Source: The Atlantic
The United States is not in the midst of a āculture warā over race and racism. The animating force of our current conflict is not our differing values, beliefs, moral codes, or practices. The American people arenāt divided. The American people areĀ beingĀ divided.
Republican operatives haveĀ buried the actual definition of critical race theory: āa way of looking at lawās role platforming, facilitating, producing, and even insulating racial inequality in our country,ā as the law professor KimberlĆ© Crenshaw, who helped coin the term,Ā recentlyĀ definedĀ it. Instead, the attacks on critical race theory are based on made-up definitions and descriptors. āCritical race theory says every white person is a racist,ā Senator Ted Cruz hasĀ said. āIt basically teaches that certain children are inherently bad people because of the color of their skin,āĀ saidĀ the Alabama state legislator Chris Pringle.
ThereĀ areĀ differing points of viewĀ about race and racism. But what we are seeing and hearing on news shows, in school-district meetings, in op-ed pages, in legislative halls, and in social-media feeds arenāt multipleĀ sidesĀ with differing points of view. Thereās only one side in our so-called culture war right now.
The Republican operatives, who dismiss the expositions of critical race theorists and anti-racists in order to define critical race theory and anti-racism, and then attack those definitions, areĀ effectively debating themselves. They have conjured an imagined monster to scare the American people and project themselves as the nationās defenders from that fictional monster.
The evangelist Pat Robertson recentlyĀ calledĀ critical race theory āa monstrous evil.ā And over the past year, that āmonstrous evilā has supposedly been growing many legs. First, Republicans pointed to Black Lives Matter demonstrators. Three days after George Floydās murder last year, President Donald TrumpĀ recastĀ the largely peaceful demonstrators as violent and dishonorable āTHUGS.ā By the end of July, Trump hadĀ framedĀ them as āanarchists who hate our country.ā
Then ācancel cultureā was targeted. At the Republican National Convention in August, TrumpĀ blastedĀ ācancel cultureā as seeking to coerce Americans āinto saying what you know to be false and scare you out of saying what you know to be true.ā
Next cameĀ attacks on the 1619 ProjectĀ and American history. āDespite the virtues and accomplishments of this Nation, many students are now taught in school to hate their own country, and to believe that the men and women who built it were not heroes, but rather villains,āĀ readĀ Trumpās executive order on November 2, establishing the Presidentās Advisory 1776 Commission.
And now the Black Lives Matter demonstrators, cancel culture, the 1619 Project,Ā American history, andĀ anti-racist educationĀ are presented to the public as the many legs of the āmonstrous evilā of critical race theory thatās purportedly coming to harm white children. The language echoes the rhetoric used to demonize desegregation after theĀ Brown v. Board of EducationĀ decision, in 1954.
In the 1950s and ā60s, the conservators of racism organized to keep Black kids out of all-white schools. Today, they are trying to get critical race theory out of American schools. āInstead of helping young people discover that America is the greatest, most tolerant, and most generous nation in history, [critical race theory] teaches them that America is systemically evil and that the hearts of our people are full of hatred and malice,ā Trump wrote in anĀ op-edĀ on June 18.
After it was cited 132 times on Fox News shows in 2020, critical race theory became a conservative obsession this year. ItsĀ mentionsĀ on Fox News practically doubled month after month: It wasĀ referred toĀ 51 times in February, 139 times in March, 314 times in April, 589 times in May, and 737 times in just the first three weeks of June. As of June 29, 26 states hadĀ introducedĀ legislation or other state-level actions to ārestrict teaching critical race theory or limit how teachers can discuss racism and sexism,ā according toĀ Education Week, and nine had implemented such bans.
I have beenĀ calledĀ the father of critical race theory, although I was born in 1982, and critical race theory was born in 1981. Over the past few months, I have seldom stopped to answer the critiques of critical race theory or of my own work, because the more Iāve studied these critiques, the more Iāve concluded that these critics arenāt arguing against me. They arenāt arguing against anti-racist thinkers. They arenāt arguing against critical race theorists. TheseĀ critics are arguing against themselves.
What happens when a politician falsely proclaims what you think, and then criticizes that proclamation? Is she really critiquing your ideasāor her own? If a writer decides what both sides of an argument are stating, is he really engaging in an argument with another writer, or is he engaging in an argument with himself?
Take the journalist Matthew Yglesias.Ā In February, inĀ TheĀ Washington Post, he wrote that I think that āany racial gap simplyĀ isĀ racist by definition; any policy that maintains such a gap is a racist policy; andāmost debatablyāany intellectual explanation of its existence (sociological, cultural and so on) is also racist.ā But nowhere have I written that the racial gap is racist: The policies and practices causing the racial gap are racist. Nowhere have I stated thatĀ anyĀ intellectual explanation of the existence of a racial gap is racist. Only intellectual explanations of a racial gap that point to the superiority or inferiority of a racial group are racist.
Was Yglesias really arguing against me, or was he arguing against himself? What about the columnist Ross Douthat? In a recentĀ op-edĀ inĀ The New York Times, he did what GOP thinkers keep doing to Americans striving to construct an equitable and just society: re-create us as extremists, as monsters to be feared for speaking out against racism. Douthat accused me of āideological extremism that embarrasses clever liberals,ā comparing me to the late Rush Limbaugh. Iāve spent my career writing evidence-based historical scholarship and demonstrating my willingness to be vulnerable; Limbaugh had no interest in beingĀ self-critical, and for decadesĀ attackedĀ truth and facts and evidence.
Douthat claimed that I have a āManichaean vision of public policy, in which all policymaking is either racist or antiracist, all racial disparities are the result of racismāand the measurement of any outcome short of perfect āequityā may be a form of structural racism itself.ā
Where did he getĀ perfectĀ equity? InĀ How to Be an Antiracist, I define racial equity as a state āwhen two or more racial groups are standing on a relatively equal footing.ā I proposed that an example of racial equity would be āif there were relatively equitable percentagesā of racial groups āliving in owner-occupied homes in the forties, seventies, or, better, nineties.ā ByĀ contrast, in 2014, 71 percent of white families lived in owner-occupied homes, compared with 45 percent of Latino families and 41 percent of Black families. Thatās racial inequity.
What we write doesnāt matter to the people arguing with themselves. It doesnāt matter that I consistently challenge Manichaean racial visions of inherently good or evil people or policy making. It doesnāt matter that I donāt write about policy making being good or evil, or that I write about the equitable or inequitable outcome of policies. It doesnāt matter that Iāve urged us toward relative equity, and not toward perfect equity.
If you want to understand why Iāve made these arguments, you first need to recognize that for decades, right-wing thinkers and judges have argued that policies that lead to racial inequities are ānot racistā or are ārace neutral.ā That was theĀ positionĀ of the conservative Supreme Court justices who recently upheld Arizonaās voting-restriction policies. Those who wish to conserve racial inequity want us to focus on intentāwhich is hard to proveārather than the outcome of inequity, which is rather easy to prove. Case in point: GOP state legislators are claiming that the 28 laws theyāveĀ enactedĀ in 17 states as of June 21 are about election security, even though voter fraud is a practicallyĀ nonexistentĀ problem. They claim that these laws arenāt intended to make it harder for Black voters or members of other minority groups to cast ballots, even asĀ expertsĀ find thatās precisely what such laws have done in the past, and predict thatās likely what these new laws will do as well.
These critics arenāt just making up their claims as they go along. They are making up the sources of their criticism as they go along. DouthatĀ arguesĀ that work like mine āextends structural analysis beyond what it can reasonably bear, into territory where white supremacy supposedly explains Asian American success on the SAT.ā Who is giving this explanation other than Douthat? Iām surely not. I point to other explanations, including the history ofĀ highly educatedĀ Asian immigrants and theĀ concentrationĀ of score-boosting test-prep companies in Asian (and white) neighborhoods.
White supremacy does explain whyĀ more than three-quartersĀ of the perpetrators of anti-Asian hate crimes and incidents before and during the pandemic have been white. Asian American success as measured by test scores, education, and income should not erase the impact of structural racism on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. This group now has theĀ highestĀ income inequality of any racial group in the United States. Asian Americans in New York experienced the highestĀ surgeĀ of unemployment of any racial group during the pandemic. Do the critics of critical race theory want us to think of the AAPI community as not just a āmodel minority,ā but a model monolith? Showcasing AAPIs to maintain the fiction of a postracial society ends up erasing Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.
Critical race theory has been falsely labeled as anti-Asian. Helen Raleigh, an Asian American entrepreneur,Ā definedĀ critical race theory as a ādivisive discriminatory ideology that judges people on the basis of their skin colorā inĀ Newsweek. āIt is my practice to ignore critics who have not read the work and who are not interested in honest exchange,āĀ respondedĀ one of the three Asian American founders of critical race theory, Mari Matsuda, a law professor at the University of Hawaii. āBut I do want to say this for the record: Asian Americans are at the center of CRT analysis and have been from the start.ā
How should thinkers respond to monstrous lies? Should we mostly ignore the critics as Matsuda has, as I have? Because restating facts over and over again gets old. Reciting your own work over and over again to critics who either havenāt read what they are criticizing or are purposefully distorting it gets old. And talking with people who have created a monologue with two points of view, theirs and what they impute to you, gets old.
But democracy needs dialogue. And dialogue necessitates seeking to know what a person is saying in order to offer informed critiques.
As a scholar, I know that nothing is more useful than criticism to improve my scholarship. As a human being, I know that nothing is more constructive than criticism to improve my humanity. Iāve chronicled how criticism and critics have been a driving force on my journey to be anti-racist, to confront my own racist, sexist, homophobic, and classist ideasāand their intersections. Constructive criticism often hurts, but like painful medical treatments, it can be lifesaving; it can be nation-saving.
But whatās happening now is something entirely different and destructiveānot constructive. This isnāt a āculture war.ā This isnāt even an āargument.ā This isnāt even ācriticism.ā This is critics arguing with themselves.
Ibram X. KendiĀ is a contributing writer atĀ The AtlanticĀ and the Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities and the director of theĀ Boston University Center for Antiracist Research. He is the author of several books, including the National Book AwardāwinningĀ Stamped From the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in AmericaĀ andĀ How to Be an Antiracist.
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1 Comment
So CRT is misunderstood and mischaracterized by people who donāt understand it. Fair enough. People creating monsters where none exist. So why doesnāt the same standard apply to voting regulations? Is requiring proper identification really voter suppression? Of course itās not. Is requiring proper identification to purchase a firearm a form of 2nd amendment suppression? Of course itās not.