By
Stanley Kurtz
Tuesday,
July 11, 2023
In
partnership with two of the most influential Marxists in America, Colin
Kaepernick has just published a book intended as a refutation of Governor Ron
DeSantis’s January 2023 decision to reject the College Board’s pilot
program in AP African-American studies (APAAS). Kaepernick’s Our History
Has Always Been Contraband: In Defense of Black Studies includes essays attacking how
DeSantis, Trump, Christopher Rufo, I, and other conservatives treat U.S.
history. The book also offers a collection of radical readings that Kaepernick
would like the College Board to add to the APAAS curriculum — or would like to
see students read on their own.
To
address DeSantis’s concerns about politicization, the College Board
initially removed or made optional radical readings that made up
nearly the entire final quarter of the APAAS pilot. With DeSantis now a hard no
on APAAS, the College Board looks ready to put back in the Marxism,
queer theory, etc. And Kaepernick and his collaborators have plenty of ideas
about how to do that. Supposedly, Kaepernick’s book and the readings it
showcases demonstrate how wrong DeSantis was to reject a perfectly good
black-studies course. In fact, Kaepernick’s thoroughly Marxist project shows
that DeSantis was right to nix a course with such a one-sided and extremist
agenda.
The core
message of Our History Has Always Been Contraband is that “the
entire American enterprise” is “illegitimate.” Given that, the purpose of black
studies is to expose the “mythologies and lies that the United States has been
built around.” “Black studies,” we are told, “honors a tradition of resistance
and struggle” designed to “unravel” America’s “social order.” In building their
book around this openly radical — even revolutionary — political agenda,
Kaepernick and his collaborators are making DeSantis’s point.
The
title of Kaepernick’s book, Our History Has Always Been Contraband: In
Defense of Black Studies, is designed to portray DeSantis as opposed to the
teaching of black history. This is demonstrably false. Florida’s Stop WOKE
Act mandates the teaching of a series of topics in the history of
black Americans, slavery and racism very much included. The issue is what
specific sort of curriculum should be adopted.
Kaepernick
and his Marxist collaborators insist that black studies can take only a radical
left line. Since slavery was wrong and must be opposed, and since contemporary
black life is (allegedly) characterized by oppression comparable to that of
slavery, black studies cannot be a traditional academic discipline, we are
told. On the contrary, it must advance what is in effect a revolutionary
political agenda. None of this follows unless you accept the utterly jaundiced
reading of contemporary America presented throughout Our History Has
Always Been Contraband. But at least Kaepernick and his collaborators are
tipping their hand.
In
September 2022, I exposed what had until then been
APAAS’s secret curriculum. I showed that the final quarter of the course was
built around the neo-Marxism of UCLA professor of American history Robin D.G.
Kelley. In early 2023, when DeSantis’s clash with the College Board was at high
tide, I highlighted the radicalism of another key
author assigned in the original APAAS curriculum, Northwestern University
professor of African-American studies, Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor (who writes
regularly for The New Yorker). Kelley and Taylor, two of the most
influential Marxists in America, are Kaepernick’s co-editors on Our
History Has Always Been Contraband. To hear Kaepernick tell it, Kelley and Taylor have long served
as his intellectual guides as well.
By
churning out an unrelievedly radical collection of readings in black studies,
Kelley, Taylor, and Kaepernick confirm the point I made when I first wrote
about APAAS. The agenda behind the modern section of the course is both
extremist and one-sided. This becomes obvious when the writers originally
featured in APAAS (Kelley and Taylor) are given a free hand to design their own
version of the course. What they come up with is a monotonous diet of neo-Marxist
radicalism.
At
points, Our History Has Always Been Contraband is sly about
its agenda. Part Two of the book—filled with suggested readings in black
studies—is titled “The History They Don’t Want You to Know.” A more honest
title would have been, “The Politics They Don’t Want to Shove Down Your
Throat.” Most of the sample essays are political manifestos, not histories. One
selection rejects the very idea of scholarly objectivity as the credulous
acceptance of disguised white-male thought. Another essay spotlights “the
radical potential of queer politics” by proposing an intersectional alliance
between marginalized groups (e.g., sexual minorities and welfare recipients) in
opposition to a white, middle-class, male, heterosexual “enemy.” Another
selection poetically alludes to a future in which the revolution will be
“irresistible” and “bigtime bigdaddies” will kill themselves.
The few
entries that do focus on history have clear — and radical — political
implications. A piece on the Haitian revolution from Marxist scholar and
revolutionary C. L. R. James is meant to convince students that liberal
democracy offers no hope of racial progress — only revolutionary organizing can
work. Comparative material on Britain’s abolition of the slave trade, or the
prohibition on slavery in America’s Northwest
Ordinance, might
have set up an interesting debate on racial progress within representative
democracies. That sort of debate, however, is precisely what Kaepernick and his
collaborators hope to avoid.
An
excerpt from the 1977 “Black Feminist Statement” of the Combahee River
Collective is in fact historically important. That statement was one of the key
origin points of identity politics. The featured excerpt in the Kaepernick
reader calls for “the destruction of the political-economic systems of
capitalism and imperialism as well as patriarchy” and goes on to make the case
for socialism. In essay after essay, this is the message.
Occasional
obfuscation notwithstanding, the editors do periodically come right out and
honestly say that black studies are, and must be, politically radical from top
to bottom. DeSantis argues that APAAS is more political than academic. Taylor’s
reply is that traditional curricula have a political agenda too: acceptance of
America’s oppressive status quo. Well, if the choice is between an
intersectional socialist revolution and America’s constitutional republic, it’s
hardly surprising that some states refuse to buy into APAAS’s radicalism.
In fact,
however, the choice is not as stark as Kaepernick, Taylor, and Kelley would
make it. Their frequent railing against more scholarly, less politicized forms
of black studies shows that another approach is possible. Nor does
Florida’s Stop WOKE Act ban all readings from the
left. Rather, it bans a one-sided curriculum that “promotes, advances,” or
“inculcates” core ideas of critical race theory. Had APAAS juxtaposed a few
radical readings with more conventional liberal and conservative viewpoints,
and then asked students to debate and decide for themselves, APAAS would likely
never have been rejected at all. This multiplicity of views is the sort of fix
I’ve advocated from the start. It’s the
radicals who want to permit only a single political line.
After
slamming DeSantis, President Trump’s 1776 Commission, and conservative pushback
against the 1619 Project, Robin D. G. Kelley’s introductory essay to Our
History Has Always Been Contraband goes after the conservative attack
on critical race theory (CRT). According to Kelley, President Trump’s anti-CRT
executive order, Christopher Rufo’s anti-CRT rhetoric, and my model anti-CRT
legislation all misrepresent critical race theory. Kelley says that, although
state laws now forbid it, “no serious scholar believes that someone is
‘inherently racist, sexist, or oppressive, whether consciously or
unconsciously, solely by virtue of his or her race or sex.’” In other words,
Kelley denies that CRT is racist. Really? Let’s see about that.
True,
CRT theorists will tell you that race is “socially constructed,” that racial
categories are neither fixed nor biological, and that claims to the contrary
are misguided “essentialism.” But look at the treatment of “Whiteness” by leading
CRT-based education theorist Bettina Love in her book We Want to Do
More Than Survive.
Love may seem to talk about “Whiteness” as a mindset, rather than a racial
classification — a mindset that can be internalized even by non-whites. But
then she adds this: “White folx cannot lose their Whiteness; it is not
possible.” All whites can do, in Love’s telling, is try to extirpate and atone
for a condition they can never truly escape. Sounds pretty essentialist to me.
In practice, in other words, Love is adopting precisely the sort of racist
stance she would formally deny that she holds.
Kelley
rejects yet another characterization of CRT implicit in the new CRT laws. Those
laws prevent teachers from promoting the idea that “meritocracy or traits such
as a hard work ethic” are racist. CRT says nothing of the kind, Kelley insists.
But again, let’s turn to Bettina Love’s book.
Bettina
Love repeatedly attacks the ideas of hard work and meritocracy,and does so in
the name of CRT. (“CRT challenges color-blindness, meritocracy, and
neutrality.” p. 136). Her book, which appeared in 2019, repeatedly goes after
character education, as embodied in the “Work Hard, Be Nice” slogan used by
KIPP charter schools, an approach Love explicitly excoriates as racist. Not
coincidentally, a year after Love’s book appeared, KIPP charter schools abandoned their “Work Hard, Be Nice”
slogan. It appears that CRT attacks the values of hard work and meritocracy,
exactly as the new CRT laws say it does.
Can
Kelley argue that Bettina Love’s version of CRT is some kind of outlier? That
would be tough since Kelley himself has a laudatory blurb on the back of
Love’s We Want to Do More Than Survive. He unequivocally endorses
her book, calling on readers to treat Love’s program as “our North Star.” In
short, Kelley denies and disowns in 2023 the version of CRT he praised and
proselytized in 2019, pretending that conservatives are wrong about CRT when,
to all appearances, Kelley knows perfectly well that they are right.
The
controversy over AP African-American studies is far from over. DeSantis’s
courage and foresight on this issue are confirmed again and again. But what
about other red states, especially states with laws barring promotion of CRT?
As of now, only Florida has rejected AP African-American studies. Yet the
College Board signaled in April that it’s likely to restore much of the radical
material it offloaded or made optional in an effort to get DeSantis on board.
As the Kaepernick, Kelley, Taylor book notes, the College Board now seems more
responsive to leftist demands for a re-radicalization of the course than to
conservative complaints. So what will conservative states do if this already
problematic course travels even further down the path of leftist radicalism?
And how
will states respond to the College Board’s overall political trajectory — ever more radically leftist since
2014? With its de facto monopoly over college placement testing, the College
Board is in a position to act as an unelected national school board. That means
it can effectively override and neutralize state efforts to gain control of
their own curriculum. With AP African-American studies only the first of what
will probably be a series of other ethnic, gender, and sexuality-based
“studies” programs, we are probably only at the opening stages of a
long-running cultural battle.
Kaepernick
and his Marxist buddies have failed to make the case for their radical and
monolithic version of education. In the process, however, they’ve reminded us
to rejoin a struggle that is anything but over.
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