Posted on 11/05/2015 8:14:01 PM PST by TBP
Progressives, who have always claimed to be the authoritative source of progressive attitudes on race, have actually become one of the centers of racist thinking in America over the last quarter century, a period of time in which postwar liberalism/progressivism itself was being reconfigured by the radical Sixties worldview. Progressive racism began in the last years of Martin Luther King, Jr.âs life, when organizations such as the Black Panther Party and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) radicalized the issue of color in America by focusing on legitimate âblack rageâ and the âinstitutional racismâ they claimed was embedded in the âDNAâ of American society. King was an obstacle in their path; they rejected the gains he had achieved as illusory. This was no mere intellectual disagreement about a strategy for improving race relations in America; it had a bitter personal component. The black radicals and their white supporters derided King as âDe Lawdâ and âUncle Martin.â
Later on, after Kingâs assassination, most of those who had expressed contempt for him during his lifetime would pay cynical homage to his martyrdom. But they never embraced his vision of an integrated social world. Rather, the program of these progressive racists, both white and black, focused on separatism and racial difference. Instead of subscribing to Kingâs belief in a colorblind society, they wanted government policies that were color-coded. The further America progressed from the dark days of slavery, the more they insisted that slavery was present in Americaâs social institutions and its personal interrelationships. The U.S., they asserted, was steeped in blood and guilt: it must pay for its crimes against âpeople of color.â
The extent to which such views have not only entered but dominated the intellectual mainstream of America in the past three decades can be seen in the degree to which Kingâs notion that people should be judged by the content of their character rather than the color of their skin has become marginalized as quaint and naive. The racism inherent in progressives' view primarily of blacks, but also of whites, has been clear in the policies the left has pursued. Some, like the demand for reparations for slavery, have not yet prevailed. Others, like the demand for affirmative action, have become part of Americaâs way of doing business as a society. Although claiming to be an equitable âleveling of the playing field,â this policy has actually tilted the social landscape. It has nothing to do with equality of opportunity, and everything to do with establishing a regime that will produce an equality of results. It is a zero sum game in which some win because of skin color and others lose because of skin color. Ultimately, affirmative action has put government back into the business of playing racial favorites â even after the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the summary achievement of the civil rights movement, banned such action.
Progressive racists believe that neutral and objective tests for college admissions are actually rigged in favor of whites. When Asians, many of them recent immigrants with little or no cultural experience, refute this notion by outscoring whites on these tests, progressive racists say that these Asians are not really a minority at all but inauthentic, imitation whites.
Progressive racists bear a heavy burden for having helped destroy the black family and create a black underclass by their romanticization of ghetto behavior, and their insistence that blacks are victims who cannot be held responsible for what they do. They reject the idea that culture rather than race may help explain the disadvantages those in the black underclass face. It is true, as they point out, that some 40 percent of Americaâs black children are born poor, and that this fact affects their life chances. But it is also true that 85 percent of these poor children come from single-parent homes. It is this circumstanceâstudies show that children born into single-parent families are more likely to be poor, regardless of race, than children with two parentsârather than âinstitutional racismâ that actually handicaps them. Yet in the progressive view, any policy aimed at countering illegitimacy and single parenthood among the black underclass is âblaming the victim.â
The effects of progressive racism can be seen in the way black students taunt those among them who strive for achievement as sellouts who are âacting white.â Progressive racism can be seen in the unholy alliance between the Democrat Party, the National Education Association and other teachersâ unions, and black spokesmen such as Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton, to maintain their power by opposing school choice for black children trapped in violent and failing public schools. Progressive racism can be seen in the way black voters are kept on the proverbial âplantationâ through scare tactics and attacks on ârace traitorsâ such as Clarence Thomas and Condoleezza Rice, who have defied the party line. Progressive racism can be seen, paradoxically, most clearly in the way anyone straying from its premises is immediately branded as a âracist.â This is a powerful sanction that progressive racists use like a bludgeon to control the public discussion about race.
The RESOURCES column located on the right side of this page contains links to articles, essays, books, and videos that explore such topics as:
the origins and worldview of progressive racism; the phenomenon of black racism, which is rooted in the notion that African Americans are justified in hating white people as a form of reprisal for the latter's historical, and continuing, transgressions against blacks; the misguided notion that white racism is to blame for virtually every ill afflicting the black community; and the rise of identity politics -- the belief that one's membership in an identifiable demographic determines the political views and values that one is morally obliged to embrace.
Bump.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.