Friday, January 13, 2017

Racism and Other Evils




 Since the presidential election, I have come to a point of mental rest and clarity: I am now convinced that the great division in our country today is simply between Good and Evil. After you weed out all the chaff and the noise, all the accidental aspects of specific issues, there remains one clear and simple fact: On one side are hatred, rage, racism, chauvinism selfishness, greed, violence, xenophobia, deliberate lies, deception and ignorance. On the other side are hope, compassion, acceptance, courage and goodwill. By and large, those who elected Donald Trump are on the bad side, and - yes, I’ll simply call a spade a spade - liberals are forever the good guys.

Flawed as we all may be, the political Right is immeasurably more evil than liberals are. The latter may often be incompetent, lazy, they may compromise their ethics and run for cover.


But just look at what drives the Paul Ryans, the Republicans, the Sean Hannitys and others at Fox News, etc: For starters, they are going to deprive 20 to 30 million people of their health insurance - most of them precisely those who already live at the edge of poverty and homelessness. They are going to cut the already precarious safety net that enables half the US population to survive in a reasonably civilized fashion. The country’s half which is already struggling to make it, already experiencing a DECLINING LIFE EXPECTANCY. The dozens of millions who will fall even further behind. Repeal of Obamacare will cause many thousands of deaths. The vicious Republican attack is targeting the working class, the poor, people of color, women - in sum the most vulnerable people.

There is a concomitant rise and acceptance of foul and hateful speech and thought, including racism. Even some of the respectable members of my upscale health spa utter blatantly racist views. Here is an example:

I am a gregarious fellow, so I chat with a lot of the guys at my club, even the conservatives. By and large, people are friendly. We agree to disagree. It’s never come to blows (yet). The other day, a conservative friend - let’s call him Bob - and I were once again arguing over politics, Trump, economics, race, etc.

By now, even Bob has learned that it is no longer acceptable to attribute behavioral differences between the races to genetic causation. Nowadays, even staunch conservatives reluctantly pay lip service to the truth that racial differences in economic achievement, crime, intelligence and scholastic performance are due to NURTURE, NOT NATURE. At least that much political correctness is now generally accepted (apart from loons like Dylann Roof, the KKK and the Nazi Party).

So now the fallback position of many educated racists is that black poverty, crime, and other problems are caused by a dysfunctional CULTURE. That’s how these Alt-Right types hope to get off the hook. They continue to blame the victim, and at the same time maintain that they do not view African-Americans as “inherently” inferior. The inferiority is in black culture.

As Bob said: “No one HAS to be poor. ANYONE willing to put their shoulder to the wheel can make something of himself!”

I contested this of course, and we exchanged the worn-out platitudes: He, the usual, individualistic, bankrupt Horatio Alger mythology (it’s all up to individual effort and hard work, blah blah); me the standard sociological rebuttal, pointing out the inter-generational reproduction of inequality, the importance of background, race, networks, luck, connections and all the rest.

I said to him: “You see, Bob, whenever I see a homeless person at a stoplight, I give him a couple of dollars...”

“Big mistake,” he interrupted, “he’ll just spend it on booze or drugs...”

“That’s idiotic,” I replied, and then continued: “ And you know why I feel compelled to give these people some money? It’s because every time, I think ‘There but for the grace of God, go I... or YOU, for that matter.”

“Nonsense,” he retorted, “we worked, we got our PhDs, we made something of ourselves. That homeless guy has no one to blame but himself...”

And so on and on.

A bit later, we were back on race. I reminded Bob of the obscene fact that 40% of all prisoners in America are black. This is when Bob revealed that he is still a true racist, still believing in NATURE, not nurture. Here is what he said:

“Look, Tom, when you come across a cocker spaniel, you are not afraid to stroke it, right? But you would be a fool to approach a strange rottweiler or doberman, wouldn’t you? It’s the same with races...”

I was aghast. I said: “So you DO believe in innate racial traits?”

Bob pushed on:

“Be honest, Tom. When you go to the emergency room for a medical procedure, and the doctor enters the room and he is black, don’t tell me you don’t cringe...”

I was stunned. My answer:

“I don’t believe that I would. But IF I did - momentarily - it would only prove that I have been contaminated by the racist culture; that I have, maybe subconsciously, bought into the bullshit that successful black professionals are the product of affirmative action, and less qualified...”

“Damn right they are, and that includes Obama!”

By now, I wanted to get away, so I said: “Look Bob, you are plain wrong. There is institutional racism, there is discrimination in housing, in hiring, there are the widespread attitudes like those which you just expressed, there are innumerable factors which perpetuate racial inequality, and they have nothing to do with a “dysfunctional” black culture or innate biological traits...But I sound like a broken record. I’ll just say this: We have to take care of EVERYONE. Your way, the Trump way, isn’t going to work. All people are people. It’s the family of man. They are all the same as you. That’s all there is to it.”
© Tom Kando 2017;All Rights Reserved
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16 comments:

Anonymous said...

Racism is a trait far more common in people with lower IQs; Trump understood this and won by winning the dumb white vote by an unprecedented margin. Increasing geographic sorting of the dumb to rural locations and the intelligent to urban areas largely at the coasts, coupled with an electoral college system that gives too much weight to rural votes, keeps the dumb white racist vote mattering more than it should. America is by design a nation ruled by and privileged for white men; it continues to be held hostage by stupid and evil white people (a.k.a. racists).

Nephew Tomi said...

Hi Tom. Firstly I don't believe in good and evil and I'm sure don't really either. People are both at different times and in different circumstances, it's perhaps more accurate to say some people are more compassionate, empathic or better informed.

Perhaps you should have asked Bob why there has been no convincing evidence to back up what he says.
Also you mentioned nurture over nature but Jared Diamond, a zoologist argues in 'The rise and fall of the third chimpanzee' that "continental differences in level of civilisation arose from geography's affect on the development of our cultural hallmarks".
Plants and animals which made agriculture and herding possible created storable food surpluses, freeing up time for metallurgy, manufacturing, writing.

Nephew Tomi said...

Hi Tom. Firstly I don't believe you really buy the good and evil thing do you? We are all capable of both as you said. Perhaps better to say some are more or less compassionate, empathic or well informed.

Maybe you should have asked Bob why in the history of racism there has been no convincing evidence to support his claims; or that he should grow some and stroke the odd rottweiler.

Also Jared Diamond, a zoologist argues convincingly in "The rise and fall of the third chimpanzee" that "continental differences in level of civilisation arose from geography's affect on the development of our cultural hallmarks... Biologist JBS Haldane remarked 'Civilisation is based, not only on men, but on plants and animals".
So although separate from human genetics nature does play a part too.

Anonymous said...

As proven again last night at UC Davis, there is nothing more intolerant and hateful than a liberal.

Tom Kando said...

Being a liberal, I find myself agreeing with anonymous 1 and disagreeing with anonymous 2.
What can I say?

Regarding anonymous 2:
I’m not sure as to what happened at UCD last night.

Having spent 52 years in academia (as a student and a professor), I do admit that there is a certain amount of intolerance and group-think among left-wing intellectuals. I fought against it for many years.

However, it is ludicrous to equate some minor excesses by the politically correct speech police on some campuses, with the vile, often violent and immeasurably more hurtful actions of racist, homophobic, xenophobic, economically and politically powerful men who continue to oppress others.

Liberals may be guilty of some irritating and intolerant chattering at times, but the difference between the two sides is between talk and action, between barking and biting. The governments and laws at all levels are increasingly controlled by the Right, which passes measures to suppress the suffrage, to infringe upon the First Amendment, to distort the Second, to gerrymander electoral districts, to legalize discrimination in housing and in hiring, to undermine the rights of women and minorities, to whitewash misbehavior by law enforcement and the criminal justice system.

Regarding anonymous 1:
Offensive as his words are, I’m afraid that they ring true - as did Hillary Clinton’s use of the word “deplorable.”

I would only add the following “softening” word, as an alternative to insult: : We cannot abandon hope. And as a life-long educator, I firmly believe that education is our greatest hope. For decades, we have been telling America’s ethnic underclass that in order to become participants in the American Dream, first, they need to get an education. Why not send the same message to the white underclass in Appalachia, the hills of West Virginia, the rust belt of Michigan, rural Iowa?

Tom Kando said...

In answer to Tomi:
Okay, I suppose I get carried away sometimes. Your more nuanced and attenuated words may be better than an excessively “Manichean” world view (seeing everything in black and white).
For the rest, yes, I have read Jared Diamond’s books; even used them in some of my courses. There is, indeed, a lot more to discuss with regard to that age-old question - nature vs. nurture...

Nephew Tomi said...

So racists are just plain stupid. The oxymoron is they need to be educated enough to understand the science. http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0963721414549750#_i1

Scott said...

Tom:
I like the point you make about racism taking the form of blaming Black poverty, etc. on their culture.
Scott

Lita said...

LitaRight on, Tom.
Lita

Gail said...

Hello and great conversation. As an African American female who has seen her share of institutional and structural racism and almost every other 'ism' , I look forward to a revolution of human love for each other. My brothers and sisters we need each other. In order to survive as a human species we MUST develop interdependence and cooperative communities that learn to thrive on unity and a healthy exchange of positive ideas to promote human improvement. Adaptability and willingness to change behavior in order to see things from each other's point of view is the only way. Not every one adapts to change in a positive way. Resilient humans that flourish have two enduring qualities. They live and love well! I hope you find yourself in the company of us!

Love,
Gail

Tamara Gary-El said...

Tom:

Your comments were eloquently stated and accurate. I find you cannot reason with someone that is at the height of ignorance. Thanks for sharing.

Tamara Gary-El


NWE said...

I think you can basically boil good and evil down to whether you are contributing to the well-being of another or exploiting another for self-benefit. Then if you look at the fundamental values behind the rhetoric of the two political parties, I'd say the liberals promote equality and inclusiveness while conservative promote productivity and responsibility. Then I'd say you need all four of these values to have a sustainable society.

The real evil is that the political parties each want to use the government to get something for their own constituents at the expense of the whole. Fundamentalists in both parties seem incapable of self-transcendence and inclusion of all the values necessary for a good society. They promote two of these four necessary values and trash two others. The failure to transcend group consciousness leads to great evil: racism, ethnocentrism, religious fundamentalism, and political partyism are all forms of groupism, with in-groups and out-groups. Using a government to serve one group at the expense of another is structural exploitation and violence whether a racial group or political party does it.

Tom, your reflections seemed to want to foster in-group and out-group mentality, which appear contrary to the principle of inclusivism, or working for the well-being of the whole, that liberals are supposed to stand for. I think this is one reason the political debates got so heated was that the behavior of many people betrayed the ideals they espoused on both sides.

Tom Kando said...

I thank Gail, Tamara and NWE for their comments.
However, in response to NWE:
the labels he uses for the core principles of liberals and conservatives could be challenged. While I agree with the two core values he ascribes to liberals, I’m not sure that the core values of “conservatives/Republicans/the political Right are primarily productivity and responsibility. If we take Adam Smith and “supply-sides economics” as their guiding economic principles, this suggests that profit is their key motive, based on the assumption that greed is good. Furthermore, conservatism is inherently individualistic, placing freedom above equality, and it is, by definition, placing the past above the future (to “conserve.”)
In addition, TODAY’s self-proclaimed conservatives are especially heinous. Trump and the Alt-Right are a far cry from Abraham Lincoln, or even William Buckley.
So today, it is not enough to equivocate and to say, “a plague on both houses.” The moral difference between liberals and so-called “conservatives” is real. If this fosters in in-group and out-group mentality, so be it. Neutrality won’t do, any more than it did in the 1930s. The policies of Donald Trump and Paul Ryan have to be resisted vigorously.

Cheryl said...

What has our country come to? Do we not care about our fellow citizens and their families anymore? How can we just cancel their health insurance like an act of spite? Trump's true colors should be obvious now even for people who ignored them before the election. Voters who thought he meant to 'fix' the economy are now the ones who are hoodwinked. Where are their voices? Don't they have even a tinge of voter regret? Wake up and take action against this tyrant!

Tom Kando said...

Good comment by Cheryl. In addition, let's keep in mind that it's the GOP and its leaders - Paul Ryan et. al. - who are the most adamant to repeal Obamacare.

Jo Ann said...

Thanks for this very timely posting. The man we encountered on our walk in the park today, was the epitome of ignorance, uncivility and racism. He was lacking in manners & incapable of rational thought. I remember my director of nursing Barbara Lafferty at Sacramento City College frequently mentioned to us that education was a leading forth and should result in changed behavior. This was 50+ yrs ago, so I am just paraphrasing here. Even though I only practiced nursing for 15 yrs, I was motivated to continue my education in other areas. I thank her always for the lessons in life, that she provided.

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