Racism:
The Western “Struggle Session” for Equality
By T.L.
Hulsey
Is there even one gripe left in the Western world that is not ultimately
rooted in racism?
Mind
you, I’m talking about the outlying provinces of discourse, far from the tower
of ideation on race, far from dispassionate consideration of Arthur Jensen’s g
Factor or Charles Murray’s bell curve. There, as in the story of Rapunzel,
to ascend the tower and see the truth is to risk having your eyes scratched out
by a vengeful witch–the Witch of Buncombe.
No,
I’m talking about the surrounding forest of thorns constituted by “social”
media (a Newspeak
term if there ever was one), by the blogosphere, by the thought-guarded “discussion”
in the campus rathskeller, by the corporate “sensitivity” officer, by the “diversity
commissars” at all levels of the outrage industry–by all the delicate and ever
more refined antennae attuned to that inadvertent word of yours that klaxons to
the world that you are a racist.
At
one time “racism” had a fairly clear meaning. One key definition was given at
least as far back as 1938, by Jacques Barzun:
The attribution of moral or intellectual
qualities from physical characteristics–a kind of whole-body phrenology. But
nowadays the charge of racism has no bounds: It’s all grown up and busted out
of its britches as a strict definition. According to the new
rage in thought–and yes, do take that both ways–power
plus prejudice constitute racism.
This
trope immediately leads to problems, even if we wink at the free pass given to
everyone who can claim to be powerless in some way or other. Consider antisemitism,
for starters. For example, is it allowed now to trash those powerful white guys
with the little cap glued to their thinning pates? Hey, just a damned minute!
The new Ptolemaic system needs some epicycles to explain this retrograde motion.
Thankfully, Olivia
Goldhill provides it. She says that antisemitism still works because “[r]ather than denigrating Jews as
inferior, it casts them as maliciously superior.” And all this time I had
thought they were delightfully
superior! But hold on, which direction are we going here? How can they claim
victimhood when they’re white guys with power? Didn’t the redefinition of
racism just recast them as victimizers, not victims? What, do we need an
indictment of semitism along with antisemitism? And the issue gets even
more complicated when we realize that folks like the Palestinians are a semitic
people. For g-d’s sake, don’t tell Rabbi
Sacks about that!
The
real purpose of this redefinition of racism begins to come clear when we refine
it in terms of its reputed victims: The Marginalized People. Just who are these
folks? According to Stacey
Abrams they’re “women, Native Americans, African
Americans, immigrants, and the LGBTQ community.” Let’s hope that the
marginalized and powerless Miss Abrams, who by the new definition can’t be a racist, is not lumping in Hispanics
with those “immigrants.” In any case, for all their being on the margin, the
Marginalized People are mighty thick on the ground. Even with both your social antennae
bent, you know what’s going on. As
Tucker Carlson puts it: “The ‘dominant’ are everyone who’s left. So do the
subtraction: That’s only one group; you know exactly who they are, and so does
Stacey Abrams.”
Any
first pass at this subtraction can surely give us The Combover Satan. Indeed,
we were doing so well, until Trump
came along, at least according to the highly objective researchers Tessa
and Mahzarin. After 4.4 million tests over 13 years, they aver
that the halcyon days of racial bliss smiled upon the land from 2007 to 2016–dates
that, aw, shucks!–that wouldn’t be the Obama administration, would it? But let
the factual chips fall where they may! Notwithstanding, this same Trump has
made it his policy to “decriminalize” homosexuality–keep them at the head of
your son’s scout troop, serve as teacher role models for “alternate” life
styles in your kids’ high school, you know, that sort of thing. This witless pandering
is of course racist, according to Out Magazine’s
Matthew
Rodriguez. Why? Because it’s an “old racist tactic,” because
it’s “colonialist,” because it’s “paternalistic,” because. . .–oh, come off it:
It’s because it’s Trump, who of course is part of the white power structure using
the policy to “amass power.”
Is
there anyone left outside this oppressed mass of Marginalized People? If women–fully
half the former republic–are “marginalized,” surely the white working poor are.
After all, they voted from the margin to elect . . .–ah, wait a minute. Clearly,
more epicycles are in order to keep this hermeneutic system working. “[D]ysfunctional,
downscale” working class white communities exist from racism and “deserve to
die. Economically, they are negative assets. Morally, they are indefensible.”–Thus
sayeth one Kevin
D. Williamson, who began his screed with the usual banal Nazi
references spewed at Donald Trump, and concluded with a final solution for The
Donald’s loser friends: To the gas chambers, go!–yes, corroborating Nietzsche
that fighting monsters risks becoming one, but more importantly, keeping the
Marginalized voting identity in order.
Today’s
definition of racism–even with the refinement from “power plus prejudice” to “power
plus prejudice against marginalized people”–begins to spin like a wild orrery,
threatening to fling moons and planets in a centrifugal hail of sprockets and
bolts. For all the supposed woe and suffering in the Marginalized club, folks
are packing the entrance like the ticket window to a Beyoncé concert.
Not
only have the “alternate lifestyle” people gained racist victim status, as
canonized by Huffpo,
but so too has every whiner and his cat–cat, and horse, and pig, and bull (say what?). According
to PETA, phrases like “bring home the bacon” and “flogging
a dead horse” are comparable to racism and homophobia. Words are so hurtful,
yes? PETA suggests the following linguistic purgative to defeat this harrowing
threat to animal self-esteem:
Minus Social Credits
|
Plus Social Credits
|
“Kill two birds with one stone.”
|
“Feed two birds with one scone.”
|
“Be the guinea pig.”
|
“Be the test tube.”
|
“Beat a dead horse.”
|
“Feed a fed horse.”
|
“Bring home the bacon.”
|
“Bring home the bagels.”
|
“Take the bull by the horns.”
|
“Take the flower by the thorns.”
|
Even
the planet has become marginalized, forming a rainbow coalition that
incorporates literal rainbows. It’s not just that pollution
is racist, whereby the “the non-Hispanic white majority”
belches poisons into the lungs of The Marginalized People, somehow holding
their own breath all the while. I mean, this
fact already has been established by the “Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, a peer-reviewed journal,”
as the U.S. News magniloquently trumpets.
But no, the situation is even more dire than this. Mother Gaia has gone bull
dyke, joining hands with the LGBTQ victims as an appalling victim of “environmental
racism,” which of course is the same as “environmental
sexism”–whatever that is.
Despite
the expansiveness of The Marginalized People, there is strict discipline for
its membership, enforced by its mob of Twitter SA Brownshirts,
threatening race taboo third-rail electrocutions for the least infractions. Thinking
of wearing cornrows, sister? That’s “cultural
appropriation.” Any of you feminists
have the least reservation about the trans movement? Careful. Not even a word,
but even your furtive “dog whistle” won’t escape the searchlight the
Brownshirts have on your consciousness: “It’s notable that anti-trans feminists
are employing similar racist dog-whistles that have been used by the Right for
centuries.” And should one of the brothers get caught starting his own
affiliate to the outrage industry, the Brownshirts know how to make lemonade:
Make the Jussie
Smollett incident an opportunity to “start a national
conversation” on that 17%
uptick in hate crimes–issued by the FBI, all factual, all immune from
overreporting.
On
the other hand, if you obediently stay within the system, no further rules
apply. Sarah
Jeong will keep her job with the New York Times, despite writing immortal free verse such as: “how
much joy I get out of being cruel to old white men”; “f**k white women lol”; “dum***s
f**king white people marking up the internet with their opinions like dogs pi**ing
on fire hydrants.” (I bowdlerize the free-spirited Sarah with asterisks.) And
let’s not forget another gem of her insightful analytical mind, which is of
course not
racist: “White men are bull***t.”
No
matter how sprawling its definition or its list of supposed victims, the target
of the new usage of “racism” is unmistakable: High-achieving white males in
positions of power.
How
can whitey absolve himself–especially when he’s never used the “n- word,” never
looked beyond the content of character in his hiring practices, never downrated
Shaft, The Wiz, or Pootie Tang on
Rotten Tomatoes? Short answer: He can’t. Racism, according to the new usage,
may not always reveal itself in personal moral actions, despite the term’s
clear moral import. It’s done up and got “systemic.”
We know this because the ice cream guys Ben and Jerry said so. Actually, the
two white guys quote a Puerto Rican, so it’s bi****n’ biblical: “The main
problem nowadays is not the folks with the hoods, but the folks dressed in
suits.”
Now,
since personal moral culpability is irrelevant, how can there be any demand for
atonement? After all, the systemic effect abides, regardless of any personal
action. Why the Twitterstorm, the doxxing, the threats to family members, the
in-your-face shouting at restaurants? Because the Twitter Brownshirts do not
want a change in behavior; they want a change in consciousness. This is the purpose of the totalitarian “struggle session,”
the relentless public hectoring and baiting and shaming: To reshape thought, to
replace the offender’s personal value system with that of the group, and to
make his own mind its enforcer. No individual is ever the real offender. The
gripe is with an entire class, with a class that, behold! is identified by the very race thinking that was the
pretended original offense. The image of offending “white males” who are “dressed
in suits” perfectly fits the true definition of racist thought that
simplistically attributes moral or intellectual qualities from physical
characteristics. This is the thinking that fulfills a profound need, as Jacques Barzun
made clear:
[I]n a real world of shifting appearance, race
satisfies man’s demand for certainty by providing a small, simple, and complete
cause for a great variety of large and complex events.[Race, page 108.]
This
further refinement of the new definition of racism–from “power plus prejudice
against marginalized people” to “power plus any
disparity of result for our in-group, regardless of intent”–at last brings
us to our destination. “Racism,” so defined, is not about racism at all. It’s
about radical democratic egalitarianism. It is not primarily about the
covetousness that lusts for other people’s material goods. It is the envious
desire for their spiritual goods: Their beauty, their ability, their superior
intellect, their creativity–everything that inspires the embarrassed
realization that the “victim” is somehow inferior. Indeed, his inferiority is
precisely his victimhood, named not by the supposed “racist,” but by his own
self-awareness. And since his feeling of inferiority can never be eradicated,
the ululations
for a solution that can never be found become ever more shrill, ever more
neurasthenic.
It
is fitting that the Austrian nobleman and superior intellect Erik Ritter von
Kuehnelt-Leddihn should describe the social disease:
The demand for equality and identity arises
precisely in order to avoid that fear, that feeling of inferiority. Nobody is
better, nobody is superior, nobody feels challenged, everybody is “safe.”
Furthermore, if identity, if sameness has been achieved, then the other person’s
actions and reactions can be forecast. With no (disagreeable) surprises, a warm
herd feeling of brotherhood emerges. These sentiments–this rejection of quality
(which ineluctably differs from person to person)–explain much concerning the
spirit of the mass movements of the last two hundred years. Simone Weil has
told us that the “I” comes from the flesh, but “we” comes from the devil.
“Racism,”
as a popular smear, is nothing but a mask for destructive envy.
--
Holy
Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!
Anathema
to the Union!
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