If You Talk Honestly About Race
by Thomas Sowell
Recently
by Thomas Sowell: Who
Is 'Racist'?
Around this
time of year, I sometimes hear from parents who have been appalled
to learn that the child they sent away to college to become educated
has instead been indoctrinated with the creed of the left. They
often ask if I can suggest something to have their offspring read
over the summer, in order to counteract this indoctrination.
This year the
answer is a no-brainer. It is a book with the unwieldy title, No
matter what ... they'll call this book Racist by Harry Stein,
a writer for what is arguably America's best magazine, City Journal.
In a little over 200 very readable pages, the author deftly devastates
with facts the nonsense about race that dominates much of what is
said in the media and in academia.
There is no
subject on which lies and half-truths have become so much the norm
on ivy-covered campuses than is the subject of race. Moreover, anyone
who even questions these lies and half-truths is almost certain
to be called a "racist," especially in academic institutions which
loudly proclaim a "diversity" that is confined to demographics,
and all but forbidden when it comes to a diversity of ideas.
The ultimate
irony is that many of those who publicly promote or accept the prevailing
party line on race do not themselves accept it privately. A few
years ago, when a faculty vote on affirmative action was proposed
at the University of California at Berkeley, there was a fierce
disagreement as to whether that vote should be taken by secret ballot
or at an open faculty meeting.
Both sides
understood that many professors would vote one way in secret and
the opposite way in public. In short, hypocrisy is the norm in discussions
of race – and not just at Berkeley. Moreover, it is the norm among
blacks as well as whites.
Black civil
rights attorneys and activists who denounce whites for objecting
to the bussing of kids from the ghetto into their neighborhood schools
have not hesitated to send their own children to private schools,
instead of subjecting them to this kind of "diversity" in the public
schools.
As for whites,
author Harry Stein says that many white liberals "give blacks a
pass on behaviors and attitudes they would regard as unacceptable
and even abhorrent in their own kind." This, of course, is no favor
to those particular blacks – especially those among young ghetto
blacks whose counterproductive behavior puts them on a path that
leads nowhere but to welfare, at best, and behind bars or death
in gangland street warfare at worst.
In the introduction
to his book, Stein says that his purpose is "to talk honestly about
race." He accomplishes that purpose in a fact-filled book that should
be a revelation, especially to young people of any race, who have
been fed a party line in schools and colleges across America.
He looks behind
the highly-sanitized picture of Al Sharpton, as a civil rights statesman
with his own MSNBC program and his designation as a White House
adviser, to the factual reality of a man with a trail of slime that
has included inciting mobs, in some cases costing innocent lives.
Positive
news also receives its due. Some readers of this book may be surprised
to learn that the ban on racial preferences in the University of
California system did not lead to a disappearance of blacks from
the system, as the supporters of affirmative action claimed would
happen.
On the contrary,
more blacks graduated from the system after the ban – for the very
common sense reason that they were now admitted to University of
California campuses where they qualified, rather than to places
like UCLA and Berkeley, where they had often been admitted to fill
a quota, and often failed.
Stein's book
is also one of the few places where many young people will see the
actual words of people like Bill Cosby, Shelby Steele, Pat Moynihan
and others who have opposed the fashionable platitudes that confuse
racial issues.
Whether those
words convince all readers is not the point. The point, especially
for young readers in our schools and colleges, is that this may
be one of the few times they will ever encounter a fundamentally
different set of views on race – views that they have only heard
referred to as coming from "Uncle Toms" or "racists."
April
28, 2012
Thomas
Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford
University. His Web site is www.tsowell.com.
To find out more about Thomas Sowell and read features by other
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