The Truth May Hurt

You might want to read this interview by Bari Weiss of Glen Loury. The man certainly understands polemic. I suspect he’s been the target of it frequently enough over the last 40 years. Here’s a snippet regarding racism:

BW: The word racism has been redefined, particularly by Ibram X. Kendi. First of all, it’s no longer about personal bigotry. It’s about any system that results in disparity. So if you have any kind of disparity between racial groups in any given institution, school culture system, it is evidence in and of itself that racism is present.

GL: That is exactly what Kendi is saying. He’s not mincing words about it. What it brings to mind is George Orwell’s essay “Politics and the English Language,” in which he talks about how words and the meaning of words fall in the service of political programs. And people think they can make reality by playing with words. I don’t know why anybody takes Ibram X. Kendi seriously. That’s a silly book, “How To Be an Anti-Racist.” Kendi’s formulations are sophomoric. They don’t bear up under the least bit of serious, rigorous social scientific scrutiny. He’s not standing on any literature. He’s not citing any intellectual development that has any deep roots in anything. It’s pablum. It’s froth on the intellectual surface of our life. And it behooves us all to think pretty hard about why it is that we’re content with that kind of analysis. When civil disorder in American cities is consuming the lives of black people like a machine, our political leaders and intellectual class and journalistic representatives haven’t got a word to say about it. Black Lives Matter is almost completely irrelevant to what matters in black lives.

All of it makes me sad because I’d genuinely like conditions for black folk to improve as well as relations between the races. There are too many people whose livelihoods depend on black poverty and increasing hostility between the races for that to happen.

2 comments… add one
  • walt moffett Link

    The wise man said “Thnking hurts” so, appears the elite once again have our best interest at heart.

  • steve Link

    Pretty funny. He thinks 1/3 of his class has their eyes glaze over when he writes something on the board because of “groupthink”. Students having their eyes glaze in class has always been an issue. Heck, it happens at all morning meetings of you pay attention.

    Anyway, he is correct about a lot of stuff but a pretty shallow thinker a lot of the time.

    Steve

Leave a Comment