Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

A Victory for White Guilt
WSJ Editorial Page ^ | June 26, 2003 | SHELBY STEELE

Posted on 06/27/2003 6:21:47 AM PDT by Matchett-PI

At last the Supreme Court has ruled on the use of racial preferences in university admissions. And now that it has happened, one wonders why the court took up the matter in the first place -- unless its goal was to make a bad situation worse.

If the two Michigan decisions disallowed the formulaic practice of affirmative action, they simultaneously opened the door to a new non-formulaic subjectivity in which admissions officers are even less accountable in their use of race as a factor in admissions than before.

At least in the past they worried that race would be ruled unconstitutional, and this had begun to have a chilling effect on racial preferences. But the court has now removed that anxiety.

Universities can, with confidence, take the matter of race and admissions into the proverbial smoke-filled room where, with Cheshire grins, they can titter at the phrase "narrow tailoring."

And apparently the words diversity and race are synonymous in the mind of Justice O'Connor, who delivered the opinion of the court in Grutter v. Bollinger. "Compelling interest in a diverse student body is not prohibited by the constitution," she wrote.

So diversity, this most spurious of notions, is now undergirded with constitutionality along with race.

And when race and diversity stand together as legitimate -- even constitutional -- principles, we have indeed arrived at the threshold of legally sanctioned racialism.

Because diversity works by group preferences, all the individuals in these beatific diverse environments must pursue a good part of their self-interest through their racial groups.

The incentive is to make a tribe of one's race. You end up with a racialist diversity going more toward segregation than integration.

Stigmatization of Blacks

A remarkable feature of this opinion is the way it ignores the vast array of contradictions and unintended consequences that attach to affirmative action -- a few of which are its racial divisiveness, its stigmatization of blacks as inferior, its facilitation of identity politics, its encouragement of a victim-focused identity in minorities, its reverse discrimination against whites and Asians, its preference for precisely the least needy minorities, its damage to the principle of excellence, its fostering of a parasitic diversity industry, its cynical refusal to allow the best and brightest minorities to compete openly with their white and Asian counterparts, its flaunting of the Constitution's equal protection clause, and of course its utter failure to close the academic gap between whites and blacks.

Affirmative action was conceived on -- and apparently will continue to thrive on -- the mere announcement of its good intentions.

No amount of failure, blatant corruption, or even lack of support from most whites and (by one poll) 84% of blacks has been sufficient to bring it down.

Now the highest court in the land has come under its spell. Why is this policy so free from accountability to performance, so able to sail on in thrall to its own good intentions?

I think we have to conclude that racial preferences serve their true purpose very well, and that they continue against all reason because American institutions need them.

And it was institutions -- universities, corporations, professional organizations, the military -- that submitted over 100 amicus briefs saying quite frankly that they needed to be able to practice race-based preferential treatment for blacks and Hispanics.

The fact is that American institutions feel a moral accountability to our racial history that individuals only feel when they speak out on race in the public square. Our institutions (including the Supreme Court) stand permanently in that public square.

In a society where full racial equality is not yet with us, and where institutions often exhibit the very racial stratifications that racism created, American institutions can easily be seen as racist until they prove otherwise.

I have called this situation white guilt, not because it has much to do with guilt but because it makes institutions (and individuals in the public square) behave as though they were guilty.

They scramble to show deference to minorities because only deference erects the firewall that protects them from stigmatization as racist. Without this protection they can easily lose their legitimacy in our democratic society.

So our institutions engineer the visibility of black and brown faces.

This is why the New York Times was so mindlessly devoted to a black reporter whose incompetence was matched only by his compulsive lying. Today there are not enough well-trained black and brown faces to meet demand. Until he got caught, Jayson Blair was a precious commodity despite his incompetence.

He even added an impression of journalistic excellence to the Times because institutions like this -- and virtually all American universities -- have made diversity an aspect of professional excellence.

Of course the people who run America's institutions do not want to feel that they are merely acting out a cynicism -- using blacks and browns as a firewall.

So, under layers of euphemistic, unexamined, and empty language (Justice O'Connor is a veritable fount of such -- "learning outcomes," "diversity factors," "soft variables," "selection index," "nuanced judgments"), they conceal the cynicism of what they do by making diversity into a bureaucratic faith, a managerial religion.

And this faith is built entirely around their good intentions.

When blasphemers to this faith point to the array of ugly unintended consequences, these institutional leaders have only to shift their gaze to the post-card beauty of what they intend.

The Supreme Court has now joined their faith. And in so doing it has enshrined yet another ugly unintended consequence of the diversity faith: anti-Americanism as a source of virtue and power.

Precisely because racial preferences have to be implemented by so many jerry-built schemes that step over the merit-based procedures of institutions, not to mention the 14th Amendment, they require an especially powerful source of moral authority.

And this has been found in the summary indictment of America that emerged in the '60s from the convergence of so many social protest movements -- civil rights, anti-war, feminism, farm workers, environmentalism, etc.

The compound effect of all this protest was to cast America as a spiritually empty, greedy, racist and imperialistic nation -- a malevolent force in the world.

Thus, anti-Americanism -- a reflexive and smug faithlessness in the moral character of America -- became the first step to redemption. It became a virtuous attitude in itself, a way to establish one's credentials as a concerned and socially responsible person.

Anti-Americanism, as a credential of virtue, found its political home on the left, and nowhere more securely than in the precincts of academe.

Today the diversity faith is predicated on an updated and subtler anti-Americanism, but an anti-Americanism nonetheless. Since there is no anti-black discrimination in American universities, preferences have to be justified by the idea that America is still a malevolent society where blacks are concerned.

And still today -- at least in the public square -- one must be committed to this view of America in order to credential one's virtue.

Anti-Americanism is also a formula for power because it truly delivers moral authority and legitimacy to institutions.

And in case you think this power is meager, a shadow of its '60s vitality, consider that the Supreme Court of the United States has just submitted to it.

An Honest Assessment

The most striking feature of Justice O'Connor's written opinion is that it has no context.

Cases of this magnitude, with issues that have not been examined for a generation, call for context -- an honest assessment of the fairness of American society.

Is the old malevolence of racism still with us to the point that minority aspiration is stifled?

In the past Justice O'Connor's jurisprudence always spoke of "narrowly tailoring" to need, usually to a specific pattern of discrimination. How can giving a preference to people (very often from the upper middle class) who have suffered no discrimination be a narrowly tailored remedy?

And what can "compelling interest" mean when no wrong has occurred?

Does Justice O'Connor seek to help wronged people or disadvantaged people?

If the latter, why the racial preference? Or why not a preference for poor whites who have endured generations of disadvantage and stigmatization?

Here is a justice known for "strict scrutiny" when actual discrimination is in question.

Yet when no discrimination is in question she forgoes strictness, and gives both race and diversity constitutional stature. And in the process she betrays all her own careful jurisprudence around race.

Finally Justice O'Connor went with the doubting spirit of anti-Americanism, with a faithlessness in a society that has made more racial progress in the last 40 years than any society in human history.

Through our struggles with race, we have grown into a self-examining and racially disciplined society.

We deserve justices who can feel certain about the capacity of whites to be fair and the capacity of minorities to compete.

Mr. Steele, a research fellow at the Hoover Institution, is the author of "A Dream Deferred" (HarperCollins, 1998).

Updated June 26, 2003


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: constitution; dreamdeferred; ruling; shelbysteele; statesrights; supremecourt; whiteguilt

1 posted on 06/27/2003 6:21:48 AM PDT by Matchett-PI
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Matchett-PI
What a disaster this court is turning out to be. I swear they are legacy building, trying to curry favor with Libs after having found for Bush in 2000 in Bush v. Gore.
2 posted on 06/27/2003 6:26:04 AM PDT by veronica (http://www.petitiononline.com/KN50711/petition.html - Confirm Daniel Pipes to USIP ......sign this!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Matchett-PI
trolling for votes in the next generation of Americans....
whites out the door....in 2004
3 posted on 06/27/2003 6:37:33 AM PDT by joesnuffy (Moderate Islam Is For Dilettantes)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Matchett-PI
This decision says, "We agree that blacks are inherently and permanently inferior to whites." Wow.
4 posted on 06/27/2003 6:45:16 AM PDT by pabianice
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: veronica; oldglory; sheikdetailfeather; MinuteGal; Luke FReeman
I started a thread last night entitled: Why Do We Need States Anymore? By Rush Limbaugh. http://www.rushlimbaugh.com

Rush said this yesterday on his program [excerpted]:

.... "I got an e-mail from some wizard who thought he skewered me on one of my points and it's actually a great illustration of just how people don't understand how this stuff works.

He calls me a hypocrite and asks, "Why didn't you argue states' rights when the Supreme Court took away Florida's right to count its votes in November 2000?"

He thinks that I'm a hypocrite on this, but I'm being utterly consistent.

The Supreme Court of Florida had no right to rewrite Florida election law because no Supreme Court can create law.

There's no court that makes law, or is supposed to.

In the Florida decision, the U.S. Supreme Court correctly prevented the Florida Supreme Court from making law.

Let me ask you this: Do you think the Supreme Court had the power in the Dred Scott case to rule that slaves are property?

You know the official law of the land, according to the Supreme Court back in Dred Scott was that slaves were property.

Do you think the Supreme Court had the power to do that? I don't think they should have, but they did.

Do you think the Supreme Court had the power in Plessy vs. Ferguson to hold that separate but equal is equal?

I don't think so, but they did.

Dred Scott and Plessy were outrageous decisions, and they had to be fixed later on. ...."

Note the words, "..they had to be fixed later on."

For more insight, you may be interested in the thread I just started here, too:

2002: Justice Scalia's comments on constitutional interpretation
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/936601/posts
5 posted on 06/27/2003 6:52:07 AM PDT by Matchett-PI (Marxist DemocRATS, Nader-Greens, and Religious KOOKS = a clear and present danger to our Freedoms.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: pabianice
Well, yes, but there's a fudge that it's only for the next 25 years or so....
6 posted on 06/27/2003 6:54:39 AM PDT by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo [Gallia][Germania][Arabia] Esse Delendam --- Select One or More as needed)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Matchett-PI
bump
7 posted on 06/27/2003 7:07:10 AM PDT by foreverfree
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Matchett-PI
INTSUM
8 posted on 06/27/2003 8:10:12 AM PDT by LiteKeeper
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: veronica
What the hell is the matter with Sandra Day? Can't be menapause --- she went through that twenty years ago!
9 posted on 06/27/2003 11:50:57 AM PDT by onyx (Name an honest democrat? I can't either!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

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.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson