Friday, May 29, 2015

I Refuse to be Spoken to in That Tone of Voice

So said Christopher Hitchens about an ideology that "makes very large claims for itself," and lectures those who do not share that ideology concerning what they are allowed to do.

In The Case for Reparations a once-respected national magazine, purporting to advance civil rights, adopts in disguised form the dysfunctional foregone conclusions and disproved socio-political theories of a radical failed ideology (see Hollander's Political Will and Personal Belief, which depicts the utter loss of faith of the radical left's most passionate supporters). It postures morally over the results. It sneers not only at our ways ("scarfing hot dogs on the Fourth of July "), but at our virtues ("the great democratizer," "And that is us as the uncomplicated, the unvarnished, the un-nuanced champion of liberty the world over. And what the question of reparations ultimately raises, is that this land of liberty, this land of freedom, was made possible by slavery, was made possible by plunder.").

We are told that Slavery Made America. We are told, illogically, that the magnitude of the Civil War represents, not a great moral commitment to ending slavery, but a demonstration of the wickedness of white folks' lust for supremacy:
I roughly understood then that the Civil War—the most lethal conflict in American history—boiled down to the right to raise an empire based on slaveholding and white supremacy.* What had not yet clicked for me was precisely how essential enslavement was to America, that its foundational nature explained the Civil War's body count.
The Liberal Founding announced the central proposition of A Dissenter's Notes: that the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution are representative Enlightenment documents; and that Enlightenment liberalism was and continues to be the underlying rationale of our country. It quoted eminent German-American historian Fritz Stern:
Liberalism—one of “America's noblest traditions,” I insisted, often defined as a state of mind—had “transformed the world . . . [I]ts greatest victory has been the American Revolution; its greatest pronouncement, the Declaration of Independence; its greatest bulwark, the Constitution of the United States and the Bill of Rights.” It had “stood for freedom against tyranny. At its best . . . a force for change and progress, seeking the institutional defense of decency.” [...] In America's liberal premises the world had seen “the best promise of the West.”
A left critique of liberalism by professor Charles K. Rowley reads:
In 1993, in his book, Post-Liberalism, [John] Gray poked around among the rubble of classical liberal philosophy to determine what, if anything was left. He concluded that none of the four constitutive elements of doctrinal liberalism — universalism, individualism, egalitarianism and meliorism (or human flourishing) — could survive the ordeal by value pluralism and that liberalism, as a political philosophy, therefore was dead. - What Is Living and What Is Dead in Classical Liberalism
In a minute I'll talk about the profound differences between liberal and left in these matters, but first, it should be noted the Democratic Party is not a left party, despite the slovenliness of our language. A left party would not have not bailed out those monster capitalist corporations, Chrysler Corp. and General Motors, or spent much of the last presidential campaign lauding the middle class. For a surprisingly doctrinaire left perspective, look not at the Democratic party but at the academic humanities professoriate. (Books (none by conservatives) about academic radicalism: Follies of the Wise; Fashionable Nonsense**; The Reckless Mind; Literature Lost)

Universalism is illustrated in the Declaration, and in American Revolution writer Thomas Paine. The Declaration: "Having a decent respect to the opinions of mankind"; "let facts be submitted to a candid world." Paine: "I have been tender in raising the cry against these men, and used numberless arguments to show them their danger, but it will not do to sacrifice a world either to their folly or their baseness." A universalist worldview underlies the words which begin the Constitution: "We the People."

The left by contrast is particularist, from the ending of the Communist Manifesto ("Workers of the world, unite! You have nothing to lose but your chains.") to Seattle's Kshama Sawant ("Environmentalists and Workers Must Link Up to Stop Global Warming and Fight"). There is always a radical binary, Oppressed and Oppressor, the latter consigned to outer darkness. In the words of Romer v. Evans, "A State cannot so deem a class of persons a stranger to its laws. Amendment 2 violates the Equal Protection Clause." (This is why The Atlantic's crusade is so jarring. It is such a crude violation of our inclusive values.)

Ta-Nehisi Coates' crusade in The Atlantic is not about any sort of rainbow coalition (contrast M. L. King's "God is ... interested in the freedom of brown men, yellow men, red men and black men ... He is interested in the freedom of the whole human race."). It's strictly about what professor Randall Kennedy called a "self-aggrandizing" group—Coates' own. For public-spirited citizens, Native Americans have an argument which is strongly-related to that of African-Americans, but what Coates had to say about their cause, in a video, was "if they can make the case."

Individualism: The romantic tenor inherited from the counterculture may cause us to think of individualism in terms of egotism. However, in the context of liberalism the emphasis on the individual means that civil rights are the rights of the single person: the citizen.

This may be contrasted with the tendency to think of the group as everything, a context which may demote the concerns of the person to mere selfishness. Mill's On Liberty mentions, about page 3, "social tyranny," a pressure for groupthink and conformity resulting from (in left jargon) "solidarity," "group rights," "collectivism," and "communitarianism." (Kennedy, above critiques "the notion that blackness gives rise to racial obligation and that black people should have a special, closer, more affectionate relationship with their fellow blacks than with others in America's diverse society." Emphasis added.) Justice operates at the level of the person; by working toward the civil rights of each individual it militates for the civil rights of all, and serves as a defense against social tyranny.

Egalitarianism: Neither the left nor the right supports that foundational American principle, "all men are created equal." (See The Condition of Equality Today.) To say "white supremacy" and "white guilt," as The Atlantic's crusade does, imputes unique evil to white folks. This parallels the Manifesto's belief in the wickedness of the bourgeoisie. As for the right, Russell Kirk included in his Ten Conservative Principles:
For the preservation of a healthy diversity in any civilization, there must survive orders and classes, differences in material condition, and many sorts of inequality. The only true forms of equality are equality at the Last Judgment and equality before a just court of law; all other attempts at leveling must lead, at best, to social stagnation.
Meliorism: Steven Den Beste spoke of the optimistic spirit of liberal democracy: "dedication to achieving ideal outcomes." It appears in the Christian scriptures as the parable about experiencing more joy over the one sheep that had been lost, but was found, than over the ninety-nine that were never lost. Meliorism is the constructive aspect of liberalism.

I will close by quoting an earlier post, Reparations: The Worst Fallacies are Those that Trash Liberal Principles:
In his essay "Dragon Slayers,"* Jerald Walker recounts a conversation with "a man who wanted me to hate him. I should hate all whites, he felt. ... 'How about slavery,' he asked. I explained, as politely as I could, that I had not been a slave. 'But you feel its effects,' he snapped. 'Racism, discrimination, and prejudice will always be a problem for you in this country. White people,' he insisted, 'are your oppressors.' ... 'After all,' I continued, 'slaves and their immediate descendants were by and large heroic, not pathetic, or I wouldn't be standing here.'The man was outraged. 'You're absolving them of responsibility, of the obligation to atone for past and present wrongs.'"

When I saw this passage yesterday, I realized that Ta-Nehisi Coates is presenting a concealed demand for atonement in The Case for Reparations:

Black nationalists have always perceived something unmentionable about America that integrationists dare not acknowledge—that white supremacy is not merely the work of hotheaded demagogues, or a matter of false consciousness, but a force so fundamental to America that it is difficult to imagine the country without it. ... What is needed is a healing of the American psyche and the banishment of white guilt.
 I refuse to be spoken to in that tone of voice. And so should you.


-*--

(*) The growth of the United States should not be pychologized as "white supremacy." David Auerbach suggested (as did our previous post), that it was an effect of the processes of modernity:
From the moment the Industrial Revolution triggered the massive 200-year explosion in growth, we made a Faustian bargain. From that point on, it was pretty much a given that the motor of technological progress and economic growth would lead us to where we are today. Henry Adams called this the dynamo, embodying the dominant force and technological motor of modern human history.

(**) For an extensive background on Fashionable Nonsense, see co-author Alan Sokal's page:

http://www.physics.nyu.edu/sokal/
 
In particular, see Linda Seebach's "Scientist takes academia for a ride with parody"

Excerpt:
Physicist Alan Sokal of New York University meticulously observed all the rules of the academic game when he constructed his article on postmodern physics and submitted it to a prestigious journal of cultural studies called Social Text.

The people he cites as authorities in cultural studies are the superluminaries of the field, the quotations he uses to illustrate his argument are strictly accurate and the text is bristling with footnotes.

All the rules but one, that is: Sokal's article is a parody. Under the grandiloquent title "Transgressing the Boundaries: Toward a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity," it appeared in the Spring/Summer 1996 special issue of the magazine, one entirely devoted to "the science wars," as the editors term the tension between people who actually do science and the critics who merely theorize about it.

Many scientists believe that the emperors of cultural studies have no clothes. But Sokal captured the whole royal court parading around in naked ignorance and persuaded the palace chroniclers to publish the portrait as a centerfold.

Once the article was safely in print, Sokal revealed his modest experiment. "Would a leading journal of cultural studies," he wrote in the May/June issue of Lingua Franca, "publish an article liberally salted with nonsense if (a) it sounded good and (b) it flattered the editors' ideological preconceptions?"

Unfortunately yes, and Sokal's deliberate nonsense is anything but subtle. Translated into plain English from the high-flown language he borrowed for the occasion, his first paragraph says that scientists "cling to the dogma" that the external world exists and its properties are independent of what human beings think.

But nobody believes that old stuff any more, right? Now we all know that physical reality is "at bottom a social and linguistic construct."

Is there a sound when a tree falls in the forest and no one hears it? Under the theory of social construction, there's not even a tree.

There are so many red flags planted throughout the paper that even non-scientists should have spotted at least one and started laughing, Sokal said Thursday (May 9). "Either this is a parody or the author is off his rocker."

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