Sunday, August 1, 2021

Binary thinking and shutting down discussion

 There was a good column by Jonah Goldberg today:  from the article:.

'If you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem.”

"I’ve long argued that this exhortation is a soft form of totalitarianism. It’s rhetorical bullying. The speaker assumes he or she has authoritative knowledge of not just the problem but the solution. And if you disagree, you’re a problem."

"....The speaker assumes he or she has authoritative knowledge of not just the problem but the solution. And if you disagree, you’re a problem.

"There’s no safe harbor, no middle position where someone can say “let’s discuss this more,” never mind “I disagree” or “your solution is bad.” That’s why “If you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem” is so often used in conjunction with “the time for debate is over.”

"Now, when I say it’s totalitarian, that doesn’t mean I’m saying everyone who uses it is a totalitarian. It just means I think they’re usually mistaken."

"Usually, not always. There are times when this idea is perfectly defensible. We call such moments a crisis. If you’re trapped in a vault and oxygen is running out, not being part of the solution does make you part of the problem."

"I normally make this point in the context of climate change, which I think is indeed a real problem, if not the “existential crisis” so many people claim. Moreover, I’m unconvinced by many of the solutions offered by the people shouting, “There’s no time to argue!”

Instead, I want to make this point about racism — or, more specifically, “antiracism,” the hot new concept in academia, journalism, Hollywood and other progressive bastions.

"Antiracism is not what it sounds like. I think most people consider themselves antiracist insofar as most people think racism is bad. I admit, this is a hard question to poll on because even most racists don’t want to tell a pollster they think racism is good, which itself should give you a sense of how unacceptable racism is in our society."

"No, “antiracism” is an idea popularized by Ibram X. Kendi, “one of America’s foremost historians and leading antiracist scholars,” according to his website bio. “The opposite of racist isn’t ‘not racist,’” Kendi writes in “How to Be an Anticracist.” “It is ‘antiracist.’”

“What’s the difference?” he asks. “... One either allows racial inequities to persevere, as a racist, or confronts racial inequities, as an antiracist. There is no in-between safe space of ‘not racist.’”

"One can make too much of the fact that this is a classically Marxist framing: Marxists argued that either you accepted the “scientific” reality of the exploitation inherent in the capitalist system or you were an abettor of injustice."

"But this Marxist technique is irrelevant. After all, 99% of the people who say “If you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem” have never read anything Marx wrote. This zero-sum way of thinking about the world is simply a human tendency. Most of the time it’s just wrong, particularly in a free society."

"And this is my problem with antiracism, along with the branches of critical race theory that peddle the same idea. I’m perfectly willing to concede that racism is a problem. But I’m sure I disagree with Kendi about the scope, nature or urgency of the problem. I’m even more certain I disagree with at least some of his proposed solutions. Does that make me racist? No. Does that make me unconcerned with racism? No. It just makes me a person with a different set of opinions and priorities."

"Kendi disagrees. For instance, he says opposition to slavery reparations is racist. If you can’t see how this if-you-disagree-with-me-you’re-racist claim amounts to moral bullying, my argument will be lost on you. But just to be clear, there are plenty of nonracist arguments against reparations. These arguments may be wrong or unpersuasive. But that doesn’t make them objectively racist — unless you believe that Kendi has pontifical authority to decide such matters."

"In a free society, dissent from a prevailing orthodoxy is not necessarily a vice, and stigmatizing disagreement is not necessarily a virtue."

My opinion:  Jonah Goldberg is discussing critical race theory, but I want instead to focus on the last sentence of his article, which I have highlighted.  There are words and phrases which are conversation enders, effectively shutting down discussion.  The example Goldberg gives is a good example:  "If you are not part of the solution, you are part of the problem."  

14 comments:

  1. Once upon a time, politics and religion were places were authoritarianism ruled. Your party and your religion were right, the other guys were wrong. That is why the rule was that we did not talk politics and religion in polite society.

    Academia and journalism were places that were supposed to have rules of evidence that distinguished fact from fiction, theories from data. What has changed is that in both academia and journalism Critical Race Theory has abolished the rules of evidence in favor of authoritarianism. In other words it is essentially an authoritarianism of the political and religious variety.

    What has also changed is that politics and religion have become strongly aligned in a variety of new authoritarianisms. In this new tribalism you have to offer incense and make sacrifice to the gods of the empire.

    Is this the end of modernity, i.e. the Enlightenment ideal that there were places of freedom where reason could flourish at least in academia, hopefully in journalism, and just possibility in a free and democratic society?

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  2. Jack and Katherine - how do you define critical race theory?

    I have read several explanations/ definitions and no two are the same. Some seem possibly objectionable and others seem like everyone should be on board. From what I understand Fox has decided to make this the culture war issue to push, because the GOP doesn’t actually seem to have any real policies that address serious issues, and CRT is a sure way to rile up the right- wing masses and keep the money flowing to trump and his congressional minions.

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    1. Anne, I agree that it seems to mean whatever people want it to mean. And yes, Fox and the GOP have decided to push culture war issues. One spokesperson even said the goal was to make them "toxic". I'd say to a large degree they have succeeded. Which means it doesn't really matter how I would define it, because someone else would define it differently. Maybe instead of focusing on so-called theories, it would be more productive to address the concrete things that need to be fixed or changed.

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    2. My impression is that it begins with the assumption that White people oppress non-White people whether or not they are aware that they are oppressors.

      Historically there is a lot of truth in this proposition, i.e. that Europeans set off conquering the world. There is even a case to be made that this oppression still exists as economic more than political oppression.

      Of course we now have China as a major global power rivaling the US and Europe. I suspect that many Asian people regard China as an historic oppressor.

      Once one gets into economic oppression however one gets back to the original capitalist problem, the great amount of the worlds resources that are owned and/or controlled by only a few people. I suspect most of them are very happy when the left and the right focus upon racial problems rather than the big economic problem of wealth.

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    3. Bernie was criticized for not concentrating enough on racial problems. But the whole motivation for slavery and the supporting racist theory was economic. The branch of racism grows from the trunk of economic oppression.

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  3. BTW, where has Jim P gone? Vacation?

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    1. Jim had two brief comments on July 26th, his last extensive comment was July 23rd, his last post July 14th. I don't remember anything about vacation.

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  4. Education Week has a good article on CRT (CRT focuses on race and minority issues in the US - the European destruction of the indigenous peoples, slavery, Jim Crow, redlining, ongoing racism etc)

    https://www.edweek.org/leadership/what-is-critical-race-theory-and-why-is-it-under-attack/2021/05

    Several articles at the America site- and two podcasts/interviews by Gloria Purvis.

    https://www.americamagazine.org/faith/2021/06/03/critical-race-theory-catholic-high-schools-black-lives-matter-240792

    https://www.americamagazine.org/faith/2021/07/06/critical-race-theory-catholic-teaching-240972

    There are several other articles about CRT at America that come up with a search of the website.

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  5. Hello - yes, I was on vacation, just back as of a few days ago. I would post something about it, but it wasn't actually that interesting :-). But it was good to be away!

    FWIW, I agree with Goldberg (in fact, I often do in general) on the unacceptability of rhetorical strategies that are designed to shut down dialogue.

    The last few years have opened my eyes to racial insensitivity and what I might think of as "soft racism". I suppose George Floyd's murder was an inflection point for the country as a whole on the topic of racism. But the ascent of Donald Trump, and his appeal to racists and white nationalists as a core part of his political base, is what really has shaken my faith in how far we've actually come as a country.

    I think the Civil Rights movement which culminated in the 1950s and 1960s, has already done the legal and government policy heavy lifting. The fruits of that movement include formal laws and government policies forbidding discrimination. I think that movement also acted as a great "cultural teacher", causing many white people to reflect on attitudes, habits and policies, and even induced them to reform their personal views and ways.

    The movement today, whatever it is (Goldberg makes a salient point that the term "anti-racism" apparently has been hijacked for a set of controversial ideological claims which seem unlikely to attract a cultural consensus) is less focused on laws and government policies, and more focused on cultural and economic outcomes. Outcome-based policy is itself controversial, inasmuch as it seems to invite the government to meddle in social and economic arrangements to try to rig certain outcomes.

    I worry that we've failed to educate our citizens in American civics, and consequently we can't imagine any way of improving our society except via government intervention. But we've surely learned - or should have learned - over the course of the last 50-60 years that government cannot solve every problem, and government intervention also can have serious unintended consequences.

    I don't know if any of you would agree with me on this. Neither the Democratic Party nor the Republican Party is inclined to agree with my views on the limited effectiveness of government intervention. However I am aligned politically these days, I think I am part of a very small minority party :-).

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    1. Glad you had a nice vacation, Jim, and good to see you back. Where did you go? Sometimes just getting away is the main objective.
      I think you are right about the civil rights movement in the 50s and 60s having done a lot of the heavy lifting. In some ways we were less polarized then, in that it seemed like we were able to actually get more done.
      Sometimes it seems like progressives are their own worst enemies; they have handed the other side a lot of culture war ammunition, and allowed them to skate on actually coming up with any solutions.

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    2. We went to Traverse City, Michigan, which is sort of a resort-ish area on Lake Michigan - up near the finger-tip part of the "mitten" which is the Lower Peninsula, on the western coast. Some of the kids tagged along, too. There is a national park (or national shore, or some such) nearby called Sleeping Bear Dunes, where we did some hiking (a strenuous trek going up the dune, not as bad coming back down). Also, that western coastline of Michigan is fruit farming country, and they've been trying to build it into a wine-producing region. We spent an afternoon driving around to vineyards tasting wines, but the wines of Michigan aren't actually something that one would feel passionately about - at least, my socks didn't get knocked off. Interestingly, despite the wine industry in those parts, nearly every restaurant in Traverse City seemed to be a microbrewery, so we probably sampled a good deal more beer than wine. The local beers actually were pretty good. We also spent some time with my brother and his family - they have a lake house and pontoon boat on a chain of lakes up in that area. Very pleasant to go out onto the lake on the boat, or on the shady shoreline watching other boats. Slept in, worked out every morning, thought little or nothing about work and housework, so all in all, a good getaway.

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    3. Regarding the Civil Rights movement of the 50s and 60s: obviously, in many ways it was transformative. Despite it bringing out the worst in many people who were determined to preserve the status quo, it also brought out the best in our country. It happened a bit before my time, but I'm filled with gratitude for everyone who marched or wrote or prayed or voted or provided moral support. I know that includes folks here, and I am grateful to each of you as well. You should feel proud of what you've wrought.

      At the same time, I think we can see that changing laws doesn't change hearts - at least not all hearts, and not all the way. As I mentioned in a previous comment, I am one who thinks the law is a teacher, and I don't wish to minimize the ability of great civil-rights achievements like the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act to teach our society about justice. Now that we are a couple of generations away from those achievements, I think it's imperative that we take the time to teach our children and grandchildren about what they stand for - and to try to help them imagine who different things would be without them.

      My former naivete was in thinking that hearts were transformed, and we had achieved a certain "herd immunity" when it comes to racism. Donald Trump has proved me deeply, badly wrong about that.

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  6. Trump was certainly about government intervention, tweet by tweet micromanagement of everything. Many Republicans became addicted to it. Let Trump do the dirty work as long as the outcomes are what they want.

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  7. Reagan demonized government intervention. But he halved the tax rate for the very rich. He essentially raised the tax rate on the middle class by putting a threshold on medical deductions and eliminating deductions of the state tax on automobile purchases. To me, these were real government interventions. What governments do or don't do affects who loses and who wins big. If government doesn't do things to make the economy more human, I really don't think it can successfully legislate away racism or sexism or any of those things.

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