In Canada, are some students “more equal than others”? A new medical school is opening in Toronto, Canada, and it will “reserve 75 percent [sic] of its seats for Indigenous, Black, and other ‘equity-deserving’ groups, including 2SLGBTQ+.” Yes, that means what you think it means—“able-bodied straight white students can’t apply for these seats.” It’s discrimination in the name of equity. So what’s “equity”?
Well, equity is a big tenet of critical race theory (CRT), the worldview dominating Western academia. Basically, equity, in this context, is equality of outcomes not equality of opportunity. In his new book Woke Injustice, AiG’s Bryan Osborne defines equity, and its link to CRT, this way:
The end game for the [CRT] revolution is to bring about equity. The CRT meaning assigned to equity is equal outcomes. Everyone gets the same stuff and same results in everything, no matter what. Recall that CRT decries any disparity in outcomes as oppressive. By equity, the critical race theorist does not mean equality. Equality assumes each person is equally valuable and worthy of equal opportunities. CRT requires equal outcomes. There’s a big difference between the two.
Here’s how this looks at this new medical school: Instead of allowing anyone to apply based on their individual merit, this new school has lowered the entry standard (students only need a 3.3 GPA to get in, compared to another Toronto medical school that requires a 3.95) and only allows certain perceived disadvantaged groups to apply. But they will never achieve equity because individuals are not all the same.
We should be striving for equality as a culture—we want equal opportunities for everyone. But we will never achieve equal outcomes because individuals are complex and so many factors make a difference in how any one person will fare under the same opportunity. God didn’t make everyone the same or, in his sovereignty, give everyone the same circumstances! God also gives people different gifts/talents (Ephesians 4:11).
Proverbs 22:2 KJV – “The rich and poor meet together: the Lord is the maker of them all.”
Christians often get duped into viewing the world through the lens of CRT because they’ve been convinced it’s both compassionate and the only way to help those who are disadvantaged. But what they don’t realize is that the framework they are adopting is an anti-biblical, anti-Christian worldview that is hurting our culture.





















