MADISON, Wis. – The University of Wisconsin-Madison’s student government thinks all black people should receive free tuition and housing, as well as exemption from all fees.

The Associated Students of Madison want to do away with racist college admissions based on ACT and SAT scores and instead look to enroll students based on where they live.

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The drastic actions and others are included in a resolution approved by the student government Wednesday titled “Cognitive Dissonance” – a play on the perceived inability of university officials to substantially increase black enrollment despite their stated focus on inclusion, The Badger Herald reports.

ASM representative Tyriek Mack, a junior who authored the resolution, aired his grievances with the university in an editorial for the student blog “The Black Voice.”

“Empty phrases like ‘inclusion’ and ‘diversity’ are just the contemporary nomenclature for ‘token integration.’ Tell me—how can a University that prides itself on diversity, have only a 2 percent Black population? If the university was committed as they say they are on paper, they would have taken steps that people have been asking for years,” he wrote.

“At the root of America’s, and the University’s, stagnation in terms of racial progress is ‘cognitive dissonance,’” he opined. “Ultimately, the inclusive rhetoric propagated by these white supremacist institutions have little real meaning.”

The approved resolution laid out five demands:

  1. A special task force to develop “test-optional” and “geographically weighted” admissions.
  2. Resources for the admissions office to carry out the news process.
  3. Increasing need-based aid to 10 percent of total giving.
  4. A penalty if the UW Foundation doesn’t increase giving.
  5. Free tuition for black people – including illegal immigrants and felons – as a form of reparations for “the systemic denial of access to high quality educational opportunities,” the Herald reports.

Mack wrote in the op-ed that the free education for blacks idea comes from The Movement for Black Lives, a coalition of radical social justice organizations that mirror Black Lives Matter.

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The group’s other reparations demands include a “guaranteed minimum livable income for all black people” and “corporate and government reparations” to address “ongoing physical and mental trauma, and ensuring our access and control of food sources, housing and land.”

The Movement for Black Lives also wants a formal declaration of the “lasting impacts of slavery” and federal legislation to force reparations.

“If no one challenges the university’s empty promises, then the racial composition of campus will remain stagnant,” Mack told the Herald.

University officials, meanwhile, point out that the racial composition of campus is far from “stagnant.”

“We’ve increased the proportion of students of color from 11 to 15 percent over the past decade,” UW spokeswoman Meredith McGlone wrote in an email to the Herald that also highlighted a $100 million and $10 million scholarship programs for need-based students.

“We’ve been recognized nationally for our work closing the graduation gap between majority and underrepresented students.”

UW is currently planning to build a black cultural center and increase diversity training for staff, while Gov. Scott Walker has also contributed to making college more affordable for minorities, Fox News reports.

“In-state undergraduate tuition has been frozen for years and Gov. Scott Walker has proposed a 5 percent tuition cut for resident undergraduates in the second year of the upcoming state budget,” according to the news site.

Chinese graduate student Yuhong Zhu told Fox News he thinks the recently adopted student government resolution is offensive to minorities and believes scholarships make more sense.

“I wouldn’t appreciate if the school offered me free tuition just because I’m a minority,” he said. “We should at least have to work hard for it.”