Monday, August 19, 2019

Two Ways of Approaching the Racist Left: Neo-Conservative vs. Realist

By Nicholas Stix

I thank the colleague who copied and pasted, and sent me the WSJ op-ed by Heather Mac Donald below my comments.

I'm generally loathe to re-post Mac Donald's work, these days, because it must be accompanied by an asterisk. Most of what she says makes sense, and yet she has a huge credibility problem. Her career is based on lying about crime and policing. (Since 1996, I have written a series of exposés of fraud by big-city police departments, above all, the NYPD, who purported to show a revolution in crime-fighting. Mac Donald's career is based on promoting the crime-fighting hoax.)

And of course, as a neocon, she pulls her punches.

However, I am able to use Mac Donald's essay below, because she quotes public figures, and none of the quotations sounds dubious.

Regarding Mac Donald's topic below:

The logic of the racist Left is that of a zero-sum game, which leaves no room for whites. No rights, no jobs, no property, no life. (Exceptions are made, momentarily, for honorary non-whites.)

What the Left is about, is white genocide. If annihilating the white race (according to the UN's definition of genocide), is the highest goal of human life, and all violence against whites is justifiable, even laudatory, how can one condemn "racist" white mass murderers? The condemnation follows, not based on the mass murder, but based on the mass murderer being white.

Thus, although the Nation of Islam has slaughtered app. 100 whites, and blacks in South Africa have slaughtered tens of thousands of whites, the Left not only does not condemn either group of butchers, but celebrates them, because the murderers are all black.

"Treason to whiteness is loyalty to humanity."
Noel Ignatiev, Race Traitor


Sent: Mon, Aug 19, 2019 1:06 p.m.

"The media & Democratic leaders routinely characterize individuals & groups by race & issue race-based denunciations of large parts of the American polity"

Trump isn't the One Dividing Us by Race

He hardly mentions it, while his adversaries are obsessed with "whiteness" and "white privilege."

By Heather Mac Donald
Aug. 18, 2019

https://www.wsj.com/articles/trump-isnt-the-one-dividing-us-by-race-11566158729

Long before the El Paso massacre, President Trump's political opponents accused him of sowing "division" with his "racist language." Mr. Trump "exploits race," "uses race for his gain," is engaged in a "racially divisive reprise" of his 2016 campaign, stokes "racial resentments," and puts "race at the fore," the New York Times has reported over the past several months.

Yet Mr. Trump rarely uses racial categories in his speech or his tweets. It is the media and Democratic leaders who routinely characterize individuals and groups by race and issue race-based denunciations of large parts of the American polity.

Some examples: "As race dominates the political conversation, 10 white Democratic candidates will take the stage" (the Washington Post); Mr. Trump's rally audiences are "overwhelmingly white" (multiple sources); your son's "whiteness is what protects him from not [sic] being shot" by the police ( Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand); white candidates need to be conscious of "white privilege" (South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg ); "white supremacy manifests itself" in the criminal-justice, immigration and health-care systems ( Sen. Cory Booker); " Michael Brown was murdered by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri" (Sen. Elizabeth Warren); whiteness is "the very core" of Mr. Trump's power, whereas his "predecessors made their way to high office through the passive power of whiteness" (Ta-Nehisi Coates in the Atlantic).

Liberal opinion deems such rhetoric fair comment, even obvious truth, not "racially divisive." America's universities deserve credit for this double standard. Identity politics dominate higher education: Administrators, students and faculty obsessively categorize themselves and each other by race. "White privilege," often coupled with "toxic masculinity," is the focus of freshmen orientations and an ever-growing array of courses. Any institutional action that affects a "person of color" is "about race." If a black professor doesn't get tenure, he's a victim of discrimination; a white professor is presumed to be unqualified.

That interpretive framework explains asymmetries in how the political and media elites analyze the Trump phenomenon. Susan Rice, President Obama's national security adviser, recently denounced Mr. Trump's "almost daily attacks on black and brown people." But "almost" and "black and brown" are superfluous. Mr. Trump's attacks on his fellow 2016 candidates—and on more-recent adversaries as homogeneous as Robert Mueller, Rep. Adam Schiff, Joe Biden and Ms. Warren—were as nasty as anything he's directed at Rep. Elijah Cummings or Rep. Ilhan Omar.

But according to the academic template, to criticize a "person of color" is inevitably "about race." Mr. Buttigieg ran afoul of this rule after firing South Bend's black police chief for secretly taping officers' phone calls. The idea that the mayor fired the chief because he was black is absurd, yet Mr. Buttigieg inevitably faced charges of racial insensitivity. Likewise, advocates and the media deemed Mr. Trump's nonracial denunciation of Baltimore's leadership racist. Never mind that the victims of the city's almost daily drive-by shootings are black. Race shields minority politicians from criticism.

Ms. Warren recently provided an unwitting summary of academic identity politics. Mr. Trump's "central message" to the American people, she declared, is: "If there's anything wrong in your life, blame them—and 'them' means people who aren't the same color as you." She has in mind a white "you," but change the race and you encapsulate the reigning assumption on college campuses—that white people are the source of nonwhite people's problems, and any behavioral or cultural explanations for economic disparities are taboo.

The academy's reflexive labeling of nonconforming views as "hate speech" has also infiltrated popular rhetoric against Mr. Trump. The president's views on border control and national sovereignty are at odds with the apparent belief among Democratic elites that people living outside the country are entitled to enter at will and without consequences for illegal entry. To the academic and democratic left, however, a commitment to border enforcement can only arise from "hate." Such a pre-emptive interpretation is a means of foreclosing debate and stigmatizing dissent from liberal orthodoxy.

Identity politics, now a driving force in the Democratic Party, celebrates the racial and ethnic identities of designated victim groups while consigning whites—especially heterosexual white men—to scapegoat status. But its advocates should be careful what they wish for. If "whiteness" is a legitimate topic of academic and political discourse, some individuals are going to embrace "white identity" proudly.

To note the inevitability of white identity politics in no way condones the grotesque violence of men like the El Paso killer. But the dominant culture is creating a group of social pariahs, a very small percentage of whom—already unmoored from traditional sources of meaning and stability, such as family—are taking their revenge through stomach-churning mayhem. Overcoming racial divisiveness will be difficult. But the primary responsibility rests with its main propagators: the academic left and its imitators in politics and mass media.

Ms. Mac Donald is a fellow at the Manhattan Institute and author of "The Diversity Delusion: How Race and Gender Pandering Corrupt the University and Undermine Our Culture."




4 comments:

Anonymous said...

." America's universities deserve credit for this double standard. Identity politics dominate higher education: Administrators, students and faculty obsessively categorize themselves and each other by race."
GRA:Shouldn't all whites disqualify themselves from university jobs as a matter of principle? If they are truly sincere negro lovers they should.In reality, of course not--not if YOU are the one that has to give up that very lucrative position.Let someone else fall on their swords to open up a spot for the beloved and oppressed negro.
What effing hypocrites.
It's the same on the news networks.The whites that complain every day about white privilege,should resign immediately--and never appear on air again.I'd like to hear Katie Hunt and Nicole Wallace argue before NBC's top boss,over who leaves.
"Katie Hunt should go,not me--Nicole Wallace.I've got more seniority hating whites than she does.I'm more sincere."
"Wallace looks more white than I do--she should go first," might reply KHunt.The only fair decision would be that both were fired by their white,male boss--and then he kills himself,so a black can replace HIM too.
Joy Behar should be fired by ABC for being white --even if she does agree with her master,Whoopie Goldberg all the time.She's WHITE--she has to go,to open up another spot for a black.That's the plan of these morons isn't it? Quit taking up the black person's chair--LEAVE!!!
At what point do whites(even the dense ones) open their eyes to see what is happening and defend their race and most of all---their lives!!! If they don't do it--for God's sake,nobody will.
My question is:what's stopping them from realizing this now?
--GR Anonymous

Anonymous said...

Kacey Hunt is the miserable white girl's name on MSNBC/NBC.I wonder why I wrote Katie ,twice.Maybe I was combining Katy Tur and Kacey Hunt--or it's just too damn late...lol.
--GRA

Anonymous said...

"Mr. Buttigieg inevitably faced charges of racial insensitivity. "

Mayor Pete doesn't have a problem with blacks because of "racial insensitivity".

Mayor Pete has a problem with blacks because he is GAY. Blacks generally speaking hate gays. Consider gayness to be a white man disease.

Anonymous said...

5...AND he's white.Plus he's gay--AND WHITE.Plus gay.AND he's not black.
--GRA