RACE TO
THE BOTTOM
The
conservative fixation on racial categories
IT'S
BEEN A STRANGE SEASON FOR race relations in America.
A black
man wrote a long, serious autobiography that sold faster than any book in
history. He called it My American Journey. It neither wallowed in nor
down-played past segregation and continuing prejudice; they were insults,
serious but surmountable, in the course of a successful life. People of all
races stood in line for hours to get his autograph and a sentence of greeting.
They begged him to run for president.
A young
white woman who murdered her children and tried to frame a mythical black
carjacker was found guilty by a small-town Southern jury. The local
sheriff--wiser than either the national media or the Boston investigators of the
Stuart case a few years back had known better than to buy such an improbable
story.
Led by
a black businessman, the University of California Board of Regents voted to end
affirmative action in admissions and hiring.
And, of
course, O. J. Simpson was acquitted.
In a
place where rich paricides can confess yet hang a jury, where police brutality
or riotous mayhem caught on videotape can win acquittal, no one should have been
surprised that a beloved celebrity who maintained his innocence would be found
not guilty. But we were.
Some
Americans cheered, relieved that a wrongly accused man would go free. Others
gasped, horrified that a vicious murderer had beaten the rap. And the cheering
and the horror broke down, overwhelmingly, on racial lines.
Too
many analysts have been too quick to see the Simpson trial as the one and only
indicator of the state of race relations in America, which it is not. Colin
Powell's cross-racial popularity is as real as the verdict; so, for that matter,
is the box office success of Seven and Devil in a Blue Dress. Race relations are
too complicated to be reduced to a single variable, to the differing views
blacks and whites hold of the trustworthiness of police.
And too
many analysts have been too quick to see the Simpson trial as only an indicator
of the state of race relations in America, which it also is not. For drama and
star power, the Simpson case may have been "the trial of the century." But it
wasn't exactly Nuremburg. It was, at its heart, about murder and domestic
violence, not politics. The jurors fervently maintain that their verdict was
based on reasonable doubt, not on sending anyone a message. We may wonder about
the reasonableness of their doubt I certainly do--but they've had ample
opportunities to make political speeches and have declined to do so.
THE
SIMPSON VERDICT DOES, HOWEVER, abet an unfortunate political trend.
Conservatives, who largely determine the shape of American politics today, are
in retreat from the principle of individual treatment--the principle on which
our justice system, and our system of free government more generally, depends.
Just
six months ago, it looked as though conservatives were going to lead the country
toward a reaffirmation of individualism, rather than group identity, as the
basis for public policy. Following conservative arguments, the Supreme Court was
questioning racially gerrymandered congressional districts. The citizens of
California were ready to overturn state-enforced affirmative action policies.
Transracial adoption had become a cause celebre, pitting the lives of individual
black children against the racial ideology of black social workers.
Six
months ago, it looked as though we would have a serious discussion about whether
labeling people by race is the best way to advance fairness and equal
opportunity about whether we can achieve a colorblind society by constantly
defining people by color. That discussion, however, depended on the good faith
of conservatives. And it's hard to lead a crusade for treating people as
individuals when you're busy lumping them together by race.
Consider the portions of Dinesh
D'Souza's The End of Racism which National Review and The American Spectator
chose to excerpt in October. Both contain some important truths about black
life--that successful blacks feel rage at perceived disrespect, that blacks more
than whites look to government to create jobs, that a higher proportion of
blacks than whites commit crimes, that blacks who excel academically face
ridicule for "acting white." But the articles wallow in stereotypes and omit
countervailing experience. Addressed to an overwhelmingly white audience, they
seem designed not to elucidate the complexities of race in America but to
justify readers' preconceived notions of black inferiority.
In the
Spectator excerpt, for instance, D'Souza draws at length from books by and about
L.A. gangster Kody "Monster" Scott, relishing their almost pornographic
portrayal of a murderous black man. Nowhere does D'Souza cite the devastating
Atlantic article in which Mark Horowitz debunks Scott's portrayal of his life as
indicative of the black experience: "Apart from a few brief mentions, [Kody
Scott's siblings] Kevin, Kim, Kendis, and Kerwin are nowhere to be found in
Monster. They don't fit Monster's version. Kevin became an actor and lives in
Burbank. Kim joined the Air Force and is currently stationed in Japan. Kendis
raised her family and is studying to be a data processor. Kerwin went to work
for the 32nd Street Market. Only Kody and Kershaun became gang members." Neither
acting nor the Air Force--and certainly not working in a grocery store--would
fit easily into D'Souza's picture.
Nor
does D'Souza include L.A. writer Leonce Gaiter's heartfelt response when Kody
Scott's editor characterized the gangster as at "primary voice of the black
experience." In the L.A. magazine Buzz, Gaiter wrote: "To me, this is a white
man who thinks that a monster who butchers African-Americans is a major voice
for all African-Americans, a white man who thinks of all blacks as less than
human, as a murderous. sub-species. . . I am an African-American man, and I have
killed no one. My parents worked, educated themselves, and raised their
children. I graduated from Harvard. . . This is the black experience."
Gaiter's anger didn't make it into
the Spectator. Indeed, the only source of middle-class black anger D'Souza
recognizes in that excerpt is "the frustration of pursuing unearned privileges
and then bristling when they do not bring something that has to be earned--the
respect of one's peers." Gaiter, one might suppose, is angry simply because he
knows he didn't deserve to go to Harvard; having patronizing white liberals lump
him in with murderers, because he shares their skin color, has nothing to do
with it.
The
whole point of the National Review excerpt is that such stereotypes are
justified. "Only because group traits have an empirical basis in shared
experience can we invoke them without fear of contradiction," writes D'Souza.
"Think how people would react if someone said that 'Koreans are lazy' or that
'Hispanics are constantly trying to find ways to make money.' Despite the
prevalence of anti-Semitism, Jews are rarely accused of stupidity. Blacks are
never accused of being tight with a dollar, or of conspiring to take over the
world. By reversing stereotypes we can see how their persistence relies, not
simply on the assumption of the viewer, but also on the characteristics of the
group being described."
The
most amazing thing about this passage isn't that D'Souza wrote it. The most
amazing thing is that to reinforce the notion that blacks are stupid (or--the
subject of most of the article--criminal), William F. Buckley's once-fastidious
magazine now blithely insinuates that "shared experience" and the
"characteristics of the group being described" suggest that Jews are not only
tight with a dollar but conspiring to take over the world! And people think
militias are wacky.
By
contrast, in an excerpt published in The Washington Post, D'Souza concludes that
Americans should unite behind "a universalist ideology that regards 'race' as a
trivial aspect of identity and that seeks to transcend it with policies that are
not based on color or ancestry." That excerpt--which includes critical
portrayals of overt white racists, including sometime National Review
contributors Lawrence Auster and Samuel Francis--was not one that conservative
publications chose to reprint. It would have undoubtedly disturbed their
readers.
You
cannot get to a colorblind society by constantly reinforcing racial categories.
You can't get justice by playing the race card. Conservatives make those
arguments when they oppose affirmative action or denounce the Simpson verdict.
They don't, however, appear to believe them. And that is America's loss.
PHOTO
(BLACK & WHITE)
~~~~~~~~
By
Virginia I. Postrel
Copyright 1995 by Reason
Foundation. Text may not be copied
without the express written permission of Reason Foundation.[1]
[1]
LPostrel, Virginia, Race to the
bottom., Vol. 27, Reason, 1 Dec
1995, pp. 4.