Most of us will be familiar with the catalogue already. Above all, there’s the eager exploitation of anything that could conceivably—or even inconceivably, as in the case of the “very fine people” of the Charlottesville demonstrations—be considered racism in Trump’s case and the complete disregard of incidents of racial insensitivity (to put it politely) in Biden’s.
Hardly a story about the former president, no matter the subject, was complete without a mention of his alleged “racism”—often rhetorically inflated to “white supremacism”—while Biden’s racial gaffes are dismissed as just “Joe being Joe.”
“Joe Biden,” writes Hanson, “(never mind his son, Hunter) has compiled the most glaring rap sheet of racist quotes of any current modern political leader.”
That may well be true, but we need to add an asterisk and a footnote to this effect: “The word ‘racism’ here is being used in its old-fashioned sense of invidious discrimination against members of one race as practiced by members of another.”
There you will find that, “For social justice leftists ... it is now self-evident that racism has nothing to do with a person’s attitudes about racial groups, and everything to do with where one stands on questions of redistributive justice among such groups. The words of one blogger reflect the resultant bullying certitude: ‘Your first step is to accept that ‘a hatred or intolerance of another race’ is not the definition of racism. The dictionary is wrong. Get over it.’”
Or, to put it another way, among the most advanced thinkers today, the single, unitary and universal moral standard enthroned by the Enlightenment has been deposed and the double standard inherited from our tribal past—wherein the rules only apply within some morally privileged group and not to anyone outside it—sits in its place.
This is what these revolutionary thinkers mean when they say that only white people can be guilty of racism. Or, for that matter, that only Republicans can be guilty of all the things Trump was said to be guilty of—except that they lack the frankness of Voegeli’s leftist blogger and don’t usually come right out and say that last part. They don’t have to if they never hear you (or Victor Davis Hanson) calling them hypocrites.
Not that they would care even if they did. Hypocrisy, like the universal moral standard that exposes it, simply doesn’t exist in their double standard world.
“Republicans want to criminalize teaching students about racism. Here’s why.”
Obviously, what’s being referred to here is the effort by state and local governments and school boards across the country to outlaw the teaching of critical race theory to school-children. To Ricky L. Jones and other progressives, CRT means “teaching students about racism.”
You can change the definition to suit yourself, but you can’t change that damning fact to suit any but brainwashed children. The resistance to the new curriculum suggests that America’s children are not going to be brainwashed without a fight.
Another progressive tactic with respect to CRT is to adopt Joe Biden’s approach during last year’s election campaign to what might otherwise have been the thorny subject of Antifa and its leadership of that summer’s anti-police riots and deny that it exists—or that it exists as anything but a fabrication of its enemies.
To that end, however, he might have done better to call it “the new racism.”
Yet Wallace-Wells appears to believe that Rufo has conjured out of thin air the idea that “the anti-racism seminars did not just represent a progressive view on race but that they were expressions of a distinct ideology—critical race theory—with radical roots.”
It’s not as if the “radical roots” are not pretty obvious in the works of the CRT guru Ibram X. Kendi who, as Wallace-Wells acknowledges, has written “that anti-racism was not possible without anti-capitalism.” But I guess that doesn’t count as radicalism to readers of The New Yorker, who can be relied upon for a Pavlovian response to any accusation of “red-baiting” by “conservative activists.”
It remains to be seen if, like those readers, middle America will allow itself thus to be soothed and reassured of the harmlessness of this reversion to tribalism and the double standard. But it is not only “conservative activists” who seem to sense the giant of public opinion stirring in its sleep.