By Rich Lowry
Friday, March 29, 2024
The writer Coleman Hughes went on The View and
was greeted almost as though he had shown up wearing a white hood.
Hughes, a soft-spoken black intellectual who is a
political independent, was talking about his new book, The End of Race
Politics: Arguments for a Colorblind America.
Once upon a time, color-blindness was an uncontroversial idea. It was
considered a core American ideal and worth aspiring to, even if we were failing
to live up to it. In recent decades, though, it has run into a buzz saw of
opposition. It clashes with the Left’s near-theological commitment to racial preferences,
especially on college campuses, and with fashionable new forms of left-wing
racialism.
So it is naïve, out of date, and, worse, even a tool of
oppression used by sneaky racists to hide their malignant designs in lofty
rhetoric.
This was the attitude of co-host Sunny Hostin when Hughes
showed up on set. She declared that color-blindness has been “co-opted” by
conservatives and that the widely respected Hughes is a “charlatan.” For the
offense, mind you, of arguing that people should be treated equally regardless
of their race.
Thoughtless even by the standards of a panelist of The
View, Hostin was easily outmatched by Hughes, who pushed back without
getting flustered or raising his voice. He even won occasional applause from
the studio audience for ideas that still, despite all that has been done to
belittle them, have strong common-sense appeal in America.
As Coleman notes in his book, a devotion to
color-blindness runs through some of the most honored writers and activists in
American history, the likes of Frederick Douglass, Wendell Phillips, Zora Neale
Hurston, A. Philip Randolph, Bayard Rustin, and, of course, Martin Luther King.
The Left always wants to retroactively enlist MLK for
woke racial causes and thinking, but Hughes convincingly locates the great
civil-rights leader firmly within the color-blind tradition.
In a statement that might now earn him an unfriendly
reception on college campuses (or on the set of The View), King
maintained, “Black supremacy is as dangerous as white supremacy, and God is not
interested merely in the freedom of black men and brown men and yellow men. God
is interested in the freedom of the whole human race.”
Such a majestic, deeply felt belief in what unites us as
persons and Americans can only scandalize today’s so called “anti-racists,”
whom Hughes deems, more accurately, “neo-racists.” They have much in common
with the white supremacists that they array themselves against. “They both deny
our common humanity,” Hughes writes. “They both deny that all races are created
equal. They both agree that some races are superior to others, and they both
agree that not all people deserve to be treated equally in society.”
The neo-racist project is nonetheless ascendant in
America’s elite institutions, and a narrative of racial conflict has gained
more traction in recent years. Hughes attributes the sense of worsening race
relations since 2013 to the rise of social media and the accelerated spread of
racially charged false stories and myths. We’ve talked, and clicked, our way
into believing we are in a state of racial crisis.
The neo-racists fan the dissension by attributing any
racial disparity in America to racism and ignoring the influence of
demographics, geography, and especially culture. They disregard, or disparage,
all the indicators of racial progress, which are inconvenient to their
simplistic condemnations of American society as fundamentally and irredeemably
racist.
For Hughes, the alternatives are “a grim world in which
whites and non-whites eternally swap the roles of the oppressor and the
oppressed,” or a world where we “recommit ourselves to the principles that
motivated the civil rights movement.” This wouldn’t seem a difficult choice.
Yet the very notion of color-blindness is now anathema to much of progressive
America. Sunny Hostin is sadly representative in her reflexive hostility to the
belief that we should — and can — treat one another without regard to race. So
much the worse for her.
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