8 February 2012
Victor Davis Hanson has a typical, and typically impressive, article rebutting Democrats and doomsayers (do I repeat myself?) about American’s prospects for the future. The whole piece is very much worth reading, but for reasons you can imagine I was particularly struck by one of his observations:
India is still straitjacketed by caste impediments, Europe by class boundaries, China, Japan, and South Korea by sharp racial distinctions, and the Arab world by insidious tribal loyalties. The idea of a Brazilian or Chinese President Obama is the stuff of fantasy. All that retrograde typecasting seems pretty post-something to me. In contrast, America, alone of the major powers, is a multiracial open society bound by one culture, where merit, more than race, tribe, birth, or class, determines success.
Hanson is of course right. And that’s why the decades old but ongoing liberal assault on what I think is the core value, the bedrock, foundational principle, of the United States — that individuals should be treated without regard to their race, creed, color, or national origin — is much worse than merely bad policy. It’s downright subversive.
7 February 2012
Yesterday Politico ran a long article by reporters Glenn Thrush and Donovan Slack on the revival of race as a political issue.
Compared to the way Obama is usually revered by Politico, this article actually approached even-handedness once or twice, most prominently in its generous admission that “the vast majority” of criticisms of Obama “aren’t … rooted in race.” Since the bulk of the article’s space and nearly all of its quotations were given over to those like Jesse Jackson who see Obama criticism as characterized by “code words” and “coded expressions” of racism, however, Thrush’s and Slack’s admission sounds about the same as an observation they quote from that highly regarded racial statesman, Al Sharpton, who similarly admitted that “not all” the people in this country can’t stand the fact that a black man is president.
Anyone worried about Politico backsliding into a reasonable facsimile of objectivity regarding Obama, however, needn’t. Thrush and Slack make it abundantly clear that on race Obama is as pure (probably in part because he’s not as white) as the driven snow. Obama, they assure us, is “a one-of-kind politician whose crossover appeal to white independents has always been rooted in a color-blind appeal to fairness.” Obama has always, they assure us, “gone out of his way to make sure white voters can’t accuse him of favoring blacks.”
Of course — this is Politico, after all — Thrush and Slack never even mention affirmative action. Since they don’t, they never explain how Obama’s unwavering support for racial preference policies, his opposition to state referenda requiring color blindness, his administration’s briefs in support of racial preference policies in Texas and elsewhere, and his Justice Department’s steadfast refusal to prosecute any voter fraud or intimidation cases against minorities comports with his asserted “color-blind appeal to fairness.”
6 February 2012
I’ve written too many times to cite on how affirmative action results in massive discrimination against Asian-Americans, much more so in fact than against whites. As though those (and others uncited) weren’t enough, now I’ve done it again — in an essay just up on Minding The Campus, Let’s Be Frank about Anti-Asian Admission Policies. Yes, [...]
2 February 2012
Bloomberg’s Business Week reports today that Harvard Targeted in U.S. Asian-American Discrimination Probe. Harvard, you will not be surprised to hear, responded with the Ivy League version of “Holistic Holy Moly! US, discriminate? You must be crazy!” Harvard “does not discriminate against Asian-American applicants,” and doesn’t comment on the specifics of complaints under federal review, spokesman [...]
1 February 2012
Megan McArdle takes Kevin Drum to task for wanting to force the Catholic Church out of the business of providing charity services to “the sick, the poor, and the dispossessed.” Drum agrees with the Obama administration’s view that if the Church is going to provide such services to the general public, i.e., to all the [...]
30 January 2012
I have an old, good Democratic friend. Even though he’s a Democrat, he’s not dumb. In fact, he ‘s a Wharton Business School graduate, which presumably means that at least at one time he knew something about business. We used to be able to disagree about politics in polite, civil, and sometimes interesting discussions. Now, [...]
28 January 2012
John Nichols in The Nation, January 25: Wisconsin Rises Up Against Walker Washington Post poll, January 25: Scott Walker leads in Wisconsin recall poll And while I’m at it, one more: July 2010: Vice President Joe Biden said Democrats would retain control of both chambers. January 2012: Biden predicts Democrats will retake the House
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