White Guilt and the Western Past

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White Guilt and the Western Past

Postby Cosmic Cowbell » Thu May 07, 2009 10:59 am

Deserves it's own space here...

White Guilt and the Western Past
Why is America so delicate with the enemy?

by SHELBY STEELE
Tuesday, May 2, 2006 12:01 A.M. EDT

There is something rather odd in the way America has come to fight its wars since World War II.

For one thing, it is now unimaginable that we would use anything approaching the full measure of our military power (the nuclear option aside) in the wars we fight. And this seems only reasonable given the relative weakness of our Third World enemies in Vietnam and in the Middle East. But the fact is that we lost in Vietnam, and today, despite our vast power, we are only slogging along--if admirably--in Iraq against a hit-and-run insurgency that cannot stop us even as we seem unable to stop it. Yet no one--including, very likely, the insurgents themselves--believes that America lacks the raw power to defeat this insurgency if it wants to. So clearly it is America that determines the scale of this war. It is America, in fact, that fights so as to make a little room for an insurgency.

Certainly since Vietnam, America has increasingly practiced a policy of minimalism and restraint in war. And now this unacknowledged policy, which always makes a space for the enemy, has us in another long and rather passionless war against a weak enemy.

Why this new minimalism in war?

It began, I believe, in a late-20th-century event that transformed the world more profoundly than the collapse of communism: the world-wide collapse of white supremacy as a source of moral authority, political legitimacy and even sovereignty. This idea had organized the entire world, divided up its resources, imposed the nation-state system across the globe, and delivered the majority of the world's population into servitude and oppression. After World War II, revolutions across the globe, from India to Algeria and from Indonesia to the American civil rights revolution, defeated the authority inherent in white supremacy, if not the idea itself. And this defeat exacted a price: the West was left stigmatized by its sins. Today, the white West--like Germany after the Nazi defeat--lives in a kind of secular penitence in which the slightest echo of past sins brings down withering condemnation. There is now a cloud over white skin where there once was unquestioned authority.

I call this white guilt not because it is a guilt of conscience but because people stigmatized with moral crimes--here racism and imperialism--lack moral authority and so act guiltily whether they feel guilt or not.

They struggle, above all else, to dissociate themselves from the past sins they are stigmatized with. When they behave in ways that invoke the memory of those sins, they must labor to prove that they have not relapsed into their group's former sinfulness. So when America--the greatest embodiment of Western power--goes to war in Third World Iraq, it must also labor to dissociate that action from the great Western sin of imperialism. Thus, in Iraq we are in two wars, one against an insurgency and another against the past--two fronts, two victories to win, one military, the other a victory of dissociation.

The collapse of white supremacy--and the resulting white guilt--introduced a new mechanism of power into the world: stigmatization with the evil of the Western past. And this stigmatization is power because it affects the terms of legitimacy for Western nations and for their actions in the world. In Iraq, America is fighting as much for the legitimacy of its war effort as for victory in war. In fact, legitimacy may be the more important goal. If a military victory makes us look like an imperialist nation bent on occupying and raping the resources of a poor brown nation, then victory would mean less because it would have no legitimacy. Europe would scorn. Conversely, if America suffered a military loss in Iraq but in so doing dispelled the imperialist stigma, the loss would be seen as a necessary sacrifice made to restore our nation's legitimacy. Europe's halls of internationalism would suddenly open to us.

Because dissociation from the racist and imperialist stigma is so tied to legitimacy in this age of white guilt, America's act of going to war can have legitimacy only if it seems to be an act of social work--something that uplifts and transforms the poor brown nation (thus dissociating us from the white exploitations of old). So our war effort in Iraq is shrouded in a new language of social work in which democracy is cast as an instrument of social transformation bringing new institutions, new relations between men and women, new ideas of individual autonomy, new and more open forms of education, new ways of overcoming poverty--war as the Great Society.

This does not mean that President Bush is insincere in his desire to bring democracy to Iraq, nor is it to say that democracy won't ultimately be socially transformative in Iraq. It's just that today the United States cannot go to war in the Third World simply to defeat a dangerous enemy.

White guilt makes our Third World enemies into colored victims, people whose problems--even the tyrannies they live under--were created by the historical disruptions and injustices of the white West. We must "understand" and pity our enemy even as we fight him. And, though Islamic extremism is one of the most pernicious forms of evil opportunism that has ever existed, we have felt compelled to fight it with an almost managerial minimalism that shows us to be beyond the passions of war--and thus well dissociated from the avariciousness of the white supremacist past.

Anti-Americanism, whether in Europe or on the American left, works by the mechanism of white guilt. It stigmatizes America with all the imperialistic and racist ugliness of the white Western past so that America becomes a kind of straw man, a construct of Western sin. (The Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo prisons were the focus of such stigmatization campaigns.) Once the stigma is in place, one need only be anti-American in order to be "good," in order to have an automatic moral legitimacy and power in relation to America. (People as seemingly disparate as President Jacques Chirac and the Rev. Al Sharpton are devoted pursuers of the moral high ground to be had in anti-Americanism.) This formula is the most dependable source of power for today's international left. Virtue and power by mere anti-Americanism. And it is all the more appealing since, unlike real virtues, it requires no sacrifice or effort--only outrage at every slight echo of the imperialist past.

Today words like "power" and "victory" are so stigmatized with Western sin that, in many quarters, it is politically incorrect even to utter them. For the West, "might" can never be right. And victory, when won by the West against a Third World enemy, is always oppression. But, in reality, military victory is also the victory of one idea and the defeat of another. Only American victory in Iraq defeats the idea of Islamic extremism. But in today's atmosphere of Western contrition, it is impolitic to say so.

America and the broader West are now going through a rather tender era, a time when Western societies have very little defense against the moral accusations that come from their own left wings and from those vast stretches of nonwhite humanity that were once so disregarded.

Europeans are utterly confounded by the swelling Muslim populations in their midst. America has run from its own mounting immigration problem for decades, and even today, after finally taking up the issue, our government seems entirely flummoxed. White guilt is a vacuum of moral authority visited on the present by the shames of the past. In the abstract it seems a slight thing, almost irrelevant, an unconvincing proposition. Yet a society as enormously powerful as America lacks the authority to ask its most brilliant, wealthy and superbly educated minority students to compete freely for college admission with poor whites who lack all these things. Just can't do it.

Whether the problem is race relations, education, immigration or war, white guilt imposes so much minimalism and restraint that our worst problems tend to linger and deepen. Our leaders work within a double bind. If they do what is truly necessary to solve a problem--win a war, fix immigration--they lose legitimacy.

To maintain their legitimacy, they practice the minimalism that makes problems linger. What but minimalism is left when you are running from stigmatization as a "unilateralist cowboy"? And where is the will to truly regulate the southern border when those who ask for this are slimed as bigots? This is how white guilt defines what is possible in America. You go at a problem until you meet stigmatization, then you retreat into minimalism.

Possibly white guilt's worst effect is that it does not permit whites--and nonwhites--to appreciate something extraordinary: the fact that whites in America, and even elsewhere in the West, have achieved a truly remarkable moral transformation. One is forbidden to speak thus, but it is simply true. There are no serious advocates of white supremacy in America today, because whites see this idea as morally repugnant. If there is still the odd white bigot out there surviving past his time, there are millions of whites who only feel goodwill toward minorities.

This is a fact that must be integrated into our public life--absorbed as new history--so that America can once again feel the moral authority to seriously tackle its most profound problems. Then, if we decide to go to war, it can be with enough ferocity to win.

Mr. Steele, a research fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, is author, most recently, of "White Guilt: How Blacks and Whites Together Destroyed the Promise of the Civil Rights Era," published this week by HarperCollins.

http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial ... =110008318
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Postby mentalgongfu2 » Thu May 07, 2009 11:24 am

There are no serious advocates of white supremacy in America today, because whites see this idea as morally repugnant.


I have to question the reality of this statement; the KKK and the neo-nazi groups in America constitute more than "the odd white bigot."

I must also question the assertion that "anti-Americanism" is a product of white guilt and is unrelated to the actual policies and practices of America. And the resort to referencing Chirac (the ungrateful Frenchman) and Sharpton (the ungrateful negro) falls into that school of thought that says if you disapprove of or question US policies it must be because you hate America.

Anti-Americanism, whether in Europe or on the American left, works by the mechanism of white guilt. It stigmatizes America with all the imperialistic and racist ugliness of the white Western past so that America becomes a kind of straw man, a construct of Western sin. (The Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo prisons were the focus of such stigmatization campaigns.) Once the stigma is in place, one need only be anti-American in order to be "good," in order to have an automatic moral legitimacy and power in relation to America. (People as seemingly disparate as President Jacques Chirac and the Rev. Al Sharpton are devoted pursuers of the moral high ground to be had in anti-Americanism.)
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Postby blanc » Thu May 07, 2009 1:21 pm

surely its hard to 'win' wars, even using your total fire power, if you have any interest in leaving a fragment of intact population and infrastructure, where essentially you fight on another's land.
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Postby compared2what? » Thu May 07, 2009 1:55 pm

There is something rather odd in the way America has come to fight its wars since World War II.

For one thing, it is now unimaginable that we would use anything approaching the full measure of our military power (the nuclear option aside) in the wars we fight. And this seems only reasonable given the relative weakness of our Third World enemies in Vietnam and in the Middle East. But the fact is that we lost in Vietnam, and today, despite our vast power, we are only slogging along--if admirably--in Iraq against a hit-and-run insurgency that cannot stop us even as we seem unable to stop it. Yet no one--including, very likely, the insurgents themselves--believes that America lacks the raw power to defeat this insurgency if it wants to. So clearly it is America that determines the scale of this war. It is America, in fact, that fights so as to make a little room for an insurgency.

Certainly since Vietnam, America has increasingly practiced a policy of minimalism and restraint in war. And now this unacknowledged policy, which always makes a space for the enemy, has us in another long and rather passionless war against a weak enemy.

Why this new minimalism in war?


Wait! I think I know this one! Just give me a moment to review my thoughts.

...

Well. Okay. As I recall, granting the unsupported-by-data-or-details premise on its own vague terms -- ie, that since World War II, America's war policies have been characterized by a new restraint wrt the full use of non-nuclear force at our disposal -- the short answer is:

There is no short answer. Or anyway, no short answer that wouldn't demonstrate a disgraceful lack of respect for American history. But very broadly speaking:

Owing to a huge uptick in America's international economic clout relative to most of the rest of the western world (and for other reasons all but wholly unrelated to race), the economic and social standard of living commonly regarded as "average" in America was much higher subsequent to World War II than it had been prior to World War II. And not for no reason, either. Real prosperity, in combination with post-depression regulatory reforms and entitlement programs, led to a basic expectation of economic independence and a certain degree of class privilege (ie -- home ownership, college education, etc), for everyone.

At the same time and for some of the same reasons, access to and use of various forms of real-time mass communication -- ie, telephone, television, radio, etc. -- became nearly universal and also, wrt to informational technologies, such as print and broadcast news media, moved from a primarily regional to a primarily national platform and pattern of distribution.

And also at the same time and for some of the same reasons, the increasingly widespread technological viability and availability of any number of non-nuclear weapons of mass destruction made "the full measure of our miltary power" -- and owing to cold-war geopolitical jockeying for global real-estate, the potential full measure of any country's military power by proxy -- an entirely different thing than it had been when it wasn't possible to bomb another country into smoking ruins without sustaining anything close to proportional casualties during the attack.

So. Today's pop quiz is essay-style. And the question is: In the context of the developments referred to above, what forces other than white guilt might account for what Shelby Steele regards as a well-intentioned but misapplied unwillingness on the part of the United States to use the full force of its military might in wartime?

I'm not gonna give away the whole answer before you all turn over your papers and start writing. But I'm willing to drop a few hints while I hum a little tune. Here we go:

La-di-da-di-tum-ti-la-unenforceability-of-the-draft-on-a-socially-entitled-populace-di-la-ti-national-and-international-outrage-in-response-to-broadcast-proof-of-the-mass-slaughter-of-civilians-tum-ti-tum-ti-la-di-da-di-omnipresent-threat-of-reprisal-in-kind-or-god-forbid-escalation-la-ta-di-da-ta, pom-pom.

And, really, though at least it improves on the Shelby-Steele hypothesis in that it has some basis in historical fact, that is still such a fucking meager explanation, it's pathetic. I'm sure that everyone has enough of a grasp of basic 20th-century history to supply far superior answers of their own. We're just not in the habit of applying all the information at our disposal to all the other information at our disposal on a cross-categorical basis that greatly expands the boundaries in which the question was initially presented.

Personally, I think it's worth considering whether it mightn't be a good idea to kick that habit. Although I do admit that it's very, very difficult to do, as I myself have been trying and failing for years. Not as hard as quitting smoking, though. Because nothing is.
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Postby MacCruiskeen » Thu May 07, 2009 2:02 pm

Is 'Shelby Steele' this thoughtful scholar's porn name? Because I suspect his real name is 'Obnoxio'.

Obnoxio (real name unknown) is a world-weary man who moonlights as a clown. He has stopped bothering to set a good example for children: he smokes a cigar, he seldom bathes, his costume needs mending ...

His only good quality is dependability: once hired for a job, he always shows up.

http://tinyurl.com/dk6ku6


Yup, got it in one.
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Postby stefano » Thu May 07, 2009 2:06 pm

I agree with the left half of c2w?'s post.

Cowbell, are you sure this Shelby Steele character came to her conclusion without any prejudices about the whole white thing? A few of her statements seem particularly shaky: "this does not mean that President Bush is insincere in his desire to bring democracy to Iraq"... "only American victory in Iraq defeats the idea of Islamic extremism" (why?).

As to the war itself, firstly it isn't possible for the US to win it by killing more people, which is what Steele is calling for. She (?) has an obviously simplistic idea of who the "insurgents" are. For the most part they are people fighting a foreign occupier, as has been pointed out to you elsewhere, a perfectly normal reaction that has nothing to do with extremism. Occupying soldiers have been killed by insurgents for ever, it has nothing to do with Islam. Secondly, has it occurred to you that the people who started the war don't want it to end?
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Postby Cosmic Cowbell » Thu May 07, 2009 2:28 pm

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Shelby Steele (born January 1, 1946, Chicago) is an American author, columnist, documentary film maker, and a research fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, specialising in the study of race relations, multiculturalism and affirmative action. In 1990, he received the National Book Critics Circle Award in the general non-fiction category for his book The Content of Our Character

Steele was born to a black father and a white mother. His father, Shelby, Sr., a black truck driver, met his mother, Ruth, a white social worker, while working for the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). His twin brother is Stanford psychology professor Claude Steele.

Shelby Steele received a B.A. in political science from Coe College, an M.A. in sociology from Southern Illinois University, and a Ph.D. in English from the University of Utah. Steele met his wife, Rita, during his junior year at Coe College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where he was one of eighteen black students in his class. Steele was active in SCOPE, a group linked to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), and he met Rita at an activist meeting. In 1968, Steele graduated from Coe and went on to earn his master's degree in sociology from Southern Illinois University. Steele attended the University of Utah, where he taught black literature and studied for his Ph.D. After earning a Ph.D. in English in 1974, Steele was offered a tenured position at the university, but turned it down due to hostility encountered as part of an interracial couple in Utah.

Steele accepted a position at San Jose State University as a professor of English literature, teaching there from 1974 to 1991

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shelby_Steele

Stefano wrote:Secondly, has it occurred to you that the people who started the war don't want it to end?


It has. And I assume it's a position held by both sides. I won't go into who "started it" here.
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Postby OP ED » Thu May 07, 2009 2:41 pm

I wouldn't get into who started it either, if i were you. You'd end up looking pretty silly, at best.

this horrible propoganda you keep producing is sickening.

fortunately it has now grown desperately obvious enough that i no longer need to even respond to it, as most around here recognize propoganda when they see it. [not all, also obviously]
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Postby Cosmic Cowbell » Thu May 07, 2009 2:47 pm

OP ED wrote:I wouldn't get into who started it either, if i were you. You'd end up looking pretty silly, at best.

this horrible propoganda you keep producing is sickening.

fortunately it has now grown desperately obvious enough that i no longer need to even respond to it, as most around here recognize propoganda when they see it. [not all, also obviously]


:bugsdance:
"There are no whole truths: all truths are half-truths. It is trying to treat them as whole truths that plays the devil." ~ A.N. Whitehead
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Postby MacCruiskeen » Thu May 07, 2009 2:55 pm

More from that Wiki bio:

On Barack Obama

Steele wrote a short book A Bound Man: Why We are Excited about Obama and Why He Can't Win, published in December 2007. The book contained Steele's analysis of Barack Obama's character as a child born to a mixed couple who then has to grow as a black man.[4] Steele then concludes that Barack Obama is a "bound man" to his "black identity." Steele gives this description of his conclusion:

“There is a price to be paid even for fellow-traveling with a racial identity (!!!) as politicized and demanding as today’s black identity. This identity wants to take over a greater proportion of the self than other racial identities do. It wants to have its collective truth-its defining ideas of grievance and protest-become personal truth.... These are the identity pressures that Barack Obama lives within. He is vulnerable to them because he has hungered for a transparent black identity much of his life. He needs to 'be black.' And this hunger — no matter how understandable it may be — means that he is not in a position to reject the political liberalism inherent in his racial identity. For Obama liberalism is blackness.”

After Obama won the 2008 U.S. presidential election, Steele defended his analysis and claimed that the subtitle of the book was simply a marketing device that he had only put "about 30 seconds" of thought into.[5]


A thoughtful scholar, as I said, and a man of deep integrity. Who could doubt it?

He explains Obama's victory by likening him to Louis Armstrong, donning the "bargainer's mask" in his bid for white acceptance.


Shelbee Steeylle is a pot calling a kettle 'Uncle Tom'.

In his analysis, he takes whites — whom he claims have for decades been stigmatized as racist and had to prove they are not — "off the hook."


In completely unrelated news, Shelbee Steeylle is now a Hoover scholar at Stanford. Honi soit qui mal y pense.
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Postby barracuda » Thu May 07, 2009 4:42 pm

Positioning America's recent wars as fostering a delicate, minimalist sensitivity seems preposterous in the shadow of the Iraqi casualty figures now well exceeding one million deaths created by the world's largest military budget in history, spanning the globe in a profusion of bases and directives. And summoning up a term of art as a descriptor for mass killing and conquest is at best a pretention, and a displacement of meaning tantamount to propaganda. However, there is a certain manner of looking at American warfare in light of cultural developments since World War Two that does have meaning in a narrow sense.

Wars prior to Vietnam were approached in the public sphere as being inescapeable, and in that ultimate determinism was carried the direness of situation which rendered any means of victory prudent. Tank warfare of WW1, the atomic bombing of Japan, even to some extent Sherman's march to the sea were proposed by and embodied a reductivist drive consequent to an urgent inner necessity. Only such a necessity could account for the barbarity of the atom bomb - truely a minimalist approach to warfare: you drop a single bomb, and it destroys everything. The technological approach to problem solving in warfare is reductivist in impulse if not in repercussion. The modern American image of "The Red Button" which signals the launch of intercontinental ballistic nukes is the supreme image of such technological reduction.

But warfare since the 1950's has aquired the manifest character of culture at large, as is to be expected. War is culture, it reflects cultural mores and in turn, influences them. And as American culture superceded the Minimalist apogee by proliferating in a fury of Post-Minmalist, Post Modernist ornament, so too did war. War aquired the impulse of narrative. Each sortie today must be preceeded by and carry with it the baggage of a story as primary public function. And once war took to story-telling in the overt manner of today, it became anything but minimalist. It became embellished and mannered and decadent, like all obviously imperial functions. White guilt is a far from the reason for this change in attitude as can be, but like all good propagandists, Mr. Steele has inverted meaning beyond recognition in order to subvert understanding of the issue, and change the baseline of the discourse. Sudeenly within Steele's essay, the world's premier killing machine has become a delicate sensitive flower.

Don't ask, don't tell.

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Postby vanlose kid » Thu May 07, 2009 4:55 pm

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Postby nathan28 » Thu May 07, 2009 5:59 pm

People, come on.

Shelby Steele looks like he just got back from his Brown Paper Bag Club meetings. You think dude really wants to rock the boat? He's a professional political commentator. In case you haven't noticed, most of them voice the most absurd conjecture and speculation (aka "conspiracy theories") every time they get a talking head appearance, because they're paid to do it. Dude is James Shelby Downard (ZOMG teh synchronicitees), it's just that Steele gets paid better
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Postby Cosmic Cowbell » Thu May 07, 2009 6:17 pm

The Double Bind of Race and Guilt

By Shelby Steele

It was not joblessness that bred the black underclass—it was 35 years of counterproductive government programs. By Hoover fellow Shelby Steele.

I have a white friend who has told me many times that he feels no racial guilt despite the fact that he was raised in the Deep South before the end of segregation. Although he grew up amid the inequality and moral duplicity of segregation, and inevitably benefited from it as a white, he says simply that he did not invent the institution. He experienced it as a fate he was born into. When segregation was finally challenged in the civil rights era, any solidarity that he felt with other southern whites was grounded more in a sense of pathos than in any resistance to change. So, he says, there is no “objective basis” for racial guilt on his part.

Recently I was surprised to hear the novelist William Styron, a southerner by birth and upbringing, say on television that he, too, felt “no [white] guilt,” despite the fact that his grandmother had owned slaves as a girl. There was something emphatic, even challenging, in his pronouncement that discouraged questioning. For as long as I can remember, I have heard white Americans of every background make this pronouncement.

This is certainly understandable. White guilt threatens the credibility of everything whites say and do regarding race. Specifically it threatens them with what I have called ulteriorality—the suspicion that their racial stands come not from their announced motivations but from ulterior ones driven by guilt. We can say, for example, that the white liberal bends over backward because he is motivated by guilt even though he says he is motivated by true concern. Or we can say the anger of the “angry white male” is simply his way of denying guilt. We can use guilt to discredit every position whites take on racial matters. So it is not surprising to hear so many reflexive denials. When people like my friend or Styron do this, they are disclaiming ulterior motives. They want us to accept that they mean exactly what they say.

The Reagan administration, famous for its disbelief in racial preferences, refused to challenge affirmative action policies because even this extremely popular president lacked the moral authority as a white to enforce the nation’s very best principles—advancement by merit, a single standard of excellence, and individual rather than group rights.

But I, for one, rarely do accept this, at least not without a glimpse past their words to the matter of ulterior motive. This is because there simply is no social issue in American life more driven by ulterior forces than race. One reason for this is that white American motivation in racial matters has gone largely unexamined, except to attribute support for policies like affirmative action to white goodwill and nonsupport to white racism. “White guilt” is almost a generic term referring to any ulterior white motivation. But the degree of ulteriorality in American race relations is far too great to be explained entirely by guilt. I think the great unacknowledged event of the civil rights era was that white Americans became a stigmatized group. I also believe that our entire national culture of racial and social reform—the policies, programs, norms, and protocols by which we address race-related problems—has been shaped more by the stigmatization of whites than by any other factor, including the actual needs of blacks.

The Stigmatization of White America


Perhaps a book called White Like Me is now called for—a book that looks into the world behind the white stigma and reports back to us. One point such a book would no doubt make is that stigmas are often double binds. The stigma of whites as racists mandates that they redeem the nation from its racist history but then weakens their authority to enforce the very democratic principles that true redemption would require. This is no small problem because the United States is no better than its principles. It may be the first country in the world to have principles and ideas for an identity.

The promise of American democracy was that freedom, and the discipline of principles that supports it, would be the salvation of humanity. This discipline would replace the atavistic power of divine kings and feudalism with a power grounded in reason. Principle would be not only the soul of America but the basis of its very legitimacy as a nation among nations. The principles of freedom were the case for a new nation.

And yet race is always an atavistic source of power, going back to a primordial source, back to the natural order. Like a divine or natural right, it comes from God or nature and presumes that one’s race is free to dominate other races by an authority beyond reason. The white racist believes that God made whites superior, so that even a democracy grounded in principle and reason is not obligated to include blacks and other races. Atavistic power always oppresses because it is immune to reason and principle. The great ambition of democracy was precisely to free people from atavistic power through a discipline of principles that would forbid it.

I say all this to make the point that white racism was no small thing. It was a primitivism, a return to atavistic power, and, most important, a flaunting of the precept that America was founded on: that human freedom depended on a discipline of fragile and abstract ideas and principles. White racism made America illegitimate by its own terms, not a new nation after all but an “old world” nation that used God as an excuse for its oppression and exploitation, a pretender to reason and civilization.

So what happens today when a white American leader, even of the stature and popular appeal of a Ronald Reagan, questions affirmative action on grounds of principle? The Reagan administration, famous for its disbelief in racial preferences, refused to challenge these policies because even this extremely popular president lacked the moral authority as a white to enforce the nation’s very best principles—advancement by merit, a single standard of excellence, individual rather than group rights, and the rest. Not only have white Americans been stigmatized as betrayers of principle, but those principles themselves have been stigmatized by their association with white duplicity.

Our entire national culture of racial and social reform has been shaped more by the stigmatization of whites than by any other factor, including the actual needs of blacks.

Here were whites proclaiming the sacredness of individual rights while they used the atavism of race to deny those rights to blacks. They celebrated merit as the most egalitarian form of advancement, yet made sure that no amount of merit would enable blacks to advance. Therefore these principles themselves came to be seen as part of the machinery of white supremacy, as instruments of duplicity that whites could use to exclude blacks. The terrible effect of this was the demonization of America’s best principles as they applied to racial reform.

This situation, I believe, has given postsixties racial reform its most stunning irony: because difficult principles are themselves stigmatized as the demonic instruments of racism, white Americans and American institutions have had to betray the nation’s best principles in racial reform in order to win back their own moral authority. For some 30 years now, white redemption has required setting aside the very discipline of principles that has elsewhere made America great.

If not principles, then what? The answer in a word is deference. Stigmatized as racist, whites and American institutions have no moral authority over the problems they try to solve through race-related reform. They cannot address a problem like inner-city poverty by saying that government assistance will only follow a show of such timeless American principles as self-reliance, hard work, moral responsibility, sacrifice, and initiative—all now stigmatized as demonic principles that “blame the victims” and cruelly deny the helplessness imposed on them by a heritage of oppression. Instead their racial reform must replace principle with deference. It must show white American authority deferring to the nation’s racial tragedy out of remorse. And this remorse must be seen to supersede commitment to principles. In fact, any preoccupation with principles can only be read as a failure of remorse. “Caring,” “compassion,” “feeling,” and “empathy” must be seen to displace principles in public policy around race.

Deference versus Development

But deference should not be read as an abdication of white American authority to black American authority. American institutions do not let blacks, in the name of their oppressive history, walk in the front door and set policy. It is important to remember that these institutions are trying to redeem their authority, not abdicate it. Their motivation is to fend off the stigma that weakens their moral authority. So deference is first of all in the interest of white moral authority, not black uplift. Certainly there may be genuine remorse behind it, but the deference itself serves only the moral authority of American institutions.

And this deference is always a grant of license—relief from the sacrifice, struggle, responsibility, and morality of those demanding principles that healthy communities entirely depend on. Virtually all race-related reform since the sixties has been defined by deference. This reform never raises expectations for blacks with true accountability, never requires that they actually develop as Americans, and absolutely never blames blacks when they don’t develop. It always asks less of blacks and exempts them from the expectations, standards, principles, and challenges that are considered demanding but necessary for the development of competence and character in others. Deferential reform—everything from welfare to affirmative action to multiculturalism—is the license to be spared the rigors of development. And at its heart is a faith in an odd sort of magic—that the license that excuses people from development is the best thing for their development.

Nowhere in the ancient or modern world—except in the most banal utopian writing—is there the idea that people will become self-sufficient if they are given a lifetime income that is slightly better than subsistence with no requirement either to work or to educate themselves. Nowhere is there the idea that young girls should be subsidized for having children out of wedlock, with more money for more children. And yet this is precisely the form of welfare that came out of the sixties—welfare as a license not to develop. Out of deference this policy literally set up incentives that all but mandated inner-city inertia, that destroyed the normal human relationship to work and family, and that turned the values of hard work, sacrifice, and delayed gratification into a fool’s game.

Because principled opposition to racial preferences has been wrongly demonized as racist, many whites are hesitant to express their opposition to these programs, despite their belief that such programs are ultimately harmful.

Deferential policies transform black difficulties into excuses for license. The deferential policymaker looks at the black teen pregnancy problem with remorse because this is what puts him on the path to redemption. But this same remorse leads him to be satisfied by his own capacity to feel empathy, rather than by the teenage girl’s achievement of a higher moral standard. So he sets up a nice center for new mothers at her high school, thereby advertising to other girls that they too will be supported—and therefore licensed—in having babies of their own. Soon this center is full, and in the continuing spirit of remorse, he solicits funds to expand the facility. It was not joblessness that bred the black underclass; it was 35 years of deference.

Deferential policies have also injured the most privileged generation of black Americans in history. Black students from families with incomes above $70,000 a year score lower on the SAT than white students from families with incomes of less than $10,000 a year. When the University of California was forced to drop race-based affirmative action, a study was done to see if a needs-based policy would bring in a similar number of blacks. What they quickly discovered is that the needs-based approach only brought in more high-achieving but poor whites and Asians. In other words, the top quartile of black American students—often from two-parent families with six-figure incomes and private school educations—is frequently not competitive with whites and Asians even from lower quartiles. But it is precisely this top quartile of black students that has been most aggressively pursued for the last 30 years with affirmative action preferences. Infusing the atmosphere of their education from early childhood is not the idea that they will have to steel themselves to face stiff competition but that they will receive a racial preference, that mediocrity will win for them what only excellence wins for others.

Out of deference, elite universities have offered the license not to compete to the most privileged segment of black youth, precisely the segment that has no excuse for not competing. Affirmative action is protectionism for the best and brightest from black America. And because blacks are given spaces they have not won by competition, whites and especially Asians have had to compete all the harder for their spots. So we end up with the effect we always get with deferential reforms: an incentive to black weakness relative to others. Educators who adamantly support affirmative action—the very institutionalization of low expectations—profess confusion about the performance gap between privileged blacks and others. And they profess this confusion even as they make a moral mission of handing out the rewards of excellence for mediocre black performance.

A welfare of license for the poor and an affirmative action of license for the best and brightest—the perfect incentives for inertia in the poor and mediocrity in the best and brightest. But this should not be surprising. Because “racial problems” have been a pretext for looking at blacks rather than at whites, we have missed the fact that most racial reforms were conceived as deferential opportunities for whites rather than as developmental opportunities for blacks. That these reforms have failed is entirely predictable.

A longer version of this essay appears as “Wrestling with Stigma” in A Dream Deferred: The Second Betrayal of Black Freedom in America, by Shelby Steele, and in the forthcoming Hoover Press book Beyond the Color Line: New Perspectives on Race in America, edited by Abigail Thernstrom and Stephan Thernstrom.

http://www.hoover.org/publications/digest/4510821.html
"There are no whole truths: all truths are half-truths. It is trying to treat them as whole truths that plays the devil." ~ A.N. Whitehead
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Postby lightningBugout » Thu May 07, 2009 7:26 pm

but, [reverse racism]. did you ever consider [i am oppressed]. [champagne sociologist] says it best when he writes, "[lightweight centrist's musing on contemporary race/class phenomena]." this place is [an echo chamber / a bunch of lemmings / a bunch of 'sheep']. {repeat x20}
"What's robbing a bank compared with founding a bank?" Bertolt Brecht
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