THIS WEEK IN RACE THIS WEEK IN RACE: Conservatives and Civil Rights Redux

8/21/2008

Conservatives and Civil Rights Redux

We are very excited about the blog THIS WEEK. After our discussion of William Voegeli's excellent Wall Street Journal piece two weeks ago, we engaged in a discussion with Dr. Voegeli via email. We all agreed to reprint that exchange here for the purposes of stimulating additional dialogue. Though Dr. Voegeli did not have time to write a formal response to our response to his response (dizzy yet?), we leave open the invitation for him to do so in the comments section below. Further, we very much encourage you to also join in the discussion.

The following is the text of the email exchange with no changes except the inclusion of hyperlinks to additional material where we feel it might be helpful to you, the reader. We want to thank Dr. Voegeli for his willingness to engage us with this important topic and for agreeing to share the conversation in this space; we all three agreed that it is a great "teaching moment."

Before reading further, please take a few moments to read Dr. Voegeli's article and our blog about it. The following will be much more meaningful in the context of the original WSJ.com article, as well as our treatment of it.


Dr. Caliendo and Dr. McIlwain:

Thank you for bringing my article on civil rights and the conservative movement to the attention of the readers of “This Week in Race.” I appreciate, as well, the compliments and attention you paid to it. I’m guessing you won’t mind if I respond to some of the points you raised.

I should begin by saying that I haven’t read Echo Chamber, so when you discuss my article in the context of that book’s argument, everything I know about that context is based on your description of it. If reading the book invalidates anything I say here, I will, naturally, revise my positions.

As I understand your reading of it, Echo Chamber argues that conservatives further their agenda by “framing” the information the public receives and assesses. When I do read the book, the question I will want it to answer is whether this isn’t something that everyone in politics does. And, if so, what’s the big deal? Will Saletan’s book, Bearing Right, for example, argues that all the participants in the abortion debate try to frame the issue to their benefit. The choice frame competes against the life frame. In a democracy, the one that makes the most sense to the most people will prevail. If liberals feel that conservatives have been selling too many frames to too many voters, the thing to do is offer better frames that will have wider appeal, and explain clearly why the liberal frames are better. The thing not to do is complain, as Thomas Frank does, that wicked conservative rhetoricians cynically put forward arguments they don’t believe to ensnare stupid conservative voters who do believe them.

According to your analysis of my article, there is a conservative frame and a civil rights frame, each advancing distinctive and generally opposed ways to think about the requirements of racial justice in the U.S. The conservative frame is preoccupied with states’ rights and limiting government, the civil rights frame with correcting an American system that is “fundamentally stacked against people of color and those who are impoverished.” If I understand correctly, you think my essay was in some ways an analysis of how the conservative frame fails to appreciate the more compelling and admirable assertions of the civil rights frame, and in other ways was an example of that failure.

I agree with that argument to this extent: I am a conservative who thinks the conservatives were fundamentally wrong and civil rights activists fundamentally correct on the questions about which they disagreed from 1955 to 1965. At the same time, I think the conservative framework is, in general, better than all the alternatives to it for helping Americans to govern ourselves satisfactorily. Clearly, there is some tension between these two propositions. Your analysis of my essay welcomes its criticism of the way conservatives responded to the civil rights movement, but criticizes it for not resolving the tension I’ve described in the obvious way: by admitting that conservatism is essentially wrong, if not evil.

You won’t be surprised that I’ll decline that invitation, and you will be relieved that I won’t offer a full explanation for why I am (still, after the failings I describe in my essay) a conservative. To be as brief as possible, I agree with George Will that liberals think the point of politics is to make the world a better place, while conservatives think the point is to keep it from becoming worse. In the context of domestic American politics, the way things can get worse that worries conservatives the most is when social reformers become so convinced of the necessity and superiority of their plans that they become quite comfortable with the government’s using its inherent monopoly on legal physical force to compel other people to fall in line with their vision.

This was the thought that led me to write that conservatism came to grief over civil rights because it had no starting point for ending Jim Crow, while liberalism came to grief because it had no stopping point after Jim Crow had been defeated. I’m thinking about busing, for example, and specifically about the 1974 Supreme Court decision in Milliken v. Bradley. By a vote of 5-to-4 the Court rejected the mad scientist scheme, devised by a federal district court at the behest of civil rights plaintiffs and approved at the appellate level, to bus school children all over the Detroit metropolitan area - the city plus 53 suburban school districts - in order to achieve racial balance. Had such liberal heroes as William Brennan and Thurgood Marshall been able to find one more vote, the plan would have been upheld and conservative justices like William Rehnquist and Warren Burger would have been the dissenters.

Perhaps you think busing was a fine idea, that it’s a shame the Milliken decision prevented it from being extended to entire metropolitan areas, that conservatives (and whites generally) who opposed busing were, yet again, “privileging the values of individualism and states’ rights over values of equality and (social) justice by buying into myths and stereotypes about people of color.” But the question about the absence of a liberal stopping point will not go away. Bill Clinton was aware of it in his “mend it, don’t end it” speech in 1995, saying that affirmative action “should not go on forever” and “should be retired when its job is done.” It’s clear, however, that the refusal of its advocates to state clearly what it would mean for its job to be done – or what it would mean for an affirmative action plan to go too far and violate rights of citizens who aren’t part of any minority group and whose well-being doesn’t figure into any scheme of social justice, but who deserve, simply and merely as citizens, to have those rights respected – guarantees that affirmative action will be retired only because of the victories of opponents like Ward Connerly.

Let me note, in closing, that I dispute your interpretation of my quotation of the Ta-Nehisi Coates article on Bill Cosby. I was making the same point that Coates made: black voters have entirely plausible reasons for voting Democratic, even those black voters whose worldviews are, in important respects, conservative. Thus, it was untrue and unfair for you to say that I was implicitly criticizing black voters by making the inherently racist assertion that they are “so unsophisticated that they vote against their interests.” (Do you think, by the way, that Thomas Frank was in any way bigoted, or simply condescending, for explicitly making the same generalization about white, working-class voters?)

Secondly, you misconstrue my “swipe at the social science” used in the 1954 Brown decision. I was not trying to evaluate the Clark doll experiment, but to argue that Supreme Court justices lack the capacity to do so, and shouldn’t have tried. It’s an argument the historian James Patterson, no one’s idea of a conservative ideologue, made in Grand Expectations, where he said that Clark’s research was “dubious and subject to different interpretations. Black children attending desegregated schools in the North, for instance, seemed to have lower self-esteem, as Clark defined it, than black children in segregated schools. The fact of the matter was that in 1954 there simply did not exist sufficient research that could ‘prove’ whether any particular racial mix in schools was superior – or in what ways – to any other. The Court would have done better to avoid socio-psychological speculation, which opened it to criticism.” The best way for the Court to have avoided that criticism would have been to overturn Plessy by embracing the “color-blind Constitution” Justice Harlan’s dissent called for.

Best regards,

Bill Voegeli
Claremont, CA


Dr. Voegeli,

Thank you very much for your thoughtful reply to our blog. We don't at all mind that you responded; to the contrary, we'd like to include this exchange in a future blog, if you agree to do so. We'll be happy to extend you an invitation to write the final entry if you wish to respond to what we write below.

First, we want to be clear that our blog focuses on race, politics and language, so our treatment of Jamieson and Cappella's Echo Chamber was less designed to be a review of the full volume as it was intended to situate your essay in the context of its discussion of the Trent Lott situation, which they use as an illustration of their larger point in chapter 2. Their thesis is not simply that conservatives frame information to further their political agendas. You are absolutely right that everyone does that. The point of their book is to show the relationship between the Wall Street Journal's editorial page, Rush Limbaugh's radio show, and Fox News television broadcasts. They discuss framing and priming, but those comprise the theoretical basis for their research, not the thrust of the book. The close relationship of message framing and the potential effects it has on the audience is the primary contribution of this work. It is certainly true that conservative frames have been more effective than liberal frames in the past thirty years (at least). George Lakoff's 2004 book Don't Think of an Elephant speaks directly to that.

Second, we want to note that one of the premises upon which our work rests is that there is too much debate and not enough dialogue in politics today. In that spirit, we'd like to elaborate and, perhaps, clarify the points you raise, but we do not wish to persuade you that we're "correct." The mission of THIS WEEK IN RACE is to apply scholarship from the fields of political science and communication to current issues of race, politics and language. Our work is not value-neutral, of course; we are decidedly committed to racial equality and exposing the way language tacitly serves to perpetuate racial inequality. So while we strive for objectivity, we do not attempt to be neutral, nor do are we naive enough to believe that our own values do not inform our work.

So the criticism you make of Thomas Frank's claims about "wicked conservative rhetoricians cynically pu[ting] forward arguments they don't believe to ensnare stupid conservative voters who do believe them" is beyond our scope. Indeed, one of the things that we've argued consistently is that as social scientists, we are interested in the effects of language, not the intent of those who use it. Intent is often inferred (by our readers, as well as the broader community), but it's always speculative. We try to point out inconsistencies and poor logic by those who use racialized language, but we are not interested in "outing" bigots as much as we are in pointing out the inherent racism in all of us.

It is on this point that we are concerned that you may have taken offense to our point about our criticism of your use of the Coates quotation. TWIR readers will recognize that we use the term "racist" very purposefully. It refers to systemic racism, not individualized bigotry. Everyone who has been socialized in the United States is racist in a way that privileges whites. That "racism" is mostly subconscious, but it exists, and it exists for everyone, irrespective of skin color. This is why you will hear scholars claim that "black people can't be racist." Black people can certainly be bigoted, meaning that they have animosity toward whites or members of other racial groups, but racism is the internalized assumptions that we all posses about people of color, even as our conscious minds strive to counteract that socialization. In that context, what we perceived as your assumption that blacks are so unsophisticated that they vote against their own interest did, indeed, reflect your racism. You may, as some conservatives (like Sean Hannity do) argue that you are not racist. Lots of folks do because most of us do not consciously judge people negatively by the color of their skin. We will not try to convince you otherwise, but we will say that racism is like an affliction such as alcoholism or even cancer: until we recognize that it's there, we cannot treat it. We've long argued (alongside others) that an unfortunate legacy of Martin Luther King is that white civil-rights progressives agreed with him so much that they convinced themselves that they were no longer racist because they were not bigoted. It is largely that reason that racism (not bigotry) is still so prevalent today. We haven't dealt with it squarely. So, even though Coates is black, he very well can make racist statements based on his assumptions. That's the real revelatory power of the Clark experiments.

On that point, we may not have been as clear as we wished to be about the possibility that Clark's work did not necessary imply that segregation was the cause of the black children preferring the white dolls. We are in absolute agreement that such an inference was a stretch (at best). Our concern was your original sentence, which we took to implicitly criticize the study itself by characterizing the research as "problematic." We agree that it was problematic to use the results in the case the way it was used, but the study is not problematic -- it is an important indication of the way racism (as opposed to bigotry) works in America -- it affects all of us in a way that we do not usually even recognize, and it leads to what Dr. Cornel West argued in his 1993 book Race Matters is one of the largest problems facing black America: "too little self love" (he pairs this with "too much poverty"). We intended our discussion of the scholarly debate over footnote 11 in the Brown case to suggest that we were sensitive to the argument about employing Clark's work in this way, but we may have not been as clear as we should have.

We chose to highlight your essay because it is one of the few works by a conservative where the writer is not trying to explain away misunderstandings of racist policies or language. We appreciate that you are frank about the mistakes conservatives made with respect to civil rights. But you certainly are aware that you are unique in this respect. That's precisely why we invoked Jamieson and Cappella's chapter on the Lott incident. Rather than own his racism, Lott argued in his memoirs that he was misunderstood. After all, he asks us to understand, he doesn't use the n-word and he's had black friends, staffers and supporters. Again, he's making a fine argument that he's not a bigot, but that's not the same as not being racist. Further, the conservative media, while distancing themselves from Lott, didn't do as you do and argue that those policies were flawed -- instead, they turned the tables to argue that liberals were being hypocritical (which they were). From our position, it is this inability or unwillingness to embrace the way racism really works that is at the heart of the problem.

As committed as we are to racial equality, we must, by definition believe that "conservatism is essentially wrong" on the issue of civil rights. We wouldn't say "evil," because that implies intent, and we can't ascribe intent or speculate on motives (well, we can, but it's not useful or grounded in any way). So we want to make two points here: 1) we do not comment at all on conservatism writ large; we are focused on race, so in that context, we believe conservatism is wrong. 2) we do not come to this conclusion by a skewed perception of conservatism but by its history and current practices by adherents.

We were not aware of George Will's explanation of contemporary American ideology, but we find it to be accurate. So by that definition, "liberals think the point of politics is to make the world a better place, while conservatives think the point is to keep it from becoming worse." Inherently, those who are disadvantaged (the poor, the uneducated, women and racial minorities) will be less interested in maintaining the status quo as those who are in relative positions of advantage. "Worse" is relative, is it not? If one is homeless, how much worse can it get? If one is illiterate and living on minimum wage, how much worse can it get? It can always get worse, but the floor is a lot closer to folks in these situations than it is to you (presumably) and us. On the other hand, if one is advantaged, it is attractive to have the boat not be rocked because there is more to lose. For most middle-class Americans, the perception of their position (as a result of living beyond our means) allows us to view ourselves further up the socio-economic ladder, and thus less likely to support policies that would do anything other than "keep things from getting worse." If one accepts that the racial and economic inequality that exists in America today is unacceptable and not solely the fault of those who suffer the disadvantage, then keeping things from getting worse is not a viable option; we want things to get better.

Perhaps this is where we part ways. Part of the conservative position has been the reliance on a model of American democracy that stresses meritocracy and personal responsibility. Given an equal starting point, it would be hard to argue with these values. But it is clear that the starting point is not equal. There continues to be documented inequality with respect to income, wealth, education, incarceration, teen pregnancy, etc. There are two possible explanations for this: it is the fault of those who continue to make bad choices, or it is a systemic problem. (There is another argument -- a biological one -- as well, but so few subscribe to it that it's not worth mentioning here.) While individual choice is always a variable in one's social standing, bad choices by a wealthy teenager in a suburban town are less likely to have life-changing results as such choices by a person of color who lives in the inner city. Where a white kid's mom with connections might be able to plea down a DUI, a city kid relying on a public defender my lose his or her chance for financial aid to college. Further, meritocracy is a myth. For example, inner city schools are vastly underfunded compared to suburban schools. Conservatives argue that "you can't throw money at the problem," but while some suburban children take Advanced Placement classes and, therefore, can have a GPA above 4.0, the smartest kid in the school with no AP classes is bound by a maximum GPA of 4.0. Relying only on "merit" for college admission, then, is inherently disadvantaging persons in certain situations and advantaging others. Those sorts of examples rarely surface in affirmative action discussions amidst the "I knew a guy who was denied admission to college because he was white" stories.

In short, then, we don't have a policy position on busing, but we agree that it certainly didn't work. We disagree, however, that liberalism has (you said "had," referring to the Jim Crow era, to be fair) no stopping point. We're aware of no thoughtful advocates of affirmative action, to take but one example of a liberal position on civil rights, who believe it's a permanent fix for racial inequality. It has, however, helped to level the playing field (though there is clearly a long way to go). We agree with Justice O'Connor's position in her opinion in the U. of Michigan cases in 2003 that there should be a time when it is not needed, but that time is not now. Quotas were wrong, and we agree with their illegality. Giving a person of color points on an entrance equation is not denying a white person his or her civil rights, though; that person got "points" throughout his or her life that cannot be codified on an admission form. Very poor whites are not helped and often harmed by affirmative action. We concede that point for sure. That's unacceptable. Poverty in America is disproportionately black and brown, though, and even wealthy people of color face systemic disadvantages. In short, the "end point" of liberal positions on civil rights is when these situations no longer exist. The end point is when a white parent would just as soon have his or her child go to an inner city school than a suburban school because children in both schools have the same chance of gaining admission into a four-year college. The end point will be when persons of all races can choose where they want to live because income ranges are evenly distributed within racial groups. The end point will be when political figures' use of racial language is not effective.

We'll close, then, by noting that we were very critical of comments by Hillary Clinton and her surrogates during the primary campaign. We were critical of Joe Biden's comments about Obama being "articulate." We were critical of the Washington Democratic Party suggesting that an Italian-American opponent was attached to organized crime. Where we see language that plays on racial predispositions, we point it out. That's not only done by conservatives, but, as your essay so nicely points out, conservatives have been on the wrong side of this issue for a long time (RNC chair Ken Mehlman admitted as much in 2005). We hope that your work makes conservatives more likely to come forward and embrace those mistakes rather than pointing the finger at others or rationalizing them. If conservatives in the public sphere were as honest as you are, we would be satisfied that we are having a fair and open debate. If John McCain would say, "In my presidency, I would advocate policies that would keep things from getting worse in America," that would be refreshing. But we all know that he will not say that, even if he believes it (though maybe he's not a conservative in the Reagan form, so he may be a bad example). If conservative public figures are against judicial activism, they should denounce the Brown decision (it didn't integrate schools anyway), but they do not. They should address why white privilege (e.g., the AP courses) is acceptable, but affirmative action is not. We agree with you that "[i]n a democracy, the [frame] that makes the most sense to the most people will prevail." We have taken it upon ourselves to unpack those frames as they concern race, politics and language, and we appreciate your willingness to engage with us on the topic.

Best wishes,

Stephen and Charlton

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2 Comments:

At 8/24/08 1:02 PM, Anonymous William Voegeli said...

Dear Stephen and Charlton,



Thank you for allowing me to participate in the political dialogue you encourage. I agree with the spirit of your enterprise: too much political rhetoric today takes place within silos. Conservatives read and write for other conservatives, liberals other liberals, feminists feminists, etc. People rarely encounter arguments they disagree with, and even more rarely do they approach them with the idea that they might learn something from an adversary, or have one of their own assumptions challenged instructively. The default option, instead, is to assume that no decent or reasonable person could possibly embrace ideas radically different from one’s own, and the people who do embrace them must, therefore, suffer from some kind of mental, moral or psychological defect.



Your illuminating reply (to my reply, to your post, about my essay - sheesh) concerns two big subjects, racism and conservatism. You treat them as different things, but ones that are closely related. You begin by distinguishing racism from bigotry. If I understand the distinction correctly, bigotry involves active discrimination against members of other racial groups, motivated by feelings of hostility or contempt. This bigotry can visit petty humiliations, economic deprivation or overt violence upon its victims. Racism, by contrast, is “systemic.” As you said in your post, we live in a nation decisively and pervasively shaped by “a system built on slavery and slowly altered to incorporate black Americans into that flawed system.” The essence of racism is obliviousness to this crucial fact, and acquiescence in the perpetuation of all the deplorable consequences of America’s woefully unequal past, either by actively opposing or never seriously considering the profound changes needed to give blacks, realistically rather than theoretically, the same prospects in life that whites take for granted. As you said in your post on August 6, the problem with the conservative approach to racial questions is that “advocating a system that is inherently biased against some Americans while advantaging others can only result in sustained inequality.”



If that’s a fair paraphrase of your thesis, then I suspect you will agree that it is very similar to the argument Pres. Johnson made in a famous speech at Howard University in 1965. It’s worth quoting at length:



Freedom is the right to share, share fully and equally, in American society – to vote, to hold a job, to enter a public place, to go to school. It is the right to be treated in every part of our national life as a person equal in dignity and promise to all others.

But freedom is not enough. You do not wipe away the scars of centuries by saying: Now you are free to go where you want, and do as you desire, and choose the leaders you please.

You do not take a person who, for years, has been hobbled by chains and liberate him, bring him up to the starting line of a race and then say, “you are free to compete with all the others,” and still justly believe that you have been completely fair.

Thus it is not enough just to open the gates of opportunity. All our citizens must have the ability to walk through those gates.

This is the next and the more profound stage of the battle for civil rights. We seek not just freedom but opportunity. We seek not just legal equity but human ability, not just equality as a right and a theory but equality as a fact and equality as a result.

For the task is to give 20 million Negroes the same chance as every other American to learn and grow, to work and share in society, to develop their abilities – physical, mental and spiritual, and to pursue their individual happiness.

To this end equal opportunity is essential, but not enough, not enough. Men and women of all races are born with the same range of abilities. But ability is not just the product of birth. Ability is stretched or stunted by the family that you live with, and the neighborhood you live in – by the school you go to and the poverty or the richness of your surroundings. It is the product of a hundred unseen forces playing upon the little infant, the child, and finally the man.

Conservatives are, as you rightly observe, instinctively unsympathetic to the ambitious project that you and Lyndon Johnson call for. We call ourselves “conservatives” for a reason – we want to conserve things that are both valuable and vulnerable. Because they’re valuable they deserve conservation, and because they’re vulnerable they need it. The conserving we favor should not be indiscriminate, though the occasions when it has been have justifiably diminished conservatism’s reputation. (This was the subject of my essay on Buckley.) Rightly and intelligently rendered, conservatism does not fail or refuse to notice aspects of the past that were wrong, and it works to improve them. But it does caution us that the best-laid plans for social reform can go astray in ways that repudiate or abandon parts of the past that are invaluable and possibly irretrievable. The most concise account of this disposition comes in a few lines Evelyn Waugh wrote in praise of Rudyard Kipling: “He was a conservative in the sense that he believed civilization to be something laboriously achieved which was only precariously defended. He wanted to see the defenses fully manned and he hated the liberals because he thought them gullible and feeble, believing in the easy perfectibility of man and ready to abandon the work of centuries for sentimental qualms.”



One way of getting at the difference between your outlook and mine is that you find Lyndon Johnson’s speech inspiring, I’m guessing, and Waugh’s statement a little hysterical. I, on the other hand, find Johnson exhibiting, perfectly, the social engineer’s bland and clueless confidence that we can disassemble a society we find deeply flawed and rebuild a very different one to our specifications with modest costs and entirely foreseeable risks – exactly the sort of attitude Waugh found alarming.



Johnson’s speech at Howard University is not the perfect expression of liberal hubris. It is not even Johnson’s best effort. In October 1964 he promised that, under his policies, every slum “would be gone from every city in America. Every child would have a first-rate education. Poverty would end; life would have meaning, purpose, and pleasure.” The lifetime achievement award for complacent grandiosity, however, goes to Archibald MacLeish, poet and avid New Dealer, who wrote in 1943, “We have, and we know we have, the abundant means to bring our boldest dreams to pass – to create for ourselves whatever world we have the courage to desire. We have the metal and the men to take this country down, if we please to take it down, and to build it again as we please to build it. We have the tools and the skill and the intelligence to take our cities apart and put them together, to lead our roads and rivers where we please to lead them, to build our houses where we want our houses, to brighten the air, clean the wind, to live as men in this Republic, free men, should be living. We have the power and the courage and the resources of good-will and decency and common understanding . . . to create a nation such as men have never seen.”



I don’t expect I’ll convince you to sign up with me in taking Waugh’s side in the debate I have set up between him and LBJ. But I think there is some purpose served in outlining why I find Waugh’s position congenial and Johnson’s troubling. A good place to start is Johnson’s admonition that you cannot, finally, respect the rights of minorities who have long been denied them “and still justly believe that you have been completely fair” to those hobbled by the weight of historical discrimination. OK, says the conservative; that’s what fairness isn’t. What is it, then? What does America need to do to justly believe that it has been completely fair, or even sufficiently fair?



I’m not trying to score a debating point here, but to get at something deeper. When Johnson says that equal opportunity is “not enough,” the conservative wants to know what would be enough. And the conservative worries that the absence of a clear and useable answer to that question means that the social reconstruction project we are being asked to endorse is either so audacious or so amorphous as to be, for all practical purposes, permanent and infinite.



Johnson’s answer to the general question of what would be enough defies parody. In his October 1964 speech he said that the goal of the Great Society was to arrive at “the time when man gains full dominion under God over his own destiny. It’s the time of peace on earth and good will among men.” This sounds like a time beyond politics and history, because it will be the time that sees the end of all human sorrows. It sounds also like social policy-making can now assert its right and competence to respond to longings formerly thought to be so fundamental that only God could address them by becoming incarnate. LBJ assured his listeners that although the Great Society sets our sights high, “higher than we expect to get, at least higher than we expect to get right away,” the transformation he looks to effect is not that far over the horizon. “The Great Society just isn’t a dream of mine. It is as real as tomorrow, and it is yours for the working at it.”



Johnson’s expansive vision, applied to the question of racial justice in his speech at Howard University, calls for “not just equality as a right and a theory but equality as a fact and equality as a result.” We’ll have arrived at that fact and result when blacks have “the same chance as every other American” to develop their abilities and pursue their happiness. This equalizing project, however, will be vastly ambitious because ability is affected by family, neighborhood, school and surroundings – by “a hundred unseen forces.”



I think Johnson’s point is entirely compatible with the one you made on August 6: “Study after study has documented racial inequality in income, wealth, hiring, arrests and incarceration, capital punishment and education.” In the shadow of this mountain of evidence, the question of whether “something needed to be done to rectify racial injustice” should have been settled long ago. Again, however, I pose my annoying question about specifics: It’s easy to say something needs to be done. It’s more difficult and more important to say what needs to be done.



It’s equally important, and difficult, to say what the rectification of racial injustice means, and how we’ll know when we’ve accomplished it. Advocates for racial justice don’t spell this out, either. I’m convinced it’s not because they don’t know the answer but because they believe it would be counter-productive to say it out loud. The full and ultimate meaning of rectifying racial injustice is to bring about the society that would exist if racial injustice had never taken place. In it, we not only stop all discrimination, but negate every lingering consequence of all the discriminatory practices of the past. This is such a vast, costly and tumultuous project that its advocates know to actually blurt it out, in a democracy, would doom it. Better – shrewder – to say that whatever we’re doing in the direction of racial justice is not enough, than to alarm lots of voters by specifying what is enough.



This rectification of racial injustice is what Thomas Sowell has called the “civil rights vision.” It holds that statistical disparities of the sort you point to – in income, occupation, criminal justice or education – are all ultimately attributable to discrimination, either going on now, or committed in the past but having consequences in the present. The corollary of this principle is that to believe some statistical disparities are not attributable to discrimination is racist, in the sense in which you use the term. This is so for two reasons. First, it is an excuse for those who favor complacency and inaction about rectifying racial injustice. Second, it blames the victim. As you said in your reply to me, since “it is clear that the starting point is not equal” for blacks and whites in America, there are only “two possible explanations” for the large and continuing statistical disparities between them: either “it is the fault of those who continue to make bad choices, or it is a systemic problem.”



I believe this is a flawed diagnosis that leads to a flawed prescription. The problem with the diagnosis is that it oversimplifies, reducing the complex realities that determine economic and social outcomes for different groups in racially or ethnically heterogeneous societies to an equation with a single variable, discrimination. Sowell has examined many such societies and concluded that, in them, “large statistical disparities have been commonplace, both in the presence of discrimination and in its absence.” In addition to sifting through lots of data on his own, Sowell cites Myron Weiner of MIT, who wrote, “All multi-ethnic societies exhibit a tendency for ethnic groups to engage in different occupations, have different levels (and, often, types) of education, receive different incomes, and occupy a different place in the social hierarchy.” And he cites Donald Horowitz of Duke University, who “examined the idea of a society where groups are ‘proportionately represented’ at different levels and in different sectors. He concluded that ‘few, if any, societies have ever approximated this description.’”



Sowell points out (in Civil Rights: Rhetoric or Reality?) that the world is full of evidence that refutes the idea that discrimination (whether as a matter of bigotry or racism, to use your terms) is the decisive variable explaining differences in the status and attainments among various groups. He says, for example, that the Chinese have been and continue to be targets of discrimination in Southeast Asia. Yet, in Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand and the Philippines, “the Chinese minority – about 5 percent of the population of southeast Asia – owns a majority of the nation’s total investments in key industries. By the middle of the twentieth century, the Chinese owned 75 percent of the rice mills in the Philippines, and between 80 and 90 percent of the rice mills in Thailand. . . . In Malaysia, where the anti-Chinese discrimination is written into the Constitution, is embodied in preferential quotas for Malays in government and private industry alike, and extends to admissions and scholarships at the universities, the average Chinese continues to earn twice the income of the average Malay.” Looking at America, Sowell notes, “Japanese immigrants to the United States also encountered persistent and escalating discrimination, culminating in their mass internment during World War II, but by 1959 they had about equaled the income of whites and by 1969 Japanese American families were earning nearly one-third higher incomes than the average American family.”



Suppose we take, very seriously and literally, the challenge implied by your observation that the only explanation for income inequality among the races in America is that it is the result of a systemic problem, one that requires a systemic solution. If we were fanatics about it, we could insist that rectifying racial injustice will be complete when the racial composition of every percentile of the income distribution will be identical to the racial composition of the entire society. Thus, there would be the same proportion of blacks in, say, the 73rd percentile as there is in the entire society, and as there is in each of the other 99 percentiles. Let’s not be fanatics, and say, less ambitiously, that we want the racial composition of each income quintile to be equal to each of the other four quintiles and, thus, to the society as a whole. This goal allows for some residual economic inequality, since different racial groups could be bunched near the top or the bottom of one or more of the quintiles.



How should we carry out our income quintile equalization program? If we wanted to be completely candid, and repeal the 14th Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection of the laws while we’re at it, we could enact racially differentiated tax surcharges and rebates. Once we got the brackets right in our zero-sum redistribution program, enough whites and Asians would be surcharged out of the top quintiles, and enough blacks and Hispanics rebated out of the bottom ones, for us to reach our goal.



America will have to elect a president to the left of Dennis Kucinich to make quintile equalization an explicit policy goal. Even then, there probably wouldn’t be enough political support for achieving that goal through racially differentiated tax surcharges and rebates. The surreptitious way to undertake the project is to deplore the racist provenance of existing economic disparities; talk about the need for greater equality without ever specifying the meaning of sufficient equality; advocate tax increases on prosperous people generally, a disproportionate number of whom will be white and Asian; and advocate more social spending and affirmative action to help poor people generally, a disproportionate number of whom will be black and Hispanic. In other words, to be 21st century Democrats.



Whether the rectification of racial injustice is pursued through candid and audacious policies, or cautious and incremental ones, a lot of what’s going to get “rectified” will be the consequences, not of racial injustice, but of human freedom and diversity. Some of the offending differences to be corrected are merely, and innocently, demographic. The age distribution of different racial groups varies considerably, for example, meaning that groups that are disproportionately young are going to have lower incomes, in the aggregate, than groups that are disproportionately middle-aged. The ways in which redistributing income from the latter to the former advances the cause of racial justice are, to put it gently, elusive. Recently arrived immigrants are disproportionately likely to be poor, and to be Hispanic. Does racial justice require us to ascribe their poverty to discrimination, carried out by us beyond our borders, and treat our assistance to them as a way to compensate for those transgressions?



In short, the rectification of racial injustice requires us to be a great deal smarter than we can be. In the 1978 Bakke decision, Justice Harry Blackmun defended affirmative action as a way of “putting minority [medical school] applicants in the position they would have been in if not for the evil of racial discrimination.” The problem, as Sowell explains, is that “the idea of restoring groups to where they would have been – and what they would have been” if past discrimination had never taken place, “presupposes a range of knowledge that no one has ever possessed.”



What would the average Englishman be like today “but for” the Norman conquest? What would the average Japanese be like “but for” the enforced isolation of Japan for two-and-a-half centuries under the Tokugawa shoguns? What would the Middle East be like “but for” the emergence of Islam?



To which we might add, what would the average African American be like today “but for” slavery? Well, for starters, African and non-American.



When you guys gallantly offered me the last word in this exchange, I’m sure you weren’t expecting it to be longer than a Russian novel. I’ll close here, knowing that I could say a good deal more but have already said a good deal too much. Though I have exhausted your patience we have not exhausted the issues, and if you would like to revisit them in the future I would be happy to oblige.



Best regards,



Bill

 
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