By Noah Rothman
Wednesday,
February 22, 2023
Republicans have
no idea what they’re talking about when they use the word “woke.” That is the
premise from which the Washington
Post’s Ashley
Parker and Liz Goodwin begin in a report on the torturing of this loaded word by its
detractors on the right.
Aspirants
for high office within the Republican firmament are quick to deploy the term,
these reporters note, but its malleability renders the word meaningless. And
yet, the term “originated in black culture before being co-opted by white
people,” and conservatives only “began using ‘woke’ in pejorative terms to
undermine black and liberal ideas,” according to the reporters’ restatement of
Duke University professor Candis Watts Smith’s verdict. That was “not an
accidental choice.”
So, the
word “woke” is nonsensical, and those who use it have no shared understanding
of what it means. But it’s also a racist sleight deployed deliberately to
broadcast and popularize bigotry. An irreconcilable contradiction is an
unpromising way to begin a piece designed to indict Republicans for being
unclear.
In fact,
Parker and Goodwin go on to quote a cavalcade of Republican elected officials
who provide concise, real-world examples of the ways in which “woke”
sensibilities fuel radical policy prescriptions.
Arkansas
governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders used the word to indict elements on the Left
who “can’t even tell you what a woman is,” which would confuse only those who
are unfamiliar with Democratic efforts to inject phrases such as “birthing
people,” “pregnant
people,” and “people who
menstruate” into
the discourse.
The Post reporters
cite House Republicans who have singled out “wokeness” in the armed forces.
Parker and Goodwin counter their claims by noting that “woke ideology was not
one of their top challenges when it came to recruitment and retention,” which
is a non sequitur. The only utility in this digression is that it deliberately
avoids addressing Republican concerns about why, for example, West Point cadets
are being treated to lectures about “Understanding Whiteness and White Rage”
and “White Power at West Point” (the appropriateness of which Joint Chiefs
chairman General Mark
Milley defended).
From
Trump-era budget officials to Kevin McCarthy and his allies in the House, many
have pledged to strip the federal government of funding for “woke” initiatives.
These reporters fail to elaborate on what those initiatives are, save to note
that one politician — former OMB
official Russell Vought — is circulating a ten-year budget proposal that guts federal
spending across the board. That’s simpler than explaining where the millions
that fund programs such as racially prioritized Covid-vaccine-distribution
schedules or a pandemic-relief fund allocated only
to racial minorities in
violation of the 14th Amendment’s equal-protection clause came from.
Senator
Ted Cruz advanced a positive definition of “wokeism” as a theory of social
organization that is “characterized by demanding one uniform view on any
particular topic, engaging in brutal punishment for any who disagree, including
most simply being canceled.” Senator Tommy Tuberville offered up a negative
definition insofar as the phenomenon applies to education, which he believes
should be “about reading, writing and math, having an opportunity to grow up in
an unbiased world.” Tuberville wouldn’t have to articulate this banal statement
of principle in the absence of a pedagogy that recommends “dismantling
racism in mathematical instruction” by teaching children that certain accidents of birth license flawed
arithmetic.
Republicans
can go on at length and in great detail about what “wokeism” is and how it
manifests in policy. They don’t seem particularly confused. Where the Post’s
reporters do find confusion over the term isn’t among
Republican lawmakers but among the voters they’re targeting.
In
particular, Parker and Goodwin cite the findings of a focus group of Florida
voters published in the Bulwark who “either had no clue what
‘woke’ means or completely disagreed with each other on the term’s meaning.”
That’s understandable. The policy dimensions around “wokeism” are generally indistinct
from those associated with the concept of social justice, which also has
no universal definition despite the efforts of generations of scholars,
theologians, and policy-makers who dedicated their lives to its pursuit.
In the
Rawlsian thought experiment, the pursuit of social justice obliges enlightened
institutions to redistribute both economic and social goods up
to the point at which, according to John Rawls, “a decrease in [the more
fortunate’s] advantages would make the least fortunate even worse off than they
are.” The American sociologist Carl Bankston later critiqued the “activists,
social workers, and policymakers” who “may have absorbed only secondhand
versions of Rawls.” They therefore see “people as positions rather than as
individuals,” which “implicitly reduces them to categories.” As working definitions
of “wokeism” go, it’s hard to do much better.
Adherents
to this philosophical outlook benefit from the ambiguity around it, which helps
explain why they heap condescension on those who seek to clear up the confusion
they’ve cultivated. The vagueness of their proposition allows them to pretend
as though their critics are simply ignorant. Their doctrine is both infinitely
complex and intuitive — a conception of justice that a child can understand,
but that only enlightened distributors operating from within remote
institutions can seek.
Perhaps
the most prolific critic of Rawlsian thought, Friedrich Hayek, illustrated the
flaws of social justice in practice most succinctly in a 1977 interview with William F. Buckley Jr.:
“Making people equal — a goal of governmental policy — would force government
to treat people very unequally, indeed.” That is the fatal flaw in the effort
to transform “equity” into a whole-of-government enterprise.
The
pursuit of “equity” in policy led the Biden Justice Department to argue
against litigating allegations of discriminatory university admissions practices
designed to disadvantage Asian Americans, whose over-performance as a group can
only be remedied with discrimination against its individual members.
That
imperative convinced Marin County to approve the provision of a
basic-income stipend only to “mothers of color” despite America’s
constitutional proscriptions against racial preferences. It led California
lawmakers to seek the codification
of racial discrimination in the state’s constitution, and Chicago mayor Lori Lightfoot to discriminate against white
reporters in the name of combating “institutionalized racism.”
It has
inspired a fashionable hostility toward “color
blindness” in both
society and law — the rejection of egalitarianism as a myth that serves as a
smokescreen to preserve and conceal racial preferences. And all of it is backed
by the superficial
authority of social science.
For
quite some time, proponents of this reimagining of the American social compact
used terms such as “woke,”
“social justice,” and “equity” interchangeably, their nuances notwithstanding. Only when
opponents of this philosophy co-opted “woke” so that it “now carries
the implication that social justice ideals are absurd or insincere” did an effort to anathematize the
word pick up steam. But seeking to cure the ills of discrimination with more
discrimination isn’t complex, and you don’t need a Ph.D. to know what you’re
looking at. Much like porn, you know it when you see it.
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