from the site:
To Put It Bluntly
 
 
May 1, 2016
THE PURSUIT OF IMPERFECTIONS

 
 
Andrew Jackson will soon be removed from the front of the $20 bill. The  
family crest of Isaac Royall, the benefactor whose bequest funded the first  
professorship at Harvard Law School, is about to be erased from campus. The 
seal  of New Mexico University, which features an Anglo settler and a Spanish 
 conquistador, is under attack. Woodrow Wilson’s name has survived a 
challenge to  remove it from Princeton’s School of Public Policy and 
International 
Affairs,  but just barely
 
These, and many other comparable campaigns, constitute expeditions into the 
 past in the relentless pursuit of imperfections. Why are these expeditions 
 undertaken, and what  do they tell us about the searchers? 
When we examine them, we see that the issues surrounding each controversy  
vary, but certain general patterns apply across the board. 
First, activists “discover” that some iconic name or symbol actually 
carries  racist freight. 
President Andrew Jackson was a slave-owner; he forced the relocation of the 
 Choctaw and other Indian nations from their homelands.  President Woodrow  
Wilson segregated the federal civil service, which at the time was one of 
the  few institutions where whites and blacks worked side-by-side
 
 
These “discoveries” amount to little more than uncovering evidence hiding 
in  plain sight, since in most cases the facts were long known to 
historians, if not  the general public. 
Next, the activists demand the expunction of the offensive name or symbol.  
The demand is usually directed toward an institution reflexively inclined 
to  succumb to such appeals, such as a progressive liberal university. 
Next, the demands are weighed. During the process, the opposition raises  
arguments which also fit into recurrent patterns. 
First, the opponents argue that the objects of the scrutiny should be  
evaluated, not by modern enlightened standards, but by the customs of their  
time. Slavery is universally acknowledged as an abomination today, but there 
was  no such consensus in the 18th century. For centuries, tribes and  nations 
had warred and raided and enslaved one another around the globe. 
Next, opponents resort to reductio ad absurdum, also known as the  “by that 
logic” argument. If we eliminate the Royall crest because of Isaac  Royall’
s connection with slavery, then by that logic, why not raze the Jefferson  
Memorial and remove his portrait from the nickel? Thomas Jefferson was a  
slave-owner. And by that logic, why not change the name of the nation’s 
Capital?  George Washington was a slave-owner. 
Finally, a decision is reached, usually in favor of the activists. But  
whether or not successful, they are always accorded great deference. Indeed,  
even when they lose, they win. At _Princeton_ 
(http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/princeton-university-keep-woodrow-wilson-s-name-despite-his-racist-n550
321) ,  for example, the University decided not to remove Wilson’s name 
from the campus,  but commended the sit-in protesters, declaring: “What is 
needed is nothing less  than a change in campus climate that elevates Princeton’
s commitment to  diversity and inclusion to a higher priority.” The 
University agreed to  establish a program to encourage more minority students 
to 
pursue doctoral  degrees, and to diversify campus symbols and art. 
While each campaign is interesting in its own right, collectively they 
raise  certain questions:  Why this obsession with the past? Aren’t there 
enough 
 challenges in the present demanding attention? 
Viewed collectively, these expeditions into the past appear to be fueled by 
 two propellants. First, they are exercises of raw power. The activists 
demand  changes, not because those changes will generate any tangible progress, 
but  because they demonstrate their power. The removal of the Royall seal, 
for  example, will not result in the admission of a single additional 
minority law  school student, or lead to the passing of the bar by a single 
additional  minority lawyer. It will have no effect whatsoever on crime rates, 
income  levels, or family stability in the minority community. But it does 
illustrate  that the activists have power, and that they can easily force the 
institution to  capitulate when they choose to exercise that power. 
Second, these expeditions into the past are necessary to feed the demand on 
 college campuses for evidence of racism. A historical analogy explains the 
 reason for this demand. 
In January 1961, outgoing President Dwight Eisenhower warned the nation of 
a  military-industrial complex, which was marshaling political support for 
greater  and greater military spending by the federal government. Today, 
there is a  comparable complex, sometimes referred to as the grievance 
industry, 
consisting  of academic departments and their off-campus affiliates such as 
the sensitivity  training services. This large and growing class seeks 
greater and greater  spending and hiring by universities. The 
military-industrial complex identified  by President Eisenhower required the 
threat of 
communism to justify its demands.  The grievance industry complex requires 
evidence 
of racism to justify  theirs. 
This creates a problem.  Although racism certainly exists in our  society, 
it has diminished dramatically over the past few generations. This may  come 
as a shock to contemporary students, who are constantly taught that racism  
is deep-seated and pervasive in our country. But the proposition that 
racism has  dramatically declined is not only true, it is indisputable. 
One can see the decline in changing public attitudes on racial issues. In  
1959, _according  to Gallup polls_ 
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/163697/approve-marriage-blacks-whites.aspx) , only 
4% of the population approved of 
interracial marriage.  By 2013, that percentage had risen to 87%. From 1958 to 
1997 _Gallup  polls_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Residential_segregation_in_the_United_States#cite_note-VonHoff-19)
  found that the proportion of 
whites who said they would move if a  black family moved next door fell from 44 
to just 1 percent. In 1958, only 38%  of the population told pollsters that 
they would vote for a qualified black  candidate for president. _By  1999_ 
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/3400/longterm-gallup-poll-trends-portrait-american-
public-opinion.aspx) , the percentage had risen to over 95%. In his two 
successful campaigns,  Barack Obama, our first black President, won 43% and 39% 
of the white vote,  exactly _the  same percentages_ 
(https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2012/11/08/president-obama-and-the-white-vote-no-pro
blem/)  that Bill Clinton won in his two presidential  campaigns. 
Of course, racism continues to exist, and of course, the answers one gives 
to  a pollster do not necessarily reflect one’s true inner feelings. But one 
simply  cannot compare the United States of today with the United States of 
a half  century ago without recognizing a gigantic, seismic shift for the 
better in  racial attitudes. 
This poses a challenge to the grievance industry complex, which depends on 
a  steady supply of racism to justify their jobs and their academic budgets, 
just  as the military industrial complex depended on the threat of 
communism to  justify their jobs and budgets. The expeditions into the past are 
one 
way to  meet this challenge. Evidence of genuine racial animus – as opposed 
to the  pretend racism manifested in such recent inventions as “
_micro-aggressions_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/09/the-rise-of-victimhood-culture/404794/)
 ”  – is increasingly hard to find in modern 
college campuses. The search into  history is a way to circumvent the shortage 
of 
real current racism, by finding  past examples that are closely tied to the 
institution’s heritage. With this  evidence in hand, the grievance industry 
can justify not only its existence, but  also the need for its expansion. 
In the 1960s, about the same time that the modern civil rights movement was 
 gaining mainstream acceptance for its progressive agenda, experts assured 
us  that we were fast running out of the fossil fuel. So the energy industry 
 developed new exploration and extraction techniques. They ranged the globe 
 finding oil in places that were once deemed inaccessible, and they 
invented new  ways to recover it. Far from running out, proven oil reserves 
have 
grown  steadily, from about 700 billion barrels in 1980 to about 1.7 trillion 
barrels  today. 
Like the energy explorers, the grievance industry explorers range far and  
wide for their targeted commodity.  They may not explore the globe, but  
they can range through the ages, and in the geography of time, they can manage  
to locate huge reserves, just waiting to be tapped. That quest animates 
these  excursions into the past. And thanks to their persistence and 
resourcefulness,  racism is a resource we will never exhaust.

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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