> On 30 Oct 2018, at 13:44, Ian Alan Paul <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> It's possible to critique biological essentialism in relation to race/sex, 
> while also defending the reality of race/sex in the sense that they are real 
> distinctions/categorizations that have been historically acted upon by the 
> material forces of capital.


Hm. 
“Defending”?!
Of course we must recognize race (and thus racism; without the anchor point of 
race, there can’t be racism) in order to understand apartheid (and other forms 
of oppression based on the social ghost / misinformed social construction of 
“race”), but that’s rather different from using it to build a preferred future. 
We should know better. 

If we want an “a-racial” world (I assume that’s what we want, but I could be 
wrong; lex SA and the politics of ANC) then cementing the notion of race hardly 
does the job. It perpetuates it. 

I find the position of using “race” to build a vision of the future deeply 
cynical, manipulative, nostalgic and/or naive. Even racist. Or at least, 
metaphorically, tone deaf. Or do you believe that the difference between 
“races” is greater than “within” race? Then you are factually incorrect. And 
that’s not a humble opinion. 

Again, I understand that race is essential for analysis of past problems, but I 
reject it’s essential for building a future vision.

And whether we subscribe to capitalism (as in risk/reward, freedom/prison/lack 
of choice and collective/individual intelligence/stupidity; thus over time 
concentrating power to people/class with wealth/timing/luck) or more regulated 
economic frameworks (promoting wealth distribution and other types of balancing 
interventions impacting “quality of life”, equal opportunity, fairness and 
justice), explain to me how the notion of race informs a way forward? What do 
you want to do with your “defending” of race going forward? In what way does it 
inform your vision? And I will not buy a lazy “I don’t know; that’s not my 
job”. You need to be able to take your position into reality. Lay it bare.

I get the intersectional analysis, I get the oppressed and oppressor (as a way 
of analyzing history and even contemporary society), but what are you 
proposing? In what way will this analysis help us going forward? Just to get 
concrete.

The best theories are deeply practical. Imho.

> What is being pushed back against is the notion that you can ever understand 
> class absent of an understanding of race and sex.

Of course you can. Just look at cash flow and balance sheet. How much profit 
are you making (or loss) and what is your net asset position? Look at it from 
sperm to worm (ie over a lifetime). Compare. Contrast. 

Believe me, I’m a son of parents, both adopted, one racially reassigned (my dad 
was the result of a “white man” raping a 15 yo sami girl; consequently forced 
by state to be put into orphanage and later fostered by two “Swedes”); the 
other “domiciled” (my mum, born into a traveling community, reassigned to a 
farmer family by state; this was Sweden in the 30s), I could easily fall into 
both race and sex analysis (been there, done that, got the t-shirt), but 
reality is, they were REDUCED to categories, not liberated from it. What got 
them into the situation, is not the same as what got them out of the situation. 
What got them out were access and opportunities based on socio economic 
conditions. 

Now, you might find that there are high correlation between race and social 
class, but race do not equal class. Neither does sex. And even if that WAS the 
case (which it factually isn’t; and probabilities is not valid here, unless 
you’re a Maoist and ready to sacrifice humanity for ideology; you obviously 
must have skipped the multi variable analysis in statistics class) then we 
should be back at fighting for class. Because anything else is a slippery slope 
to equality meaning we must all BE the same (or even worse; the oppressed 
becomes the oppressor) — which we are not. Unless you do believe that we can 
only be equal if we are the same. Or that “difference” somehow merits any type 
of “special treatment” (white OR black, man OR female, etc). 

I’m not buying what you’re selling. But I’m open to me misinterpreting your ad. 
The copy could just be too academic for my comprehension. Talk to me like a 
worker / consumer please. 

What’s in it for me and my people?

All the best,
David

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