By Rich
Lowry
Tuesday,
June 06, 2023
Donald
Trump hasn’t been known for his scrupulously correct use of language, but
he now wants to police the use of “woke.”
“I don’t
like the term ‘woke’ because I hear, ‘woke, woke, woke,’” he said the other
day. “It’s just a term they use, half the people can’t even define it, they
don’t know what it is.”
Of
course, Trump wasn’t randomly volunteering his equivalent of an elementary rule
of usage from Strunk & White. His newfound disdain for the term “woke” has
everything to do with his contest with Ron DeSantis for the 2024 GOP
presidential nomination.
The
former president’s by-any-means-necessary approach to fighting DeSantis means
that he doesn’t care whether he’s adopting the arguments of the other side, as
long as he’s taking a dig at the Florida governor. It’s his version of what
people who are woke — to use the offending word — call
“allyship.”
Trump
recently talked up the disgraced former governor of New York, Andrew Cuomo, by
arguing that the Empire State’s response to the coronavirus was better than
Florida’s. Cuomo expressed his appreciation. Now Trump is embracing the Left’s
contention that conservatives are throwing around the term “woke” as a catchall
insult without knowing what it means.
Contra
Trump and the progressives who agree with him on this point, “woke” is a useful
term for social-justice excesses and everything associated with them. If the
word didn’t exist, it — or something very similar — would have to be invented.
As it
happens, it was invented long ago, and not by the Right. The term dates to the
first half of the 20th century when it was used by African Americans to
describe how they should be aware of threats from white people — “Stay woke.”
The word gained new prominence with the Ferguson, Mo., protests in 2014, when
it became an online trope. The publication Vox notes that “the
idea of staying aware of or ‘woke’ to the inequities of the American justice
system was a heady one.”
Then, as
often occurs in American political and social life, it got repurposed.
Conservatives took the word over and began applying it to cultural radicalism
largely involving issues of race and gender.
Is it
used promiscuously? Sure. Does DeSantis say it too much when describing his
fights in Florida? Maybe — there’s always a fine line between good branding and
overkill. But there’s no doubt that wokeness is a real thing.
We see
it, for instance, in elaborate pronoun policies, in the dumbing down of
standards in the name of equity, and in the assumption that every institution
in American life is racist. “Woke” has replaced “political correctness” as a
term, but the concepts aren’t the same. “P.C.” tended to denote a
hypersensitivity to alleged offensiveness, whereas “woke” gets to something
that goes much deeper — a critique of American life as fundamentally racist,
sexist, homophobic, and transphobic.
The
concepts of “white privilege” and “white supremacy,” so prevalent on the left,
are central to the woke worldview, and the remedy is an outcomes-based focus on
so-called equity.
As we
saw in the debate over critical race theory, as soon as the Right adopts a term
that has purchase, the Left denies that the underlying phenomenon exists. There
have been numerous reports in the press about how no one can define “woke,”
while left-wing commentators and academics have been saying that the use of the
term is, of course, itself racist.
Whenever
the term “woke” goes out of style, whatever replaces it will be found similarly
lacking.
The word
and what it denotes are going to stay at the center of the GOP debate, though,
because Republican voters are rightly alarmed by the cultural direction of the
country. In the absence of a better word, “woke” is unavoidable — so
unavoidable, in fact, that Trump used it to describe the military on the same
day he knocked it as nebulous and overused.
He knows
what the word means, and so does everyone else.
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