« The Rest Is Detail | Main | Mortal After All » 28 Jul 2008 02:54 am Clearing The Barby Chris Bodenner
His take is unfortunate on so many levels. First, the primary motivation for ending racial preferences should be the advancement of minorities -- by restoring personal agency, raising expectations, cooling racial resentment, avoiding the stigmatization of AA in the minds of many. If race-based AA were replaced by class-based AA, perhaps the country could lower racial strife and still provide help primarily to African Americans (who are disproportionately poorer because of centuries of institutional racism). Second, the idea that "all the old injustices and inequalities have disappeared" is absurd. Structural inequalities formed by hundreds of years of slavery and segregation don't disappear in a generation or two, and there will always be some lingering racism. But with legal discrimination in the U.S. now abolished, and with a general sentiment of goodwill towards racial opportunity in mainstream America, the question is whether those inequalities are insurmountable without lowering the bar. While Obama is still vague as to whether the answer is "yes," he is unequivocal about the end of widespread, institutional racism:
The right-wing blogger asks, "How can all those kids growing up in ghettoes [sic] claim to be at any disadvantage any longer if America elects an African-American president?" This dim line of reasoning is similar to the one examined in a recent CNN report, "Could an Obama presidency hurt black Americans?" The article (which was brilliantly lampooned by Larry Wilmore of The Daily Show) suggests that white America will see an Obama presidency as an excuse to ignore racial inequality. While some people like the blogger may do so, the innumerable dividends of a black president would far outweigh them. Lastly, the right-wing blogger is hoping an end to racial
preferences will make it "much easier for white men to get jobs."
While equal treatment is a high virtue, the main concern with
affirmative action shouldn't be the plight of the white man, but
whether AA actually hurts the people it was formed to help. (Peter Beinart wrote a brilliant piece last month about the philosophical divide between liberals and conservatives on patriotism.) TrackBack URL for this entry:http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c45669e200e553da9b998834 Listed below are links to weblogs that reference 'Clearing The Bar' |
