accommodate their needs and interests." 766 F. Supp., at 1411.
Changes that the District Court's detailed analysis found would be
required include new allowances for personal privacy in the
barracks, such as locked doors and coverings on windows, which
would detract from VMI's approach of regulating minute details of
student behavior, "contradict the principle that everyone is
constantly subject to scrutiny by everyone else," and impair VMI's
"total egalitarian approach" under which every student must be
"treated alike"; changes in the physical training program, which
would reduce "the intensity and aggressiveness of the current
program"; and various modifications in other respects of the
adversative training program that permeates student life. See id.,
at 1412-1413, 1435-1443. As the Court of Appeals summarized it,
"the record supports the district court's findings that at least
these three aspects of VMI's program -- physical training, the
absence of privacy, and the adversative approach -- would be
materially affected by coeducation, leading to a substantial change
in the egalitarian ethos that is a critical aspect of VMI's
training." 976 F.2d, at 896-897.
In the face of these findings by two courts below, amply supported
by the evidence, and resulting in the conclusion that VMI would be
fundamentally altered if it admitted women, this Court simply
pronounces that "the notion that admission of women would downgrade
VMI's stature, destroy the adversative system and, with it, even
the school, is a judgment hardly proved." Ante, at 542 (footnote
omitted). The point about "downgrading VMI's stature" is a straw
man; no one has made any such claim. The point about "destroying
the adversative system" is simply false; the District Court not
only stated that "evidence supports this theory," but specifically
concluded that while "without a doubt" VMI could assimilate women,
"it is equally without a doubt that VMI's present methods of
training and education would have to be changed" by a "move away
from its adversative new cadet system." 766 F. Supp., at 1413, and
n. 8, 1440. And the point about "destroying the school," depending
upon what that ambiguous phrase is intended to mean, is either
false or else sets a standard much higher than VMI had to meet. It
sufficed to establish, as the District Court stated, that VMI would
be "significantly different" upon the admission of women, 766 F.
Supp., at 1412, and "would eventually find it necessary to drop the
adversative system altogether," id., at 1413. n5
n5 The Court's do-it-yourself approach to factfinding, which
throughout is contrary to our well-settled rule that we will not
"undertake to review concurrent findings of fact by two courts
below in the absence of a very obvious and exceptional showing of
error," Graver Tank & Mfg. Co. v. Linde Air Products Co., 336
U.S. 271, 275, 93 L. Ed. 672, 69 S. Ct. 535 (1949) (and cases
cited), is exemplified by its invocation of the experience of the
federal military academies to prove that not much change would
occur. See ante, at 542, n. 11; 544-545, and n. 15; 550-551, n. 19.
In fact, the District Court noted that "the West Point experience"
supported the theory that a coeducational VMI would have to "adopt
a [different] system," for West Point found it necessary upon
becoming coeducational to "move away" from its adversative system.
766 F. Supp., at 1413, 1440. "Without a doubt . . . VMI's present
methods of training and education would have to be changed as West
Point's were." Id., at 1413, n. 8; accord, 976 F.2d 890, 896-897
(CA4 1992) (upholding District Court's findings that "the unique
characteristics of VMI's program," including its "unique
methodology," "would be destroyed by coeducation").
6. Finally, the absence of a precise "all-women's analogue" to VMI
is irrelevant. In Mississippi Univ. for Women v. Hogan, 458 U.S.
718, 73 L. Ed. 2d 1090, 102 S. Ct. 3331 (1982), we attached no
constitutional significance to the absence of an all-male nursing
school. As Virginia notes, if a program restricted to one sex is
necessarily unconstitutional unless there is a parallel program
restricted to the other sex, "the opinion in Hogan could have ended
with its first footnote, which observed that 'Mississippi maintains
no other single-sex public university or college.'" Brief for
Cross-Petitioners in No. 94-2107, at 38 (quoting Mississippi Univ.
for Women v. Hogan, supra, at 720, n. 1).
Although there is no precise female-only analogue to VMI, Virginia
has created during this litigation the Virginia Women's Institute
for Leadership (VWIL), a state-funded all-women's program run by
Mary Baldwin College. I have thus far said nothing about VWIL
because it is, under our established test, irrelevant, so long as
VMI's all-male character is "substantially related" to an important
state goal. But VWIL now exists, and the Court's treatment of it
shows how far reaching today's decision is.
VWIL was carefully designed by professional educators who have long
experience in educating young women. The program rejects the
proposition that there is a "difference in the respective spheres
and destinies of man and woman," Bradwell v. State, 83 U.S. 130, 16
Wall. 130, 141, 21 L. Ed. 442 (1873), and is designed to "provide
an all-female program that will achieve substantially similar
outcomes [to VMI's] in an all-female environment," 852 F. Supp.
471, 481 (WD Va. 1994). After holding a trial where voluminous
evidence was submitted and making detailed findings of fact, the
District Court concluded that "there is a legitimate pedagogical
basis for the different means employed [by VMI and VWIL] to achieve
the substantially similar ends." Ibid. The Court of Appeals
undertook a detailed review of the record and affirmed. 44 F.3d
1229 (CA4 1995). n6 But it is Mary Baldwin College, which runs
VWIL, that has made the point most succinctly:
"It would have been possible to develop the VWIL program to more
closely resemble VMI, with adversative techniques associated with
the rat line and barracks-like living quarters. Simply replicating
an existing program would have required far less thought, research,
and educational expertise. But such a facile approach would have
produced a paper program with no real prospect of successful
implementation." Brief for Mary Baldwin College as Amicus Curiae
5.It is worth noting that none of the United States' own experts in
the remedial phase of this litigation was willing to testify that
VMI's adversative method was an appropriate methodology for
educating women. This Court, however, does not care. Even though
VWIL was carefully designed by professional educators who have
tremendous experience in the area, and survived the test of
adversarial litigation, the Court simply declares, with no basis in
the evidence, that these professionals acted on "'overbroad'
generalizations," ante, at 542, 550.
n6 The Court is incorrect in suggesting that the Court of Appeals
applied a "deferential" "brand of review inconsistent with the more
exacting standard our precedent requires." Ante, at 555. That court
"inquired (1) whether the state's objective is 'legitimate and
important,' and (2) whether 'the requisite direct, substantial
relationship between objective and means is present,'" 44 F.3d, at
1235 (quoting Mississippi Univ. for Women v. Hogan, 458 U.S. 718,
725, 73 L. Ed. 2d 1090, 102 S. Ct. 3331 (1982). To be sure, such
review is "deferential" to a degree that the Court's new standard
is not, for it is intermediate scrutiny. (The Court cannot evade
this point or prove the Court of Appeals too deferential by stating
that that court "devised another test, a 'substantive
comparability' inquiry,'" ante, at 555 (quoting 44 F.3d, at 1237),
for as that court explained, its "substantive comparability"
inquiry was an "additional step" that it engrafted on "the
traditional test" of intermediate scrutiny, ibid. (emphasis
added).)
C
A few words are appropriate in response to the concurrence, which
finds VMI unconstitutional on a basis that is more moderate than
the Court's but only at the expense of being even more implausible.
The concurrence offers three reasons: First, that there is "scant
evidence in the record," ante, at 562, that diversity of
educational offering was the real reason for Virginia's maintaining
VMI. "Scant" has the advantage of being an imprecise term. I have
cited the clearest statements of diversity as a goal for higher
education in the 1990 Report, the 1989 Virginia Plan for Higher
Education, the Budget Initiatives prepared in 1989 by the State
Council of Higher Education for Virginia, the 1974 Report of the
General Assembly Commission on Higher Education to the General
Assembly of Virginia, and the 1969 Report of the Virginia
Commission on Constitutional Revision. See supra, at 579, 581-582,
and n. 2, 583, n. 3. There is no evidence to the contrary, once one
rejects (as the concurrence rightly does) the relevance of VMI's
founding in days when attitudes toward the education of women were
different. Is this conceivably not enough to foreclose rejecting as
clearly erroneous the District Court's determination regarding "the
Commonwealth's objective of educational diversity"? 766 F. Supp.,
at 1413. Especially since it is absurd on its face even to demand
"evidence" to prove that the Commonwealth's reason for maintaining
a men's military academy is that a men's military academy provides
a distinctive type of educational experience (i. e., fosters
diversity). What other purpose would the Commonwealth have? One may
argue, as the Court does, that this type of diversity is designed
only to indulge hostility toward women -- but that is a separate
point, explicitly rejected by the concurrence, and amply refuted by
the evidence I have mentioned in discussing the Court's opinion. n7
What is now under discussion -- the concurrence's making central to
the disposition of this litigation the supposedly "scant" evidence
that Virginia maintained VMI in order to offer a diverse
educational experience -- is rather like making crucial to the
lawfulness of the United States Army record "evidence" that its
purpose is to do battle. A legal culture that has forgotten the
concept of res ipsa loquitur deserves the fate that it today
decrees for VMI.
n7 The concurrence states that it "read[s] the Court" not "as
saying that the diversity rationale is a pretext" for
discriminating against women, but as saying merely that the
diversity rationale is not genuine. Ante, at 562, n. The Court
itself makes no such disclaimer, which would be difficult to credit
inasmuch as the foundation for its conclusion that the diversity
rationale is not "genuine," ante, at 539, is its antecedent
discussion of Virginia's "deliberate" actions over the past century
and a half, based on "familiar arguments," that sought to enforce
once "widely held views about women's proper place," ante, at 537,
538.
Second, the concurrence dismisses out of hand what it calls
Virginia's "second justification for the single-sex admissions
policy: maintenance of the adversative method." Ante, at 564. The
concurrence reasons that "this justification does not serve an
important governmental objective" because, whatever the record may
show about the pedagogical benefits of single-sex education, "there
is no similar evidence in the record that an adversative method is
pedagogically beneficial or is any more likely to produce character
traits than other methodologies." Ibid. That is simply wrong. See,
e. g., 766 F. Supp., at 1426 (factual findings concerning character
traits produced by VMI's adversative methodology); id., at 1434
(factual findings concerning benefits for many college-age men of
an adversative approach in general). In reality, the pedagogical
benefits of VMI's adversative approach were not only proved, but
were a given in this litigation. The reason the woman applicant who
prompted this suit wanted to enter VMI was assuredly not that she
wanted to go to an all-male school; it would cease being all-male
as soon as she entered. She wanted the distinctive adversative
education that VMI provided, and the battle was joined (in the
main) over whether VMI had a basis for excluding women from that
approach. The Court's opinion recognizes this, and devotes much of
its opinion to demonstrating that "'some women . . . do well under
[the] adversative model'" and that "it is on behalf of these women
that the United States has instituted this suit." Ante, at 550
(quoting 766 F. Supp., at 1434). Of course, in the last analysis it
does not matter whether there are any benefits to the adversative
method. The concurrence does not contest that there are benefits to
single-sex education, and that alone suffices to make Virginia's
case, since admission of a woman will even more surely put an end
to VMI's single-sex education than it will to VMI's adversative
methodology.
A third reason the concurrence offers in support of the judgment is
that the Commonwealth and VMI were not quick enough to react to the
"further developments" in this Court's evolving jurisprudence.
Ante, at 561. Specifically, the concurrence believes it should have
been clear after Hogan that "the difficulty with [Virginia's]
position is that the diversity benefited only one sex; there was
single-sex public education available for men at VMI, but no
corresponding single-sex public education available for women."
Ante, at 562. If only, the concurrence asserts, Virginia had "made
a genuine effort to devote comparable public resources to a
facility for women, and followed through on such a plan, it might
well have avoided an equal protection violation." Ante, at 563.
That is to say, the concurrence believes that after our decision in
Hogan (which held a program of the Mississippi University for Women
to be unconstitutional -- without any reliance on the fact that
there was no corresponding Mississippi all-men's program), the
Commonwealth should have known that what this Court expected of it
was . . . yes!, the creation of a state all-women's program. Any
lawyer who gave that advice to the Commonwealth ought to have been
either disbarred or committed. (The proof of that pudding is
today's 6-Justice majority opinion.) And any Virginia politician
who proposed such a step when there were already four 4-year
women's colleges in Virginia (assisted by state support that may
well exceed, in the aggregate, what VMI costs, see n. 3, supra)
ought to have been recalled.
In any event, "diversity in the form of single-sex, as well as
coeducational, institutions of higher learning" is "available to
women as well as to men" in Virginia. Ante, at 564. The concurrence
is able to assert the contrary only by disregarding the four
all-women's private colleges in Virginia (generously assisted by
public funds) and the Commonwealth's longstanding policy of
coordinating public with private educational offerings, see supra,
at 579, 581-582, and n. 2, 583-584, and n. 3. According to the
concurrence, the reason Virginia's assistance to its four
all-women's private colleges does not count is that "the private
women's colleges are treated by the State exactly as all other
private schools are treated." Ante, at 564. But if Virginia cannot
get credit for assisting women's education if it only treats
women's private schools as it does all other private schools, then
why should it get blame for assisting men's education if it only
treats VMI as it does all other public schools? This is a great
puzzlement.
IV
As is frequently true, the Court's decision today will have
consequences that extend far beyond the parties to the litigation.
What I take to be the Court's unease with these consequences, and
its resulting unwillingness to acknowledge them, cannot alter the
reality.
A
Under the constitutional principles announced and applied today,
single-sex public education is unconstitutional. By going through
the motions of applying a balancing test -- asking whether the
State has adduced an "exceedingly persuasive justification" for its
sex-based classification -- the Court creates the illusion that
government officials in some future case will have a clear shot at
justifying some sort of single-sex public education. Indeed, the
Court seeks to create even a greater illusion than that: It
purports to have said nothing of relevance to other public schools
at all. "We address specifically and only an educational
opportunity recognized . . . as 'unique.'" Ante, at 534, n.
7.
The Supreme Court of the United States does not sit to announce
"unique" dispositions. Its principal function is to establish
precedent -- that is, to set forth principles of law that every
court in America must follow. As we said only this Term, we expect
both ourselves and lower courts to adhere to the "rationale upon
which the Court based the results of its earlier decisions."
Seminole Tribe of Fla. v. Florida, 517 U.S. 44, 66-67, 134 L. Ed.
2d 252, 116 S. Ct. 1114 (1996) (emphasis added). That is the
principal reason we publish our opinions.
And the rationale of today's decision is sweeping: for sex-based
classifications, a redefinition of intermediate scrutiny that makes
it indistinguishable from strict scrutiny. See supra, at 571-574.
Indeed, the Court indicates that if any program restricted to one
sex is "unique," it must be opened to members of the opposite sex
"who have the will and capacity" to participate in it. Ante, at
542. I suggest that the single-sex program that will not be capable
of being characterized as "unique" is not only unique but
nonexistent. n8
n8 In this regard, I note that the Court -- which I concede is
under no obligation to do so -- provides no example of a program
that would pass muster under its reasoning today: not even, for
example, a football or wrestling program. On the Court's theory,
any woman ready, willing, and physically able to participate in
such a program would, as a constitutional matter, be entitled to do
so.
In any event, regardless of whether the Court's rationale leaves
some small amount of room for lawyers to argue, it ensures that
single-sex public education is functionally dead. The costs of
litigating the constitutionality of a single-sex education program,
and the risks of ultimately losing that litigation, are simply too
high to be embraced by public officials. Any person with standing
to challenge any sex-based classification can haul the State into
federal court and compel it to establish by evidence (presumably in
the form of expert testimony) that there is an "exceedingly
persuasive justification" for the classification. Should the courts
happen to interpret that vacuous phrase as establishing a standard
that is not utterly impossible of achievement, there is
considerable risk that whether the standard has been met will not
be determined on the basis of the record evidence -- indeed, that
will necessarily be the approach of any court that seeks to walk
the path the Court has trod today. No state official in his right
mind will buy such a high-cost, high-risk lawsuit by commencing a
single-sex program. The enemies of single-sex education have won;
by persuading only seven Justices (five would have been enough)
that their view of the world is enshrined in the Constitution, they
have effectively imposed that view on all 50 States.
This is especially regrettable because, as the District Court here
determined, educational experts in recent years have increasingly
come to "support [the] view that substantial educational benefits
flow from a single-gender environment, be it male or female, that
cannot be replicated in a coeducational setting." 766 F. Supp., at
1415 (emphasis added). "The evidence in this case," for example,
"is virtually uncontradicted" to that effect. Ibid. Until quite
recently, some public officials have attempted to institute new
single-sex programs, at least as experiments. In 1991, for example,
the Detroit Board of Education announced a program to establish
three boys-only schools for inner-city youth; it was met with a
lawsuit, a preliminary injunction was swiftly entered by a District
Court that purported to rely on Hogan, see Garrett v. Board of Ed.
of School Dist. of Detroit, 775 F. Supp. 1004, 1006 (ED Mich.
1991), and the Detroit Board of Education voted to abandon the
litigation and thus abandon the plan, see Detroit Plan to Aid
Blacks with All-Boy Schools Abandoned, Los Angeles Times, Nov. 8,
1991, p. A4, col. 1. Today's opinion assures that no such
experiment will be tried again.
B
There are few extant single-sex public educational programs. The
potential of today's decision for widespread disruption of existing
institutions lies in its application to private single-sex
education. Government support is immensely important to private
educational institutions. Mary Baldwin College -- which designed
and runs VWIL -- notes that private institutions of higher
education in the 1990-1991 school year derived approximately 19
percent of their budgets from federal, state, and local government
funds, not including financial aid to students. See Brief for Mary
Baldwin College as Amicus Curiae 22, n. 13 (citing U.S. Dept. of
Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Digest of
Education Statistics, p. 38 and Note (1993)). Charitable status
under the tax laws is also highly significant for private
educational institutions, and it is certainly not beyond the Court
that rendered today's decision to hold that a donation to a
single-sex college should be deemed contrary to public policy and
therefore not deductible if the college discriminates on the basis
of sex. See Note, The Independent Sector and the Tax Laws: Defining
Charity in an Ideal Democracy, 64 S. Cal. L. Rev. 461, 476 (1991).
See also Bob Jones Univ. v. United States, 461 U.S. 574, 76 L. Ed.
2d 157, 103 S. Ct. 2017 (1983).
The Court adverts to private single-sex education only briefly, and
only to make the assertion (mentioned above) that "we address
specifically and only an educational opportunity recognized by the
District Court and the Court of Appeals as 'unique.'" Ante, at 534,
n. 7. As I have already remarked, see supra, at 596, that assurance
assures nothing, unless it is to be taken as a promise that in the
future the Court will disclaim the reasoning it has used today to
destroy VMI. The Government, in its briefs to this Court, at least
purports to address the consequences of its attack on VMI for
public support of private single-sex education. It contends that
private colleges that are the direct or indirect beneficiaries of
government funding are not thereby necessarily converted into state
actors to which the Equal Protection Clause is then applicable. See
Brief for United States in No. 94-2107, at 35-37 (discussing
Rendell-Baker v. Kohn, 457 U.S. 830, 73 L. Ed. 2d 418, 102 S. Ct.
2764 (1982), and Blum v. Yaretsky, 457 U.S. 991, 73 L. Ed. 2d 534,
102 S. Ct. 2777 (1982)). That is true. It is also virtually
meaningless.
The issue will be not whether government assistance turns private
colleges into state actors, but whether the government itself would
be violating the Constitution by providing state support to
single-sex colleges. For example, in Norwood v. Harrison, 413 U.S.
455, 37 L. Ed. 2d 723, 93 S. Ct. 2804 (1973), we saw no room to
distinguish between state operation of racially segregated schools
and state support of privately run segregated schools. "Racial
discrimination in state-operated schools is barred by the
Constitution and 'it is also axiomatic that a state may not induce,
encourage or promote private persons to accomplish what it is
constitutionally forbidden to accomplish.'" Id., at 465 (quoting
Lee v. Macon County Bd. of Ed., 267 F. Supp. 458, 475-476 (MD Ala.
1967)); see also Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U.S. 1, 19, 3 L. Ed. 2d 5, 78
S. Ct. 1401 (1958) ("State support of segregated schools through
any arrangement, management, funds, or property cannot be squared
with the [Fourteenth] Amendment's command that no State shall deny
to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the
laws"); Grove City College v. Bell, 465 U.S. 555, 565, 79 L. Ed. 2d
516, 104 S. Ct. 1211 (1984) (case arising under Title IX of the
Education Amendments of 1972 and stating that "the economic effect
of direct and indirect assistance often is indistinguishable").
When the Government was pressed at oral argument concerning the
implications of these cases for private single-sex education if
government-provided single-sex education is unconstitutional, it
stated that the implications will not be so disastrous, since
States can provide funding to racially segregated private schools,
"depending on the circumstances," Tr. of Oral Arg. 56. I cannot
imagine what those "circumstances" might be, and it would be as
foolish for private-school administrators to think that that
assurance from the Justice Department will outlive the day it was
made, as it was for VMI to think that the Justice Department's
"unequivocal" support for an intermediate-scrutiny standard in this
litigation would survive the Government's loss in the courts
below.
The only hope for state-assisted single-sex private schools is that
the Court will not apply in the future the principles of law it has
applied today. That is a substantial hope, I am happy and ashamed
to say. After all, did not the Court today abandon the principles
of law it has applied in our earlier sex-classification cases? And
does not the Court positively invite private colleges to rely upon
our ad-hocery by assuring them this litigation is "unique"? I would
not advise the foundation of any new single-sex college (especially
an all-male one) with the expectation of being allowed to receive
any government support; but it is too soon to abandon in despair
those single-sex colleges already in existence. It will certainly
be possible for this Court to write a future opinion that ignores
the broad principles of law set forth today, and that characterizes
as utterly dispositive the opinion's perceptions that VMI was a
uniquely prestigious all-male institution, conceived in chauvinism,
etc., etc. I will not join that opinion.
* * *
Justice Brandeis said it is "one of the happy incidents of the
federal system that a single courageous State may, if its citizens
choose, serve as a laboratory; and try novel social and economic
experiments without risk to the rest of the country." New State Ice
Co. v. Liebmann, 285 U.S. 262, 311, 76 L. Ed. 747, 52 S. Ct. 371
(1932) (dissenting opinion). But it is one of the unhappy incidents
of the federal system that a self-righteous Supreme Court, acting
on its Members' personal view of what would make a "'more perfect
Union,'" ante, at 558 (a criterion only slightly more restrictive
than a "more perfect world"), can impose its own favored social and
economic dispositions nationwide. As today's disposition, and
others this single Term, show, this places it beyond the power of a
"single courageous State," not only to introduce novel dispositions
that the Court frowns upon, but to reintroduce, or indeed even
adhere to, disfavored dispositions that are centuries old. See, e.
g., BMW of North America, Inc. v. Gore, 517 U.S. 559, 134 L. Ed. 2d
809, 116 S. Ct. 1589 (1996); Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620, 134 L.
Ed. 2d 855, 116 S. Ct. 1620 (1996). The sphere of self-government
reserved to the people of the Republic is progressively
narrowed.
In the course of this dissent, I have referred approvingly to the
opinion of my former colleague, Justice Powell, in Mississippi
Univ. for Women v. Hogan, 458 U.S. 718, 73 L. Ed. 2d 1090, 102 S.
Ct. 3331 (1982). Many of the points made in his dissent apply with
equal force here -- in particular, the criticism of judicial
opinions that purport to be "narrow" but whose "logic" is
"sweeping." Id., at 745-746, n. 18. But there is one statement with
which I cannot agree. Justice Powell observed that the Court's
decision in Hogan, which struck down a single-sex program offered
by the Mississippi University for Women, had thereby "left without
honor . . . an element of diversity that has characterized much of
American education and enriched much of American life." Id., at
735. Today's decision does not leave VMI without honor; no court
opinion can do that.
In an odd sort of way, it is precisely VMI's attachment to such
old-fashioned concepts as manly "honor" that has made it, and the
system it represents, the target of those who today succeed in
abolishing public single-sex education. The record contains a
booklet that all first-year VMI students (the so-called "rats")
were required to keep in their possession at all times. Near the
end there appears the following period piece, entitled "The Code of
a Gentleman":
"Without a strict observance of the fundamental Code of Honor, no
man, no matter how 'polished,' can be considered a gentleman. The
honor of a gentleman demands the inviolability of his word, and the
incorruptibility of his principles. He is the descendant of the
knight, the crusader; he is the defender of the defense-less and
the champion of justice . . . or he is not a Gentleman.
"A Gentleman . . .
"Does not discuss his family affairs in public or with
acquaintances.
"Does not speak more than casually about his girl friend.
"Does not go to a lady's house if he is affected by alcohol. He is
temperate in the use of alcohol.
"Does not lose his temper; nor exhibit anger, fear, hate,
embarrassment, ardor or hilarity in public.
"Does not hail a lady from a club window.
"A gentleman never discusses the merits or demerits of a
lady.
"Does not mention names exactly as he avoids the mention of what
things cost.
"Does not borrow money from a friend, except in dire need. Money
borrowed is a debt of honor, and must be repaid as promptly as
possible. Debts incurred by a deceased parent, brother, sister or
grown child are assumed by honorable men as a debt of honor.
" Does not display his wealth, money or possessions.
"Does not put his manners on and off, whether in the club or in a
ballroom. He treats people with courtesy, no matter what their
social position may be.
"Does not slap strangers on the back nor so much as lay a finger on
a lady.
"Does not 'lick the boots of those above' nor 'kick the face of
those below him on the social ladder.'
"Does not take advantage of another's helplessness or ignorance and
assumes that no gentleman will take advantage of him.
"A Gentleman respects the reserves of others, but demands that
others respect those which are his.
"A Gentleman can become what he wills to be. . . ."I do not know
whether the men of VMI lived by this code; perhaps not. But it is
powerfully impressive that a public institution of higher education
still in existence sought to have them do so. I do not think any of
us, women included, will be better off for its destruction.
n1 During the Civil War, school teaching became a field dominated
by women. See A. Scott, The Southern Lady: From Pedestal to
Politics, 1830-1930, p. 82 (1970).
n2 Historically, most of Virginia's public colleges and
universities were single sex; by the mid-1970's, however, all
except VMI had become coeducational. 766 F. Supp. 1407, 1418-1419
(WD Va. 1991). For example, Virginia's legislature incorporated
Farmville Female Seminary Association in 1839, the year VMI opened.
1839 Va. Acts, ch. 167. Originally providing instruction in
"English, Latin, Greek, French, and piano" in a "home atmosphere,"
R. Sprague, Longwood College: A History 7-8, 15 (1989) (Longwood
College), Farmville Female Seminary became a public institution in
1884 with a mission to train "white female teachers for public
schools," 1884 Va. Acts, ch. 311. The school became Longwood
College in 1949, Longwood College 136, and introduced coeducation
in 1976, id., at 133.
n3 The District Court allowed the VMI Foundation and the VMI Alumni
Association to intervene as defendants. 766 F. Supp., at
1408.
n4 Six judges voted to rehear the case en banc, four voted against
rehearing, and three were recused. The Fourth Circuit's local Rule
permits rehearing en banc only on the vote of a majority of the
Circuit's judges in regular active service (currently 13) without
regard to recusals. See 52 F.3d, at 91, and n. 1.
n5 As Thomas Jefferson stated the view prevailing when the
Constitution was new: "Were our State a pure democracy . . . there
would yet be excluded from their deliberations . . . women, who, to
prevent depravation of morals and ambiguity of issue, could not mix
promiscuously in the public meetings of men." Letter from Thomas
Jefferson to Samuel Kercheval (Sept. 5, 1816), in 10 Writings of
Thomas Jefferson 45-46, n. 1 (P. Ford ed. 1899).
n6 The Court has thus far reserved most stringent judicial scrutiny
for classifications based on race or national origin, but last Term
observed that strict scrutiny of such classifications is not
inevitably "fatal in fact." Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena, 515
U.S. 200, 237, 132 L. Ed. 2d 158, 115 S. Ct. 2097 (1995) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
n7 Several amici have urged that diversity in educational
opportunities is an altogether appropriate governmental pursuit and
that single-sex schools can contribute importantly to such
diversity. Indeed, it is the mission of some single-sex schools "to
dissipate, rather than perpetuate, traditional gender
classifications." See Brief for Twenty-six Private Women's Colleges
as Amici Curiae 5. We do not question the Commonwealth's
prerogative evenhandedly to support diverse educational
opportunities. We address specifically and only an educational
opportunity recognized by the District Court and the Court of
Appeals as "unique," see 766 F. Supp., at 1413, 1432; 976 F.2d, at
892, an opportunity available only at Virginia's premier military
institute, the Commonwealth's sole single-sex public university or
college. Cf. Mississippi Univ. for Women v. Hogan, 458 U.S. 718,
720, n. 1, 73 L. Ed. 2d 1090, 102 S. Ct. 3331 (1982) ("Mississippi
maintains no other single-sex public university or college. Thus,
we are not faced with the question of whether States can provide
'separate but equal' undergraduate institutions for males and
females.").
n8 On this point, the dissent sees fire where there is no flame.
See post, at 596-598, 598-600. "Both men and women can benefit from
a single-sex education," the District Court recognized, although
"the beneficial effects" of such education, the court added,
apparently "are stronger among women than among men." 766 F. Supp.,
at 1414. The United States does not challenge that recognition. Cf.
C. Jencks & D. Riesman, The Academic Revolution 297-298
(1968):
"The pluralistic argument for preserving all-male colleges is
uncomfortably similar to the pluralistic argument for preserving
all-white colleges . . . . The all-male college would be relatively
easy to defend if it emerged from a world in which women were
established as fully equal to men. But it does not. It is therefore
likely to be a witting or unwitting device for preserving tacit
assumptions of male superiority -- assumptions for which women must
eventually pay."
n9 Dr. Edward H. Clarke of Harvard Medical School, whose
influential book, Sex in Education, went through 17 editions, was
perhaps the most well-known speaker from the medical community
opposing higher education for women. He maintained that the
physiological effects of hard study and academic competition with
boys would interfere with the development of girls' reproductive
organs. See E. Clarke, Sex in Education 38-39, 62-63 (1873); id.,
at 127 ("identical education of the two sexes is a crime before God
and humanity, that physiology protests against, and that experience
weeps over"); see also H. Maudsley, Sex in Mind and in Education 17
(1874) ("It is not that girls have not ambition, nor that they fail
generally to run the intellectual race [in coeducational settings],
but it is asserted that they do it at a cost to their strength and
health which entails life-long suffering, and even incapacitates
them for the adequate performance of the natural functions of their
sex."); C. Meigs, Females and Their Diseases 350 (1848) (after five
or six weeks of "mental and educational discipline," a healthy
woman would "lose . . . the habit of menstruation" and suffer
numerous ills as a result of depriving her body for the sake of her
mind).
n10 Virginia's Superintendent of Public Instruction dismissed the
coeducational idea as "'repugnant to the prejudices of the people'"
and proposed a female college similar in quality to Girton, Smith,
or Vassar. 2 History of Women's Education 254 (quoting Dept. of
Interior, 1 Report of Commissioner of Education, H. R. Doc. No. 5,
58th Cong., 2d Sess., 438 (1904)).
n11 See post, at 566, 598-599, 603. Forecasts of the same kind were
made regarding admission of women to the federal military
academies. See, e. g., Hearings on H. R. 9832 et al. before
Subcommittee No. 2 of the House Committee on Armed Services, 93d
Cong., 2d Sess., 137 (1975) (statement of Lt. Gen. A. P. Clark,
Superintendent of U.S. Air Force Academy) ("It is my considered
judgment that the introduction of female cadets will inevitably
erode this vital atmosphere."); id., at 165 (statement of Hon. H.
H. Callaway, Secretary of the Army) ("Admitting women to West Point
would irrevocably change the Academy. . . . The Spartan atmosphere
-- which is so important to producing the final product -- would
surely be diluted, and would in all probability disappear.").
n12 See 766 F. Supp., at 1413 (describing testimony of expert
witness David Riesman: "If VMI were to admit women, it would
eventually find it necessary to drop the adversative system
altogether, and adopt a system that provides more nurturing and
support for the students."). Such judgments have attended, and
impeded, women's progress toward full citizenship stature
throughout our Nation's history. Speaking in 1879 in support of
higher education for females, for example, Virginia State Senator
C. T. Smith of Nelson recounted that legislation proposed to
protect the property rights of women had encountered resistance. 10
Educ. J. Va. 213 (1879). A Senator opposing the measures objected
that "there [was] no formal call for the [legislation]," and
"depicted in burning eloquence the terrible consequences such laws
would produce." Ibid. The legislation passed, and a year or so
later, its sponsor, C. T. Smith, reported that "not one of [the
forecast "terrible consequences"] has or ever will happen, even
unto the sounding of Gabriel's trumpet." Ibid. See also supra, at
537-538.
n13 Women cadets have graduated at the top of their class at every
federal military academy. See Brief for Lieutenant Colonel Rhonda
Cornum et al. as Amici Curiae 11, n. 25; cf. Defense Advisory
Committee on Women in the Services, Report on the Integration and
Performance of Women at West Point 64 (1992).
n14 Brief for Lieutenant Colonel Rhonda Cornum, supra, at 5-9
(reporting the vital contributions and courageous performance of
women in the military); see Mintz, President Nominates 1st Woman to
Rank of Three-Star General, Washington Post, Mar. 27, 1996, p. A19,
col. 1 (announcing President's nomination of Marine Corps Major
General Carol Mutter to rank of Lieutenant General; Mutter will
head corps manpower and planning); Tousignant, A New Era for the
Old Guard, Washington Post, Mar. 23, 1996, p. C1, col. 2 (reporting
admission of Sergeant Heather Johnsen to elite Infantry unit that
keeps round-the-clock vigil at Tomb of the Unknowns in Arlington
National Cemetery).
n15 Inclusion of women in settings where, traditionally, they were
not wanted inevitably entails a period of adjustment. As one West
Point cadet squad leader recounted: "The classes of '78 and '79 see
the women as women, but the classes of '80 and '81 see them as
classmates." U.S. Military Academy, A. Vitters, Report of Admission
of Women (Project Athena II) 84 (1978) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
n16 VMI has successfully managed another notable change. The school
admitted its first African-American cadets in 1968. See The VMI
Story 347-349 (students no longer sing "Dixie," salute the
Confederate flag or the tomb of General Robert E. Lee at ceremonies
and sports events). As the District Court noted, VMI established a
program on "retention of black cadets" designed to offer academic
and social-cultural support to "minority members of a dominantly
white and tradition-oriented student body." 766 F. Supp., at
1436-1437. The school maintains a "special recruitment program for
blacks" which, the District Court found, "has had little, if any,
effect on VMI's method of accomplishing its mission." Id., at
1437.
n17 As earlier observed, see supra, at 529, Judge Phillips, in
dissent, measured Virginia's plan against a paradigm arrangement,
one that "could survive equal protection scrutiny": single-sex
schools with "substantially comparable curricular and
extra-curricular programs, funding, physical plant, administration
and support services, . . . faculty[,] and library resources." 44
F.3d 1229, 1250 (CA4 1995). Cf. Bray v. Lee, 337 F. Supp. 934
(Mass. 1972) (holding inconsistent with the Equal Protection Clause
admission of males to Boston's Boys Latin School with a test score
of 120 or higher (up to a top score of 200) while requiring a
score, on the same test, of at least 133 for admission of females
to Girls Latin School, but not ordering coeducation). Measuring
VMI/VWIL against the paradigm, Judge Phillips said, "reveals how
far short the [Virginia] plan falls from providing substantially
equal tangible and intangible educational benefits to men and
women." 44 F.3d, at 1250.
n18 Both programs include an honor system. Students at VMI are
expelled forthwith for honor code violations, see 766 F. Supp., at
1423; the system for VWIL students, see 852 F. Supp., at 496-497,
is less severe, see Tr. 414-415 (testimony of Mary Baldwin College
President Cynthia Tyson).
n19 Admitting women to VMI would undoubtedly require alterations
necessary to afford members of each sex privacy from the other sex
in living arrangements, and to adjust aspects of the physical
training programs. See Brief for Petitioner 27-29; cf. note
following 10 U.S.C. § 4342 (academic and other
standards for women admitted to the Military, Naval, and Air Force
Academies "shall be the same as those required for male
individuals, except for those minimum essential adjustments in such
standards required because of physiological differences between
male and female individuals"). Experience shows such adjustments
are manageable. See U.S. Military Academy, A. Vitters, N. Kinzer,
& J. Adams, Report of Admission of Women (Project Athena I-IV)
(1977-1980) (4-year longitudinal study of the admission of women to
West Point); Defense Advisory Committee on Women in the Services,
Report on the Integration and Performance of Women at West Point
17-18 (1992).
n20 Virginia's prime concern, it appears, is that "placing men and
women into the adversative relationship inherent in the VMI program
. . . would destroy, at least for that period of the adversative
training, any sense of decency that still permeates the
relationship between the sexes." 44 F.3d, at 1239; see supra, at
540-546. It is an ancient and familiar fear. Compare In re Lavinia
Goodell, 39 Wis. 232, 246 (1875) (denying female applicant's motion
for admission to the bar of its court, Wisconsin Supreme Court
explained: "Discussions are habitually necessary in courts of
justice, which are unfit for female ears. The habitual presence of
women at these would tend to relax the public sense of decency and
propriety."), with Levine, Closing Comments, 6 Law & Inequality
41 (1988) (presentation at Eighth Circuit Judicial Conference,
Colorado Springs, Colo., July 17, 1987) (footnotes omitted): "Plato
questioned whether women should be afforded equal opportunity to
become guardians, those elite Rulers of Platonic society.
Ironically, in that most undemocratic system of government, the
Republic, women's native ability to serve as guardians was not
seriously questioned. The concern was over the wrestling and
exercise class in which all candidates for guardianship had to
participate, for rigorous physical and mental training were
prerequisites to attain the exalted status of guardian. And in
accord with Greek custom, those exercise classes were conducted in
the nude. Plato concluded that their virtue would clothe the
women's nakedness and that Platonic society would not thereby be
deprived of the talent of qualified citizens for reasons of mere
gender." For Plato's full text on the equality of women, see 2 The
Dialogues of Plato 302-312 (B. Jowett transl., 4th ed. 1953).
Virginia, not bound to ancient Greek custom in its "rigorous
physical and mental training" programs, could more readily make the
accommodations necessary to draw on "the talent of [all] qualified
citizens." Cf. supra, at 550-551, n. 19.
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n21 R. Morris, The Forging of the Union, 1781-1789, p. 193 (1987);
see id., at 191, setting out letter to a friend from Massachusetts
patriot (later second President) John Adams, on the subject of
qualifications for voting in his home State: "It is dangerous to
open so fruitful a source of controversy and altercation as would
be opened by attempting to alter the qualifications of voters;
there will be no end of it. New claims will arise; women will
demand a vote; lads from twelve to twenty-one will think their
rights not enough attended to; and every man who has not a
farthing, will demand an equal voice with any other, in all acts of
state. It tends to confound and destroy all distinctions, and
prostrate all ranks to one common level." Letter from John Adams to
James Sullivan (May 26, 1776), in 9 Works of John Adams 378 (C.
Adams ed. 1854).
n22 The dissent equates our conclusion that VMI's "asserted
interest in promoting diversity" is not "'genuine,'" with a
"charge" that the diversity rationale is "a pretext for
discriminating against women." Post, at 579-580. Of course, those
are not the same thing. I do not read the Court as saying that the
diversity rationale is a pretext for discrimination, and I would
not endorse such a proposition. We may find that diversity was not
the Commonwealth's real reason without suggesting, or having to
show, that the real reason was "antifeminism," post, at 580. Our
cases simply require that the proffered purpose for the challenged
gender classification be the actual purpose, although not
necessarily recorded. See ante, at 533, 535-536. The dissent also
says that the interest in diversity is so transparent that having
to articulate it is "absurd on its face." Post, at 592. Apparently,
that rationale was not obvious to the Mission Study Committee which
failed to list it among its reasons for maintaining VMI's all-men
admissions policy.