By Ari Blaff
Friday, July 30, 2021
There was one major reason why I dropped out of a
prestigious grad school this past fall. It wasn’t the economic insecurity, the
poor wages, or the need for geographical flexibility: Journalism isn’t much
better. The simple fact I learned after half a semester studying sociology is
that the discipline isn’t very tolerant.
Americans were reminded of this when sociology
professor Sam Richards of Penn State
University picked an “average white guy” and treated him like a
dissected biology specimen in a packed lecture hall. “I just take the average
white guy in class, whoever it is, it doesn’t really matter. Dude, this guy
here. Stand up, bro. What’s your name, bro?” the middle-aged, and evidently
hip, Richards asks. The bewildered freshman, Russell, stands at attention to
make the visual experience easier for the gawking crowd. “Look at Russell,
right here, it doesn’t matter what he does. If I match him up with [an
identical] a black guy in class . . . and we send them into the same jobs,
Russell has a benefit of having white skin,” Richards says.
In another clip, Richards points to a projected slideshow
referencing a study in which job applicants are segmented by race and criminal
record. The paper found that even whites with a criminal record were more
likely to get call-backs than blacks without one. Richards then turns to the
white student. “Bro, how does it feel knowing that push comes to shove your
skin’s kind of nice?” Richards prods. “I don’t know, it makes me feel like sad
cause like, God knows, I don’t deserve it. You know what I mean? Like, I didn’t
choose to be white,” the student rambles.
What is edifying about Richards cornering a student, based
on skin color, in front of hundreds of classmates? The show trial offered no
academic value apart from humiliation. In an act of poetic blindness, Richards,
who prides himself on having a viral TED talk entitled “A Radical Experiment
with Empathy,” demonstrated a magnificent lack of empathy throughout the
incident. Nor were university administrators all that bothered. Defending
Richards’s conduct, the university released a statement that Richards and his
colleagues “take time to discuss opinions from many perspectives — from liberal
to conservative — and the classroom conversation is framed in a thoughtful
way,” a spokesman noted.
The flavor of Richards’s lecture, described by the school
as “an introductory class on race and culture,” as well as the administration’s
equivocation, struck me as eerily similar to my own latest academic stint. Had
I been sitting in the lecture, Richards could easily have pointed at me as the
epitome of white privilege, although I identify as Jewish. Richards certainly
would never have scoured the room for Chinese, Korean, Iranian, or Indian students, even though members of such groups
come from wealthier and, on average, better-educated backgrounds.
When all you have is a hammer, all the world is a nail;
so, too, when one is devoutly anti-racist, all the world is racist.
This kind of treatment has become increasingly standard
fare for students, particularly at elite
universities. Following the murder of George Floyd and nationwide Black
Lives Matter (BLM) protests last year, educational spaces are now confronting
calls for a “racial reckoning” with the past. These “History Wars” have thrust once-esoteric academic debates
into the public square. The stickiest of these is “critical race theory” (CRT),
which views white supremacy as inextricably baked into the
American pie.
Originated among legal scholars in the 1990s, CRT has
become a catch-all term into which anti-racism, intersectionality, whiteness
studies, and other progressive shibboleths have been thrown. It was
brought to the mainstream’s attention by Christopher Rufo of the Manhattan Institute, and many on the left lay the
blame at his feet for setting off a racial powder keg: “The proof lies offline
in the new moral panic he helped instigate,” Sarah Jones of New York magazine
writes. Critics view Rufo’s initiative as a crude crowbarring of various
distinct theories under the CRT umbrella, but he has firmly countered such claims.
Regardless of what term one wishes to use, there has been
a tangible shift, with CRT bleeding out of academic and cultural arenas and now
corroding everyday discourse. “There is no in-between safe space of ‘not
racist,’” anti-racist luminary Ibram X. Kendi writes. “The claim of ‘not racist’
neutrality is a mask for racism.” Accordingly, if you disagree with Kendi’s
assessment of America or race relations, what does that make you?
The corollary of such thinking is that once the world is
neatly divided into racists and anti-racists, it’s time to get the ball
rolling. After all, those who are skeptical of such theorizing today are
compared with anti-abolitionists and segregationists of yore. “In the 1950s and ’60s, 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,”
Kendi recently argued in The Atlantic.
Proponents of the unstoppable-march-of-history approach
view opposition — dare I say skepticism? — as unmistakably standing athwart
progress. Speaking before a gathering, Michelle Leete, a communications staffer for the Virginia
Parent-Teacher Association, condemned opponents of CRT:
Let’s deny this off-key band of people that are
anti-education, anti-teacher, anti-equity, anti-history, anti-racial reckoning,
anti-opportunities, anti-help people, anti-diversity, anti-platform,
anti-science, anti-change agent, anti-social justice, anti-health care,
anti-worker, anti-LGBTQ+, anti-children, anti-health care, anti-worker, anti-environment,
anti-admissions policy change, anti-inclusion, anti-live-and-let live people.
Let them die.
As with Kendi, if one resists Leete’s perspective, one is
seemingly anti-everything — in other words, part of the problem. More
specifically, such dissidents require retraining to teach them and their
children how to think properly.
Teacher Dana Stangel-Plowe publicly announced her resignation
from a New Jersey private school in June on YouTube because
of such initiatives. The school had embraced an ideology that “requires
students to see themselves not as individuals, but as representatives of either
an oppressor or oppressed group.” According to Stangel-Plowe, students
self-censored, approaching assigned texts “in search of the oppressor.”
Teachers at a February faculty meeting were even “segregated by skin color.”
In Illinois’s Evanston-Skokie School District 65, another teacher, Stacy Deemar, felt compelled to formally file suit in
federal court earlier this month against the anti-racist encroachment within
school life. Teachers in the district were also separated by race and mandated
to participate in “privilege walks,” which the suit’s general counsel
described as conditioning teachers “to see one another’s skin color first and
foremost.” Such thinking, understandably, flowed downstream to students.
Lessons distributed to eighth-graders in the district included assertions that
“white people have a very, very serious problem and they should start thinking
about what they should do about it.”
* * *
Simplistic binaries suffocate thoughtfulness in our
already nuance-starved times. Understanding complexity requires an expansive
view of the world that is incompatible with fetishizing race to the exclusion
of all other variables. The much-touted white–black racial wealth gap is largely skewed by top
earners, but that’s lost when class is disregarded. Similarly, the World
Socialist Web Site, alongside leading U.S. historians, tore apart the anti-racist
foundations of The 1619 Project for overlooking immigration and
class. Despite these bipartisan criticisms, the project won a Pulitzer Prize,
and now certain schools are seeking to incorporate its
approach within their curricula.
However, such intellectual uncertainty is elided or swept
entirely under the rug of the malfunctioning intellectual Mad Libs we find
ourselves in today. An imperceptible and hegemonic white supremacy will suffice
for every blank. The truth requires no further investigation; no more stones
need turning.
Counter to the aphorism that reminds us, “It is the mark of an
educated mind to entertain a thought without accepting it,” today we are
encouraged not to strain ourselves with all that excessive thinking. Inquiry,
thought, and dissent are castigated as “white fragility” by prominent anti-racist scholar Robin DiAngelo. Unfortunately, when we are encouraged to
differentiate the world solely based on skin color, viewing strangers through
the rudimentary prism of racial categories, intricacy is lost. Complexity
requires heterodoxy, not the Orwellian groupthink found in Richards’s
classroom.
Thank God I left academia.
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