By Robert F. Graboyes
Wednesday, February 27, 2024
EGALITARIANISM VERSUS ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
The titanic social struggle of our era pits those
favoring equality (in its traditional sense) against those demanding “equity”
(in a sense far from its traditional meaning). One who advocates equality
is an egalitarian, and his philosophy is egalitarianism. One who advocates
“equity” has no name—or has scores of names; the same is true of his
philosophy. This asymmetry of nomenclature and the divergent meanings of “equity”
put egalitarians at a powerful rhetorical disadvantage. For effective
argumentation, egalitarians need to level the rhetorical playing field, and I
believe the most efficient way of doing so is to refer to anti-egalitarians as
“equitists” and to their philosophy as “equitism”—as we’ll do here.
Following
is an excellent example of how equitists themselves distinguish
egalitarianism from equitism:
“Equality means each individual or
group of people is given the same resources or opportunities. Equity recognizes
that each person has different circumstances and allocates the exact resources
and opportunities needed to reach an equal outcome.”
Egalitarians aspire to equalize individual rights
and opportunities, and perhaps to equalize ex post outcomes across
individuals via social safety nets. Equitists, well-intentioned
though they may be, pigeonhole people by immutable characteristics (race,
gender, sexual orientation, nationality, religion, disability, etc.) and then
seek to equalize average outcomes across groups.
Someone in charge (an equitist, naturally) must devise a taxonomy of mankind,
assign every individual to some cell in that taxonomy, rank each cell along
something like an oppressor/oppressed spectrum, and then allocate rights,
privileges, opportunities, and wealth among these cells.
Generally, egalitarians seek to define “equal”
objectively (e.g., equal rights, opportunities, access to education, income),
whereas equitism’s definitions of “equal” are subjective. Equitism is
largely an outgrowth of Frankfurt School critical theory, which rejects the
very notion of objectivity. (My “Equity-toonz: One Meme Is
Worth a Thousand Pictures” explores how explanatory memes that equitists
often employ can mislead readers—intentionally or not. See more in the
LAGNIAPPE section below.)
The subjectivity of equitism can be seen in “antiracism”
guru Ibram
X. Kendi’s prescription:
“The only remedy to racist
discrimination is antiracist discrimination. The only remedy to past
discrimination is present discrimination. The only remedy to present
discrimination is future discrimination.”
In Kendi’s formulation, no metric can ever signal that
equality (between groups) has arrived. Instead, there is never-ending
retribution for ancestral sins, subjectively administered via an authoritarian
“antiracist
constitutional amendment.”
And yet, as odious as Kendi’s ideas may be, the absence
of a word like “equitism” leaves egalitarians flailing. Kendi calls his
version of equitism “antiracism,” allowing his enthusiasts to declare that if
one is not antiracist, then logic dictates that one must be proracist.
This false dichotomy forces egalitarians into convoluted, never-satisfying
rebuttals. Declaring one’s opposition to “Kendian Equitism” would present no
equivalent difficulties.
And “antiracism” is only one of many names an egalitarian
must battle. As the artwork atop this essay shows, these interconnected
doctrines have been called antiracism; wokeness; diversity, equity, and
inclusion (DEI); critical race theory (CRT); environmental, social, and
governance (ESG); postcolonialism; anticolonialism; social and emotional
learning (SEL); safetyism; intersectionality; oppressor/oppressed; white
fragility; identity Marxism; identity politics; fighting white privilege;
postmodernism; identity synthesis; social justice; critical social justice;
political correctness; progressivism; and more. All are closely related, but
just different enough to sow confusion, accidentally or deliberately—e.g.,
“Antiracism is not the same thing as critical race theory, which is not the
same as DEI.”
Sun Tzu said, “He who occupies the high ground will fight
to advantage.” The absence of an umbrella term for these highly
interrelated philosophies hands equitists the rhetorical high ground. The key
to cleaning this Augean Stable of lexicon is recognizing that the revisionist
definition of “equity” is the one common thread running through every one of
these movements or concepts. This simple trio of terms—equity, equitist,
equitism—can level that battlefield of ideas.
***
NAME THE TARGET, FREEZE IT, AND PERSONALIZE IT
Many have commented on the absence or multiplicity of
names for this anti-egalitarian tendency—and the rhetorical mire this
shortcoming imposes on the whole
egalitarianism-versus-whatever-you-happen-to-call-it-on-a-given-day
debate. On
the political right, Thomas Klingenstein said, “Rhetorically, our side
is getting absolutely murdered … We have not even come up with an agreed-on
name for the enemy.” In
the center, Bari Weiss said, “[T]his new ideology doesn’t even like to
be named.” On
the left, Freddie DeBoer titled an essay (without asterisks), “Please
Just F***ing Tell Me What Term I Am Allowed to Use for the Sweeping Political
Changes You Demand,” adding, “You don't get to insist that no one talks about
your political project and it's weak and pathetic that you think you do.”
Many have suggested names, but none has caught on. This
is because an effective name must meet seven separate criteria—and no
previously suggested options have checked all or even most of the seven boxes.
Here are (1) the criteria; (2) examples of why current terms fail; and (3) why
equity-equitist-equitism could succeed.
[1] FLEXIBILITY: There must be a trio of terms naming the
aspiration, the advocate, and the philosophy.
·
If you call the philosophy “wokeness,” then who
advocates it? Wokesters? Woke folk? Persons of the woke persuasion? They have
no name.
·
With equity-equitist-equitism, one can say,
“Someone who supports equity over equality is an equitist, and his philosophy
is equitism.” All grammatical forms are available, and their interconnections
are logical and intuitive. (This grammatical flexibility extends to other
forms, like “equitize,” “equitized,” and “equitizing,” whose analogs would be
“equalize,” “equalized,” “equalizing.”)
[2] BREVITY: The trio must consist of simple, single,
clearly related words.
·
“Critical race theory” demands three words and
seven clunky syllables. Who is its advocate? “Critical race theorist” might
describe academicians, but not activists. “Someone who subscribes to critical
race theory” entails a mind-numbing seven words and thirteen syllables. “CRT”
is brief but obscure.
·
In contrast, one can easily say, “He is an
equitist,” rather than ponderous phrases like, “He is someone who supports the
idea of equity over equality,” or the audience-euthanizing, “He is someone who
supports equity, but I’m talking about the modern anti-egalitarian definition
of equity, not the traditional definition.”
[3] BREADTH: The terms must be applicable to a broad
swath of the many allied movements comprising this philosophy.
·
Enthusiasts swear (sometimes) that CRT is only a
legal doctrine and not, say, the clearly derivative concepts taught in K-12
settings. ESG applies only to business investment. You need a term that covers
all these related doctrines.
·
The re-engineered definition of “equity” is the
common thread that connects all 21 movements listed above (along with others),
and equitist-equitism follow suit. Does any other word fill this niche?
[4] COHESION: The quest for breadth must be offset by
parameters that limit the philosophy to a focused topical range.
·
“Political correctness” may cover many equity
doctrines, but it also incorporates lots of barely related concepts—etiquette,
scientific doctrines, etc. Maybe SEL derives from postcolonialism, but applying
the latter label to the former would likely stall the speaker in a futile
argument over arcane lexical points.
·
Using equity-equitist-equitism limits the
conversation to the notion of allocating rights, privileges, resources, and
wealth across groups rather than across individuals. It leaves cultural tics
and attitudes to other days.
[5] CLARITY: The trio must be sufficiently novel to
insulate egalitarians from both innocent confusion and deliberate shenanigans.
·
To naive listeners, “I oppose Diversity, Equity,
and Inclusion” (the doctrine) sounds exactly like “I oppose diversity, equity,
and inclusion” (three separate, benign ideals). This can lead to confusion
among thoughtful, well-intentioned listeners and speakers—and it allows some
disingenuous “equity” enthusiasts to frustrate meaningful debate by means
of motte-and-bailey rhetorical
tactics (i.e., using a term that has two meanings—one controversial, and one
not).
·
Equity-equitist-equitism quashes the
motte-and-bailey problem. “Equitist” and “equitism” have no familiar,
traditional meanings with which they can be easily confused—accidentally or
purposefully. The word “equity” remains a problem, but one easily dealt with
via scare quotes or quick clarifications like “equity, in the equitist sense.”
[6] FAMILIARITY: The trio must not be so novel as to
be incomprehensible to those hearing them for the first time.
·
Yascha
Mounk suggests that these doctrines be referred to together as,
“identity synthesis.” But one would need a fairly comprehensive explanation
before using such an expression. Terminology, like iPhones, should be usable
without requiring an instruction booklet.
·
Someone who has never heard the terms equitist
or equitism can intuitively sense their meanings by thinking about the obvious
root word—equity.
[7] RESPECTABILITY: The terms must not be patently
frivolous or insulting.
·
“Wokeness” is widely viewed as an insult and, to
be honest, the word is usually invoked specifically to deliver scorn or insult.
Yes, “woke” was once a self-description that seems to have originated with
blues musician Huddie Ledbetter (a.k.a., Lead Belly), but there is always
danger in outsiders trying to co-opt in-group slang.
·
“Equitist” and “equitism” have a staid, neutral
vibe. Equity-equitist-equitism is precisely analogous to
equality-egalitarian-egalitarianism. While some equitists will object to being
called equitists, their complaint will seem more petty and unreasonable than
their current objections to “wokeness” or “political correctness.”
Equity-equitist-equitism has an additional bonus virtue. Google
Translate is able to translate all three into at least some other languages.
(e.g., Equidad-equitista-equitismo for Spanish; Equité-equitiste-equitisme for
French). Since these doctrines are debated internationally, this multilingual
flexibility is important. This brings us to the following.
***
EQUITY-EQUITIST-EQUITISM AS SELF-DESCRIPTION
Interestingly, one can find some (obscure) equitists on
the Internet who have suggested calling their philosophy “equitism.” Billionaire
entrepreneur Marc Lore aspires to build a visionary city (“Telosa”) based on a
somewhat-related concept of “equitism;” Telosa’s website says, “Equitism is inclusive growth,” and
speaks of the project’s “commitment
to DEI” to be administered by a municipal DEI department. A group calling
itself the Atlas
Movement (of whom I know nothing) wrote:
“Equitism is the political, social,
and economic doctrine promoting the idea that to maximize peoples’ well-being,
society must ensure equitable rights and opportunities for all. In short,
we want to systematically improve society by applying the value of Equity
(from Aequitas, justice & fairness) to all its areas.”
There was also a 2022 opinion column in Ecuador’s El
Heraldo: “La
filosofía del equitismo” (“The Philosophy of Equitism”). Written by
Guillermo Tapia Nicola, who calls himself a legal and political advisor to
Ecuador’s National Assembly, here are some relevant passages (translated from
Spanish):
“This endeavor … the result of
everything that has happened in recent decades, is what has been called
‘Equitism,’ conceptualizing it as a new ideology for a new stage, which is
supposed to guide political and social work. ... Then, talking about democratic
equity, equity in vaccines, institutional equity, climate equity, or equity in
matters of rights, and verifying the actions that are actually taking place on
these issues, will no longer sound strange to the ears ... Ultimately, the
effort and determination put in by those agents of change, promoters of
equitism, could well give us a spark of hope, two years after the pandemic ...
In short, it is about maintaining the audacity of those actions that provide
balance, and it is only matched by the audacity of that new vision and
philosophy. Equitism.”
I agree with these writers. The movement they
describe should have a name, acceptable to honorable advocates and adversaries
alike, and I believe the best option lies in equity-equitist-equitism.” Apply
these words to the proponents of “equity” and to their philosophy, and let the
real debates begin—on level ground, at last.
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