Being in the World, According to Privilege or Its Lack

My life experience and social position has offered me some perspective. I’m a CIS-hetero white man born in the US, a relatively favored subject of the largest and most powerful empire in world history. I’m intimately familiar with the privilege that comes from that. More specifically, I was raised upper middle class, though I was working class once I moved out on my own and have remained so. I’m particularly sensitive to the mentality, identity, and worldview of the typical upper middle class white man, specifically those who hold some kind of status-based authority as my father did in having been an army officer, a factory manager, and later a professor. I understand it* and I’m not bluffed by it.

There is a casual, relaxed confidence one can have when one has a basic level of privilege. Though a mere working class nobody, my whiteness and maleness allows me to expect a certain amount of tolerance and leniency about my way of being in the world. In taking this for granted, I don’t have to worry as much about what others think or might do (e.g., a passing police officer). One example that occurs to me is my habit, on work breaks in the warm weather, to exercise in the downtown pedestrian mall near naked with just shorts on, as if I were chilling out in my own home. I bet I wouldn’t be as cavalier in that manner if I was a lower class minority in this white middle class town.

In walking behind a black guy yesterday, it reminded me of a common behavioral pattern. There was an edge to how he held himself, a macho swagger in his gait. It wasn’t exactly aggression but a visceral self-assertion that was meant to be noticed. Through his movements, he was making claim on the personal space surrounding him. But presumably he had to do so because the world didn’t as automatically give him any such claim. Whereas white people, especially those who are well off, tend to hold themselves in a way that is inconspicuous or else just relaxed. The thought occurred to me that they do so because they can assume personal space without being questioned or challenged.

There are more extreme examples of this among blacks. Part of my early youth was spent in a big city in the Deep South (Columbia, SC). It was common for poor blacks, typically near the projects, to willfully walk slowly across a busy road to force cars to slow down. It was a way for someone, otherwise without power in a society dominated by whites and the well off, to impose himself in such a way that couldn’t be ignored. But even well-off blacks are forced to act differently in public around whites, if their intention is different than that of a poor black (Claude Steele, Whistling Vivaldi). Even some wealthy, powerful blacks have told of being taken for servants when at posh parties. Blacks can’t assume that their place in the world is assured.

That same insight came to mind when on the public bus, maybe a year ago. I was sitting next to an older black lady. I shifted to get something out of my bag and accidentally bumped her. She responded gruffly in clearly expressing she wanted me out of her personal space, which could be taken as extremely disproportionate to the unintentional and momentary offense. But I immediately understood her likely perspective in taking my action as rudeness or simply intolerable. In being an older black woman, I could imagine that maintaining her personal space, as part of her right to exist in the world, has had to be constantly defended against those who would disrespect it.

There is an amusing, if disheartening, anecdote one Southern black lady shared in an article (Lucy M., That Time An Elderly White Woman Put Her Hands On Me, And I Refused To Act Like The ‘Bigger’ Person). While watching a race, a frail old lady took hold of her like she was a ‘grab-handle’. The writer’s response: “Right there and then, I screamed at the very top of my lungs, ‘Let go of my hand!’”  It wasn’t merely a violation of personal space. It was as if her body wasn’t her own to decide how others could use it. As I commented, rather than her personhood having been acknowledged and respected, she was treated as an affordance, a means to an end, almost like public property to be freely used by any passing white person. Black women surely get that treatment more often.

In my position as a ramp attendant, I help customers of all sorts and so have the experience to draw upon to make comparisons. Among demographic groups, those who act the most entitled, unsurprisingly, are middle-to-upper class whites. Something doesn’t go the way they want it to and they expect me to treat them as VIP. For example, the ramp was full and a white lady, a guest of a nearby pricier hotel, assumed I should let her in. Even when I explained it to her again, she insistently asked if I was going to let her in. It didn’t occur to her that privilege offers no exceptional treatment when seeking to access a public facility. I almost never come across non-whites and lower class whites acting that way.

That lady, if she wasted a few minutes of my life and left in a huff, at least didn’t make a scene. I’ve had other middle-to-upper class whites act much much worse. One guy got in a long argument with me because he thought I didn’t show proper deference to him in greeting him in the way he thought he deserved (Fractures of a Society Coming Apart). But it was simply that he was so busy and distracted doing his own thing that, in ignoring me, he didn’t realize I had already greeted him. It was my supposed inferior status that meant I should bow to him. And even when he was in the wrong, I should accept blame for his not treating me decently as a fellow human being.

On another occasion, a wealthier white couple from Chicago, likely the suburbs, put on the greatest display of an adult tantrum I’ve witnessed in my entire life (Class Anxiety of Privilege Denied). All of it in response to not wanting to pay a $23 fee for a lost ticket, far less than it’d take to fill their gas tank. Amusingly, they were so loud that four white police officers into two patrol cars heard them while passing by and, after stopping, put them back in their place. Then there was a well-off white lady with kids in the backseat who freaked out when, after she refused to accept any options for a lost ticket charge, I finally told her the only option left was for me to call the police. She complained to management, presumably having tried to get me fired.

This makes one think of Donald Trump’s boast that he could publicly shoot someone in the street for everyone to see and no one could touch him. That’s the extreme end of that kind of wealthy white privilege, specifically of the male variety. Over decades, Trump has openly committed numerous crimes, few of them ever investigated or prosecuted. He probably put the hit on his former friend Jeffrey Epstein. And since ‘elected‘, he has committed more political crimes and unconstitutional acts, such as openly accepting bribes, than any president in history. Yet he apparently was right in his boast. He has earned his moniker as ‘Teflon Don’. Some suspect he has immunity as a possible asset of the FBI or CIA. Being born into plutocracy, though, helps.

Prejudices are pervasive, systemic, structural, and institutional. They get built into the very fabric of society, privately and publicly, individually and collectively. That is how they can operate invisibly. And for those with privilege, they take the biases as reality itself. Few privileged people ever recognize others have an entirely different experience. They’re likely to be dismissive and judgmental of those who act differently than they do, not comprehending what causes others to act differently. As I repeat, the greatest of all privileges is to be oblivious of your privilege, to be unconscious with the implicit expectation that society exists to serve people like you. It determines your way of being in the world. And it’s trained from a young age.

“I remembered when I was a child being in a bank and other places of business with my mother and experiencing the same phenomenon of watching the white kids play while my mother insisted that I stay near her. Watching the repeat of my experience, I wondered how the little black girl who stood in the bank line felt while she watched the white boy run and play in the bank. I suspect she felt a number of emotions: fear of the consequences she might receive from disobeying her mother; shame from the curious looks of her white peers; anger at not being able to move about freely.

“Without explicitly saying so, the black mother sent a message to her children and the message was, ‘little white children can safely run and play but you cannot because it is not okay or safe for you.’ These experiences teach black children that somehow this world does not belong to black boys and girls, but it does belong to the little white children.”

~ Joy DeGruy, Post Traumatic Slave Syndrome, Kindle Locations 580-599 (quoted in: Social Order and Strict Parenting)

There is good reason for that young training. To be a minority in a bigoted society requires learning how to survive in the face of real world threats and risks, and many black parents make sure their kids learn young. It’s one explanation I’ve heard for why black parents are more likely to hit or aggressively manhandle their kids in public, something I regularly saw in the Deep South, at least up through the 2000s. It’s because the dangers are so real and dire. If a young black man acts out in public and the police intervene, there is a greater chance that events could end very badly for him: tasered, beat, shot, or simply arrested. They aren’t going to get the benefit of the doubt.

That’s the difference that makes the difference. I’ve been doing this job for more than a quarter of a century. And I’ve seen all types. In all that time, I can only think of one example, in a situation involving a coworker, of a minority who got upset enough that the police showed up (in a city that’s almost a third non-white). Much of the time and especially at night, lower class minorities, in particular, keep their eyes straightforward looking out the windshield during the entire exchange. Many of them don’t acknowledge me, don’t interact, and don’t talk. They’ve learned that, when dealing with a white authority figure (even merely a cashier), it’s best to avoid any possibility of misinterpretation, conflict, or drama. The last thing they want is the police to show up. Whereas well-off whites can’t even imagine the police being called on them or, if so, the police not taking their side.

Historically oppressed minorities are in a tough position. There is a pull in two directions. Like anyone else, they want to be recognized, acknowledged, and treated with respect. They want to be seen as equal humans with equal rights. This can lead them to assert themselves in simple ways that are available to them, sometimes just a swagger and other times a rebuke, so as to claim their space and establish their place. Yet at the same time, they know any and every interaction with a white person, especially one of middle-to-upper class, might end with unhappy outcomes or else just exhausting trouble. This negotiation of their identity and position in the world is always balancing on a knife edge. They have to tread carefully and choose their battles wisely. But those with privilege rarely, if ever, think much about it.

* * *

*See:

Ranita Ray’s Slow Violence: Book Review

In her book Slow Violence published last year, the sociologist Ranita Ray explained and explored her ethnographic study of the US education system. Beginning in 2017 and continuing until the COVID shutdown, her research was done in Las Vegas, Nevada. She observed classrooms in one of the country’s largest minority-majority school districts, but where most of the teachers are white.

It’s the kind of work I seek out.

It’s a scathing leftist critique of a dominant system that is part of larger problems in society. But also, it combines the personal with the objective and analytical, the scientific and scholarly. In writing about it, she refused a posture of academic neutrality by, instead, taking a strong position of righteous judgment toward unfair cruelty, social injustice, and collective failure.

I also appreciated how she talked about health. It went beyond physical, emotional, and psychological health.

She also referred to ‘political health’. And in relation to ‘political consciousness’, she spoke of ‘political well-being’. I like that way of putting it, as it properly radicalizes what is at stake. Such strong language may only be sprinkled throughout the text, but it stood out in my reading. While political health resonates with public health, it further points to the issues of power, specifically power that is held over others versus being empowered in oneself and holding mutual power.

Political health, without a doubt, is a fundamental and foundational requirement of democracy, of a free people. So, it’s no minor issue.

If public school teachers may not think of themselves as powerful, they are in relation to the children in their charge. The problem might be the very fact that teachers generally feel so powerless, in being employed within a dysfunctional bureaucracy where they have so little autonomy and self-determination, not to mention little respect in the larger society. Their only direct authority is over the students in their classrooms, and so those children could become the easy target of their frustration.

Giving Ray’s work an additional edge, she has a personal stake in the very structural and institutional prejudices she describes. She sees herself in the children she came to know.

During her childhood in India, her family scraped together just enough money to send her to a government-subsidized, English-based boarding school that was an institutional legacy from British colonialism. If getting a barely adequate formal education at all might’ve made her lucky, the school was so underfunded as to lack teachers for some classes.

Worse still, while there, she experienced what it was like to be stigmatized, denigrated, shamed, and punished for belonging to the lower class Indian culture that didn’t conform to white Western norms and expectations. If different than the US, she was part of an assimilationist project to separate her from her traditional community, to ‘civilize’ and Westernize her (speak proper English, eat with utensils, etc).

One can sense the anger, outrage, and frustration burning just below the surface of the author’s words and, on many occasions, stated outright. In the classes she sat in, she saw the maltreatment and abuse firsthand and, even as an expert already familiar with it all, she came away shocked at how pervasive it was. Plus, she was forced into the moral harm of not only witnessing the tragedy but also, as an academic researcher, in being forbidden to intervene when it was happening before her eyes.

All she could do was watch, take notes, and bide her time. But obviously, she wasn’t a neutral, detached observer.

So, she came to feel guilt about what she worried was her passive complicity in the very system she hoped to criticize and challenge. The book, obviously, was a cathartic experience for her. She finally could speak out, if it was too late for the children she saw hurt years before and who would now be outside the public education system entirely.

As much as it’s a scholarly work, Slow Violence also at times verges on a near jeremiad, and that is meant as a compliment of sorts. We need more people, especially scholars and public intellectuals, willing to speak uncomfortable truths and speak them without quibbling. She is to be commended for having the courage to say what so many didn’t want to hear, hence with much pushback.

But it should be clarified that Ray doesn’t limit herself to mere complaint and protest.

* * *

To demonstrate her left-wing credentials, Ray goes so far as to advocate school abolitionism, with a distinction between schooling and education. However, she only brings it up in her concluding thoughts, as her primary intent is to first and foremost show what’s happening in public schools, to simply wake up the public in recognizing there is a problem at all.

That advocacy indicates strong left-libertarian tendencies, though she never explicitly details her ideological principles and political commitments. This radical proposal, certainly, isn’t in line with right-wing attacks on public schools, as part of fearing an educated citizenry — liberal-minded and liberated — that might demand real democracy. She leans in the opposite direction. In her view, it’s akin to the prison abolitionist movement that itself took inspiration from the success of slave abolition.

If it’s not clear how seriously she takes this radical vision, the point is that we should feel compelled to have a moral reckoning about the history of schooling that has formed into present realities. In acknowledging the problems of how schooling is actually practiced, we should come to terms with how far that diverges from democratic aspirations, in how public education is conceived and perceived in the public imaginary. Then we can publicly debate the possibilities of what could take its place, or else how it could be reformed.

It’s necessary to survey the origins of public education in the US. It’s a history few are ever taught, in public or private schools. (This wasn’t a focus of Ray’s book either.)

Early 20th century Progressivism was often led by paternalistic right-wingers. One well known advocate was Theodore Roosevelt, an avowed elitist, racist, misogynist, conservative, fundamentalist, and imperialist. The movement to create universal education was once the darling of socially conservative right-wingers, specifically WASPS who were nativists and ethnonationalists, sometimes also white supremacists, eugenicists, and fascists.

In the moral panic of the late 1800s to early 1900s, right-wingers feared and hated the multicultural hordes of ethnic populations (i.e., hyphenated Americans) that flooded in as waves of immigrants and that formed into ethnic enclaves. Specifically, their animosity and prejudice was directed at: Catholics and Jews; Mexicans, Irish, Italians, Germans, and Eastern Europeans. These other ethnicities were sometimes deemed as non-white or as questionable in their whiteness, certainly not of the good sort.

These ethnics were perceived as unAmerican and, possibly, an enemy within. It was assumed they had greater loyalty to their ancestral homelands, their ethnic communities, and their traditional religions. There was particular paranoia about the Pope’s authority, as if the Vatican conspired to take over the US; an old conspiracy theory that went back to the country’s founding.

Those ties of traditional social order needed to be broken to make the ethnics into real Americans. It also helped weaken regional identities in creating a common American identification with the nation-state, as part of the modernizing process. Along with many other means, the Pledge of Allegiance required in schools was used to this end. Schooling was largely about citizen-making, as part of the Melting Pot.

Similar to the reservation school system, public education was intended to enforce assimilation by taking children out of their homes and communities. Public schools sought to compete with and replace private schools run by ethnic groups, as well as by the Catholic Church and other religions. The purpose was to eliminate ethnic identity and autonomy. This was the same period of English-only laws that forbade speaking and writing non-English languages in any official manner, especially in schools.

Then in the world war period and into the early Cold War, propaganda was actively part of the curriculum in the education system, combined with America studies at the college level. That legacy continues in the present education system that is a sanitized pedagogy serving the elite interests of the American Empire.

Another early stated purpose of public schools was to prepare children for the workforce in industrialized capitalism. So, it was also meant to indoctrinate and interpellate the youngest generation into capitalist realism, as rural communities and extended families were dissolved during mass urbanization. This was particularly important as many rural Americans and rural European immigrants had, up to that point, still been living in partly pre-capitalist economies, with lingering traditional cultures and carryovers from the Ancien Regime.

It’s surprising how long it took capitalism to fully take over by eliminating all that came before it.

Even into the early post-war period of the mid-20th century, some rural communities continued to operate based on kin networks, subsistence farming, access to resources on the commons (hunting, trapping, fishing), and a barter economy. Having been born in 1946 with his formative early years in the 1950s, the West Virginian Joe Bageant described this still existing pre-capitalism in his memoir, Rainbow Pie. His family literally lived off the land.

[For the longer historical context, in the United Kingdom, the last remnants of the Charter of the Forests (1217) wasn’t fully eliminated until the neoliberal-neocon revolution. That charter protected the commons for public use by the propertyless commoners (i.e., economic rights of the working class). It’s one of the most radical documents ever written, and some consider it to be a foundation of the US Constitution (Guy Standing, Why You’ve Never Heard of a Charter That’s as Important as the Magna Carta). Its final repeal happened in 1971 (same year as the Powell Memo), slightly over a half century ago and so well within living memory.]

During the Cold War, the public education system was revamped to better serve industrialized capitalism and the military-industrial complex, so as to better compete against the Soviet commies. That was when started the takeover of STEM education. With most ethnic cultures and communities destroyed at that point, and with immigration intentionally suppressed, schools could even more intensely focus on churning out subjugated worker-citizens for a modern economy in service to big biz.

So, it’s not only the failure of schooling, as related to democratic education and social justice, but also its ‘success’ toward ends we might deem questionable. To know how to fix education, we’d first have to agree about its legitimate reason for existing at all.

To Ray’s mind, the purpose of education isn’t merely intellectual achievement, to be ascertained by standardized testing, and to be rewarded with good grades, with any failing to be punished. And definitely she isn’t hoping for proper assimilation, be it as patriotic citizens or obedient workers. Instead, she envisions an education system that promotes health and happiness, even pleasure and joy, but certainly one that empowers students to take control of their own education.

Once again, it’s personal for her.

Since finishing her research, she has been looking into schools for her own child (Finding a Joyful School). She wants a space where curiosity, creativity, and play can flourish. Basically, if she doesn’t state it exactly this way, what she considers to be the ultimate goal is to induce open-mindedness and liberal-mindedness. That’s to say greater expression of the dual personality trait of ‘openness to experience’ and ‘intellect’ (FFM), which only happens under healthy, low-stress conditions.

The point is to support children in exploring and developing their fullest potential, with as much freedom and opportunity as is possible. Education systems and institutions should serve children, as part of serving the public good. If one is opposed to the total abolition of schools, then achieving that end is the most basic requirement to be met to prove their legitimacy and justify their continuance.

To have a free society, we’ll need an education system that supports and promotes freedom. Democracy has to be instilled from childhood onward. That would be the main point of departure from public schools as they function now. We the citizenry can tolerate nothing less.

* * *

Notwithstanding my praise of Slow Violence, there were some oversights and missed opportunities.

First off, Ray attempts a delicate balance of empathic concern for both sides of the equation. If her ultimate sympathy and allegiance is to the children she followed for years and came to care for, she also recognizes how difficult and troubled is the teaching profession. Teachers are underpaid and overworked, with expectations placed upon them that are unrealistic and unfair. As she advocates for students, she also advocates for teachers and better teaching conditions — it’s all of the same package.

Yet she rightly sees that as no excuse for the bigotry, cruelty, and ignorance among many teachers that is casually practiced and has become socially normalized, or else unrecognized and unacknowledged. That is why she correctly refers to it as slow violence, a concept more often used in environmental studies (e.g., childhood lead toxicity) and health studies (e.g., shit life syndrome).

She is correct to apply it to public education, from the perspective of social science.

Such slow violence is inseparable from structural, systemic violence. The schools themselves, as public institutions, are part of the problem. But of course, it’s about the communities and entire society that forms the larger context of lived experience. The sad part is that the public schools meant to be a respite and saving grace for these children more often than not contribute to their hardships. And too many teachers are part of the problem.

The missed opportunity in the book, though, is precisely that the author didn’t delve into what’s done to psyche, identity, and behavior under severe, chronic stress that so easily causes trauma and forms into PTSD, as part of victimization cycle. Calling it ‘toxic stress’ in The Deepest Well, Dr. Nadine Burke Harris shows how it relates to all aspects of health. American schools don’t represent healthy conditions for anyone involved.

Everyone is worse for it, and to an extreme degree.

It’s related to how high inequality causes problems not only for the poor but likewise for the economically well off (Keith Payne, The Broken Ladder). As the students are harmed, and as Ray was impacted by moral harm, so the same happens to many working within schools. It’s easy to forget how victimization perpetuates itself, with many of the victims becoming victimizers in turn. That is to say teachers aren’t protected from the stress, trauma, and oppression; especially as they’re products of the same schooling from their own early lives.

Teachers don’t stand above the fray but, rather, find themselves on the frontlines; and with little preparation for how to deal with any of it, much less the resources and support. What meager and superficial training they get for racism, abuse, etc is far from adequate. And if they step out of line once, if anything goes wrong, it’s the teacher who will be scapegoated with almost no one to step in for their defense.

Teaching in public schools is one of the hardest jobs in the world, and with little worthy compensation for all the hard work and heartache.

In addition, keep in mind that it’s not only the power differential and dynamic that creates an imbalance between teachers — mostly white, US-born, cisgender, able-bodied, and neurotypical — and their underprivileged students. A society like this is completely defined by high inequality, dominance hierarchy, and social Darwinism. The power disparities are found in all areas. Teachers too are disempowered by those who hold power above them in controlling the education system: administrators, school boards, PTAs, legislators, lobbyists, etc.

They are barely above the bottom of society. Many teachers don’t make enough money to meet their needs and so have to work second jobs or else, in some cases, live out of their vehicles. That economic insecurity or even outright desperation, for many, is layered upon physical, mental, and emotional exhaustion. Those who end up in teaching often have few other good options for, if nothing else, it’s a steady paycheck with basic benefits like healthcare.

Ray does understand this to a large extent and talks about it on multiple occasions. But I’m not sure she fully appreciates the significance of it, in what it does to the mind.

Yes, going by her account, most of the teachers she met had internalized problematic attitudes. Prejudice is as rampant in schools as it is in the society at large. As she points out, teachers are normal people and white teachers, specifically, are unfortunately representative of the average white American. I have no problem with her no-holds-barred condemnation of teachers who are plain bigots or who otherwise spread problematic views and fail to do right by their students.

But she doesn’t explore what shaped those people in the first place. Many teachers have been under extreme pressure for years, some for decades. It takes a toll as a deranging and corrupting force. Even if they had begun teaching as good liberals with the best of intentions, the entire system will wear people down and bring out the worse in them.

* * *

Social liberalism and liberal-mindedness has a tough time surviving the onslaught of illiberal forces (Paul R. Nail, et al, Threat causes liberals to think like conservatives). I’ve often referred to a number of specific examples in social science research.

As a clear demonstration, liberals who first learned of the 9/11 terrorist attack on television, in repeatedly viewing the violent footage played on a loop, were more likely to later support right-wing policies: Patriot Act, Homeland Security, expanded police powers, restrictions on civil liberties, etc (Dietram A. Scheufele, et al, September 11 News Coverage, Public Opinion, and Support for Civil Liberties). That’s an example of mean world syndrome, as explained by cultivation theory.

[As a side note, all of the the corporate MSM jointly and systematically having beaten the war drums, while pushing violent imagery and fear-mongering rhetoric, shifted public opinion from majority opposition to majority support toward the Iraq War. As part of mediated social construction of conflict (e.g., false reporting of non-existent WMDs) and as part of political spectacle, it took a lot of media-provoked-and-promoted stress and trauma to elicit greater illiberal and authoritarian compliance (Douglas Kellner, 9/11, spectacles of terror, and media manipulation). The so-called War On Terror was a War Of Terror on the American public mind.]

On a more basic level, simply getting liberals mildly inebriated increases conservative-style thinking of stereotypes, and the more drunk people get the more they express conservative views (Scott Eidelman, et al, Low-effort thought promotes political conservatism). Basically, as cognitive load and cognitive complexity was compromised, the liberal-minded fell back on simplifying heuristics. That would make them prone to prejudice and bigotry. If only temporarily, they became right-wingers.

As that shows, the kinds of stress that induce conservative-mindedness can be rather minor.

Other studies have found that, for judges, an uncomfortable chair or being hungry (and low blood-sugar) before lunch will cause them to be more punitive with longer sentencing, less likely to give pardons, etc. Now put that back into the context of the chronic, pervasive, and overwhelming stress teachers are under, probably including uncomfortable chairs as the least of it. Why would we be surprised that a dysfunctional system causes antisocial thought, attitudes, views, speech, and behavior?

Stress and trauma become internalized. It alters us at a neurological level. If it lasts long enough, if it remains unresolved and unhealed, it permanently restructures our brains and psyches.

The thing is that few people have the knowledge and awareness to understand how they’re impacted, not that there is much one could do about it when one has no personal control over one’s environment (e.g., work conditions in a dominance hierarchy and authoritarian society). Enculturation, indoctrination, and interpellation into oppressive systems tends to happen unconsciously and incrementally. No one would freely choose such a sad fate.

As a sociologist, Ray should understand better than most. She should know how this happens and so, optimally, she would’ve included it as part of her discussion. Sure, maybe it could be excused or at least explained as outside the scope of her work. Her focus was mainly on the children and how teachers affected them, not on what affected the teachers themselves.

Still, it’s such an important piece of the puzzle, arguably the piece that brings into focus the entire picture.

It was also relevant to the author herself, as we are all in need of intellectual and psychological self-defense. In the moments when she fell into moralizing about white teachers as individuals and as a group, one might interpret that as a stress-induced expression of right-wing mentality. If we are all responsible for what we do, ultimately that is a collective and mutual responsibility. As a fracturing of our common humanity, both identity politics and isolated individuality are dangerous illusions, as abstractions and distractions.

One could sense the reactionary impulse to frame and narratize it all as a Manichaean divide of dominant whites against all others, specifically where white teachers symbolically stand in for the entire ruling system of hegemonic oppression. As such, poor, powerless, and underprivileged whites are excluded, disappeared, and silenced, but also the system itself isn’t prioritized and interrogated to the degree that’s necessary.

How often did Ray ignore a troubling incident involving a poor white child because it didn’t fit the frameworking of her study?

What gets lost in it all is that the real divide is between the elite and everyone else, between the elite-controlled system and everyone caught in it. Turning whites and non-whites against one another is as unhelpful as doing the same for teachers and students. This plays into divide-and-conquer. Ray herself experienced the negative consequences of this false and counterproductive framing in how many people felt defensive when she spoke of it, in wrongly taking her critique as an attack.

Her take on it at times, if unintentionally, came too close to the gravity pull of a right-wing portrayal of group competition, us vs them. Genuine liberal-minded thinking can get suppressed and compromised without our realizing it. But fortunately, the author was partly able to pull back from the moralizing temptation. If she failed to offer a full class analysis, she did slightly acknowledge economic issues. For instance, it’s good she mentions that teacher pay is too low, but the stressors of our absolutely effed up society go far far far beyond that.

More likely than not, she understands that. I get that she was trying her best and the situation might be near impossible. Entrenched problems are hard to talk about and few want to face them or know how to. That’s all the more reason we leftists need to tread carefully, to communicate clearly, to avoid the most common traps of rhetoric and psychology.

If we want to push for left-wing solutions, we’re going to have to be tirelessly consistent and persistent in keeping the focus on the system itself, on the institutions and structures, on the conditions and other shared factors. That is the one and only point of leverage we have, in that it’s the Achille’s heel of right-wing influence and control. We must bear our entire collective strength on that pressure point.

This isn’t to say teachers shouldn’t be challenged and encouraged to question their own role in the system. But ultimately we leftists need to look upon them as prospective allies, as insiders who know the system and could help to change it. That’s all the more important in realizing so many on the left look upon teachers as heroes. If that is a fantasy, it’s nonetheless a genuine liberal ideal and dream about what public education should be.

We need to find a way of honoring the intent, while gently probing its failure.

* * *

That gets us to the other point that felt missing, if understandably.

As Ray maintained primary concern with the students, not the teachers, so she also kept a laser-like focus on what she considered the most disadvantaged students. That’s helpful to zero in on those who have been historically oppressed and disenfranchised, ignored and disregarded. But this might cause losing sight of the bigger picture, the system itself. In how both students and teachers are harmed by the same system and society, so is true of all students, far from limited to only those who are Black, brown, immigrant, trans, or what have you.

Even in writing on her own life, she doesn’t emphasize the socioeconomic class or caste of her family and her community. All we get is some comments that they were of limited means.

To my mind, class war and class prejudice is as important as other systemic problems and biases. The issues she is talking about, obviously, are a non-issue to wealthy minorities, immigrants, girls, LGBTQIA+ individuals, etc. It’s specifically the lack of wealth and privilege that underlies power disparities, that allows those in authority to treat perceived subordinates and inferiors badly without consequence.

What differentiates the teachers and students in her research wasn’t only race and such but also class.

Teachers, as mostly middle class whites (if often barely middle class), wouldn’t feel automatic racial sympathy for and solidarity with poor whites. That would particularly be true in the poorest white communities where the teachers were hired from elsewhere. Few of those white teachers would’ve grown up in the poor white community where they work nor in any other poor white community for that matter.

[It’s not unlike the fact that most teachers being women doesn’t make them any more open to disadvantaged girls in their classrooms, as her own research elsewhere shows (Mary Beth King, Research finds Black, immigrant girls of color face hostile classrooms). Sharing a demographic detail — be it race, gender, or anything else — doesn’t create an automatic link of shared identity, mutual respect, and moral concern.]

Or to consider the opposite scenario, if she had studied Black, brown, and immigrant students in elite private schools, she surely wouldn’t have made the same observations. The parents of those children could pressure the school administration, could sue teachers, or could simply move take their children elsewhere. White teachers, in such schools, would feel compelled to be deferential to those non-white students.

It all comes down to class. It’s just that, in the US, class has always been conflated with much else. The author failed to take that into account and disentangle it.

In the text, references to ‘poverty’ and the ‘poor’ only comes up a handful of times and only in passing. She only once includes the poor when making a list: “poor, Black, Latinx, brown, immigrant, disabled, and indigenous children.” Also, the only time she even mentions the “students’ socioeconomic status” was in reference to the teachers being “acutely aware” of it and having “pitied them” for it. But apparently, other than dismissing such pity as condescension, it didn’t merit even the briefest and most superficial class analysis.

I suppose it simply isn’t her area of expertise. A scholar can’t necessarily incorporate every possible factor and issue. But in it popping up every now and then in her language, she was clearly aware of it being relevant enough to be mentioned, if only in passing.

It plays into the previous point I made about unhealthy conditions, chronic stress, lingering trauma, and moral harm. Arguably, it’s economics that underlies, worsens, and exacerbates all else. It’s not the only thing, but the capitalist order we live in can’t be otherwise understood. It’s the economics that determines every aspect in the lives of children and adults, students and teachers.

* * *

The omission of class analysis is particularly striking as her previous book, The Making of a Teenage Service Class, was about racialized poverty and socioeconomic mobility.

And I would think that someone from India, where socioeconomic status has been historically structured according to caste and historically restructured according to colonial imperialism, would grasp this far better than most. For a long period of time, in fact, India was brutally ruled over by a Western corporation, the British East India Company, and so made to comply with proto-capitalist mercantilism. The Western imprint of economic power and dominance is stark in that country and one would presume she felt the legacy of it in her own childhood.

Then again, maybe it’s for that reason she wouldn’t as easily appreciate what economics means in the American social order. She came to the US as an adult. It’s possible her main American experience has been limited to places of higher education like the University of Connecticut, University of Nevada, and University of New Mexico where the whites she has personally known are mainly middle class professionals, from academics to teachers.

Whether or not she knows it, most poor Americans are white and most welfare recipients are white. Also related, as most prisoners in the US are white, it might be a safe guess to suspect that most children with single parents are white and most children in the school-to-prison pipeline are white too. Specifically about the author’s research, whites likely still represent the largest portion of the poor in US public schools, if that might be shifting or already shifted as a national minority-majority approaches.

All in all, even as minorities and immigrants are disproportionately targeted and harmed, the permanent underclass remains majority white.

I get it. We should be fair by understanding someone’s context of experience. This wouldn’t have stood out to Ray where she did her research in Las Vegas. The poor residing there are mostly non-white. That is likely true in some other states like California, as well as true all across the Southwest and, of course, in the Deep South.

But she would’ve gotten an entirely different view of society if she’d done her research in the rural areas and inner cities of regions elsewhere: Appalachia, Upper South, New England, Midwest, Great Plains, Far West, and Northwest. The poorest counties in the country are in Appalachia, one of the whitest regions in the country. The only area of worse concentrated poverty is the Pine Ridge Reservation.

Here in Iowa, the poorest and most disadvantaged, on average, are definitely on the pale side of the skin color spectrum.

As she knows the poor and immigrant minority perspective, I have some familiarity with poor whites. I went to public schools in the Deep South, that of South Carolina, that were an even mix of races and socioeconomic status, some of it white poverty. And  I’ve also spent time in the rural Upper South, from North Carolina to Kentucky. But most of all, the greatest portion of my life has been here in Iowa and elsewhere in the Midwest. This includes my own working class family in Indiana.

One specific example stands out in my mind (Victimization Culture and Lesser Evilism). West Branch is a neighboring town to Iowa City. I’ve known various people who have lived there, in some cases during their early life. One of these is a close friend who is white and experienced the dark side of that town. To be clear, it is racist, likely an old sundown town; as five black families disappeared, in the early 1900s, from one census to another.

My friend saw how minorities were driven out, including a cross-burning on a Black family’s lawn. But any perceived outsiders and pariahs, such as my friend and her family, were also excluded and persecuted. Oddly enough, her parents were even teachers, one in town and the other here in Iowa City. But they were perceived as low class because the family lived in a rundown old building, the location of a former business, by the railroad tracks.

For decades, one of the most respected community leaders was Coach Butch Pederson (Victimization Culture and Lesser Evilism). His reputation was based on bringing the town football victories for the high school team. But working in the school, he also taught classes and my friend sometimes had him as a teacher. In that role, he had another reputation from bullying kids, mostly white kids since it’s an almost entirely white town. My friend, as a neurodivergent, became a target of his sadism and it left her traumatized.

That’s the thing about oppressive societies. They harm everyone on the bottom of society. It gets built into the culture, social order, and institutions (economic, political, educational, etc). Consider areas in the US that had the most concentration of slavery in the past. To this day, these places have some of the greatest inequality, worst poverty, and most distrust, not only for Blacks but also whites (Christine Kenneally, Invisible History of the Human Race; Nicholas Kristof, When Whites Just Don’t Get It, Part 4; & Facing Shared Trauma and Seeking Hope).

This relates to why the Deep South not only has the highest rates of conservatism, authoritarianism, social dominance orientation, honor culture (honor concern), fundamentalism, and patriotism — all of them overlapping (O.K. Nop & M.D. Hammond, A meta-analysis and test of the overlap between honor concern, right-wing authoritarianism, and social dominance orientation) — but also a prevalence of aggression, abuse (child, spousal), bullying, hate crimes, violent crimes, accidents (guns, vehicles, boats, work), drunk driving, learning disabilities, high school dropouts, drug addiction, mental illness, cardiometabolic disease, STDs, teen pregnancies, etc.*

Under bad conditions, everything is bad for everyone, if it hurts some more than others, and so everyone acts badly. But the addiction to power and privilege is so alluring that many are willing to pay the price to maintain such a dysfunctional social order (Costs Must Be Paid: Social Darwinism As Public Good; & Capitalism as Social Control). Or else the oppressiveness of it all shuts down the mind so that they can’t imagine anything else.

The ruling elite there have sought to maintain a dominance hierarchy, that of both racism and classism. They’ve done so by disinvesting in all areas of public good, public welfare, public infrastructure, and public education; especially the latter as the wealthy children are sent to private schools.

My mother worked in public schools in the Deep South, and indeed it was in areas of former mass enslavement. Some of the poor white kids she dealt with were struggling with severe problems, and the schools were in no position to help them in the way and to the degree they needed. As a white woman, similar to most of the teachers in Ray’s research, I don’t know how my mother treated her students. I’m sure she tried do right by them, but it’s also likely she was carrying unconscious prejudices.

The point is disadvantages and underprivileges, oppressions and harm come in many forms. And it varies greatly from one population to another, in how the US is a vast and diverse country or, rather, empire.

* * *

White poverty gets overlooked because it doesn’t always match the stereotype of poverty (or at least not the stereotype that’s become fashionable), as portrayed among the Black and brown populations in the old inner cities and post-industrial metros. Poor whites sometimes can pass as not poor just by dressing slightly better. Indeed, research shows its easier for poor whites to become assimilated into middle class white communities. Yet they might remain poor, and some of the programs and services directed to minorities would be unavailable to poor whites (not to suggest DEI isn’t necessary).

In any case, the average poor white never escapes poverty, never finds their way into the middle class. They tend to get overlooked in the mainstream narrative of middle-to-upper class whites versus poor, underprivileged, and immigrant minorities. But what happens to poor whites is inseparable to what happens to poor non-whites. It’s all the same indifference and depravity that victimizes children before they’ve even had a chance.

As a blind spot for the author of Slow Violence, it might be a byproduct of the author’s higher education and university career.

Notoriously, academics tend to fall into the silo effect, and even told to stay in their lane. There is probably little interdisciplinary dialogue and in-depth research that, with complexity and nuance, specifically combines poor whites with other disadvantaged populations. For various reasons, experts in one field of study tend to not be experts in the other, nor tend to talk to experts in the other.

It’s not a unique problem in this case. I’ve come across plenty of scholarly (and journalistic) writings about poor whites where there is little or no discussion beyond that demographic. It’s the nature of present academia to narrowly focus on a niche area of study. Besides, wide-ranging curiosity and broad knowledge has never been typical, inside or outside academia.

It’s also likely a simple issue of geographic separation.

The worst white poverty and the worst non-white poverty are often concentrated in totally different parts of the country. Typically, to be near one is to not be near the other. A researcher might have to go to greater effort by traveling to multiple areas to see both and/or to find the few parts of the country where the two populations mix, such as in the Deep South.

A similar problem comes with identity politics where the emphasis is on what divides us (demographics, labels, citizenship status, etc), rather than what unites us or potentially might unite us (high inequality, capitalist oppression, economic struggle, labor organizing, etc). We live in a shared society with shared problems. That could inspire a humanistic vision of group consciousness, solidarity, the commons, and the public good. But that will never happen as long as every separate group, in isolation, is focused on its own concerns as being in competition with the concerns of others.

This is how the identity politics of disadvantaged groups plays right into the narrative frame of the identity politics of right-wingers. That is a conflict that the broad left can never win, as our only path of progress is to reframe it. The right-wing will always excel at dominating under divisiveness.

If left-wingers want to start winning again, we’ll have to recruit potential allies.

That’s what the Black Panther’s did with the Rainbow Coalition, under the charismatic and visionary leadership of Fred Hampton. Among others like feminists and AIM, he reached out to the Young Patriots, an organization of Southern poor whites who had moved to Chicago. Hampton didn’t see it as a zero-sum game but as an opportunity to create strength through numbers and solidarity.

Still, for its limitations and shortcomings, Ranita Ray’s Slow Violence is a much needed view into a problem that has gone unappreciated. As she points out, it simply doesn’t fit into any of the conventional narratives, neither on the Right nor the Left. But it’s just one key take among many others. No single area of scholarship will ever show us the full picture, as the amount of problems we face is immense and daunting.

* * *

All text below is taken from Ranita Ray:

It Never Seems to Be a Good Time to Talk About Teachers’ Racism
by Ranita Ray

Teachers like Ms. Connnell have recently been the targets of right-wing attacks for teaching a curriculum on America’s history of racial oppression, colloquially referred to as critical race theory. Many have come to these teachers’ defense, pointing out the necessity of including basic American history in school curricula. In these debates, people across the political spectrum tend to assume that white teachers–who make up 79 percent of the public school teaching force–are comfortably, and truthfully, teaching about America’s history and the present realities of racial oppression. However, my research reveals something different: a disturbing picture of what is actually happening. […]

What I discovered was rampant racism, cruelty, and indifference from teachers working inside public schools. Most of the teachers I observed were not, in fact, teaching about America’s racist history but instead were perpetuating everyday racial violence against their students inside the classroom. While the idea is not prominent in public discourse, I am not alone in finding teacher racism to be an everyday presence in the American classroom. One recent study, for example, found that teachers hold as much implicit and explicit pro-white racial bias as nonteachers do. Education scholar Michael Dumas has written about teacher racism and Black suffering inside the classroom, showing that these attitudes have concrete outcomes. And students themselves know this. Social media is replete with students talking about teacher racism, and they have often taken to the streets to protest it.

The curriculum I witnessed in action at the elementary and middle schools I studied was certainly multicultural, as it is in many urban school districts. Teachers lectured extensively about the civil rights movement, and students read books about Black families, such as The Watsons Go to Birmingham–1963, to learn about it. Teachers also received extensive anti-racist and cultural sensitivity trainings through the district and within the schools.

But what I observed in the classrooms didn’t reflect any of that. Just as Ms. Connell readily divorced past from present, another white teacher, Ms. Trevor, minimized racial oppression by suggesting it was similar to discrimination based on height. […] As all of these 9- and 10-year-old Black and brown kids started to bring in examples of various types of discriminated-against categories, such as height, weight, and age, I sate there documenting how Ms. Trevor’s lesson on the civil rights movement and segregation ended up having absolutely nothing to do with the matter at hand: racism.

Slow Violence: Confronting Dark Truths in the American Classroom
by Ranita Ray

p. 3

Ribbon had nearly 800 students in Las Vegas’s Clark County School District, which at the time served over 320,000 children. In 2017, approximately 24.5 percent of students in the district were white, compared to New York City’s current 16 percent, Chicago’s 11 percent, and Los Angeles’s `10 percent. Also in 2017, 70 percent of Clark County teachers were white, closely resembling the national numbers as well.

pp. 5-6

The American left tends to valorize teachers as altruistic, self-sacrificing, benevolent people, and the conservative right despises them for supposedly indoctrinating our children with liberal sexual education and histories of racial oppression that villainize white people.

Both of these are false and both of them justify teachers’ abysmal pay and heinous working conditions: you don’t need to fight for higher pay if you come for the love of leading our next generation, and you certainly don’t need higher pay if your job is to indoctrinate innocent children.

I spent three years among fifteen teachers and talked with hundreds of others across two schools and the entire district and found one teacher who had come to the profession motivated by altruism and a love for children and teaching. And only one other expressed any interest in cultivating some kind of political consciousness in the children they taught. The teachers you will meet in this book are ordinary people for whom it is a job, a means to make ends meet. Many of them are young and have, or had, other dreams and aspirations; they come to teaching because it is a stable occupation with health insurance and a retirement plan. Over 80 percent of public school teachers in the US are white and a little over 60 percent of them white women. It’s an accessible profession for them. But fewer and fewer teachers think it a desirable job. Yet they come, perhaps because there are several routes to it that are not time-consuming–provisional licenses, traditional and nontraditional paths for those with or without a bachelor’s degree.

Teacher’s attitudes to questions of racial, gender, or class inequalities resemble those of the general public. For example, Princeton, National Institutes of Health, and Tufts researchers found that teachers harbor as much racial animosity toward nonwhite people as the general public.

After the years I spent inside public schools in Las Vegas, I was not surprised to learn that in a survey conducted in the two months preceding the November 2024 election between Donald Trump and JD Vance over Kamala Harris and former educator Tim Walz. Among educators between the ages of 45 and 60, 41 percent planned to vote for Donald Trump. To sum up, while teachers’ unions backed Harris, the story of educators is more complex.

p. 257

The Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey in 2020 revealed that 3 percent of Black families engaged in homeschooling. By October of the same year, the number had gone up to 16 percent. Cheryl Field-Smith, a sociocultural scholar at the University of Georgia, has conducted research showing that a growing number of Black families are opting to homeschool to avoid racism in school. Online schools during COVID exposed some of the classroom slow violence to guardians of Black, brown, immigrant, and trans children, and many people newly confronted how many of these bullies are teachers. Black families who wanted their children to learn deeply about Black history and culture, freely and with dignity, also realized this could not occur at school.

p. 261

High-achieving poor, Black, Latinx, brown, immigrant, disabled, and Indigenous children become a testament to the great success of the US education system. Their academic success is supposedly a harbinger of a fulfilling life. But even good students were treated so poorly.

p. 262

After three years behind the closed doors of the American classroom and many more years of analyzing what I saw, it was clear to me that a focusing on the achievement gap is not only the wrong fight but often becomes a trap. The slow violence of the teachers at Ribbon and Dorena damaged and diminished their students, regardless of academic achievement.

A wide range of child abuse inside schools is not an uncommon phenomenon. CCSD took extensive precautions against student-on-student bullying or sexual harassment by teachers. The district hosted events, provided training around identifying student bullies and tackling them, and made sexual harassment trainings compulsory. the focus on sexual abuse and peer-on-peer bullying, serious issues no doubt, the districts treated as the be-all and end-all, ignoring issues of teachers bullying students.

pp. 265-6

David Stovall, a professor at the University of Illinois Chicago, wrote a paper called “Are We Ready for ‘School’ Abolition? Thoughts and Practices of Radical Imaginary in Education.” Three things stand out to me from the paper that give shape to the idea of school abolitionism in the legacy of the prison abolition movement. First, Stovall and other more critical scholars pf schooling have urged us to understand schooling as separate and distinct from education. Second, Stovall considers how schools in the US, as they are structured, demand and reward compliance. Finally, Stovall urges that in the tradition of prison abolitionism, we demand the impossible.

One of those impossible things is to insist on a more honest conversation about the stark power differential between teachers and students, especially little children who are ten-, eleven-, and twelve-year-olds. The realities of larger power relations that oppress Black, brown, immigrant, and trans people coincide with this fact that teachers have absolute authority inside the classroom and students in places like Ribbon and Dorena have close to none. That teachers have it hard does not preclude the fact that they are capable of immense harm, whether they always do or not, and that the colossal power differential between mostly white teachers and their Black, brown, immigrant, queer, fat, and trans children is a material reality, and it is unsafe. But because we assume teachers’ omnipresent altruism, we don’t look carefully. Yet, most of us can recall a mean teacher, someone who at one point or another hurt or harassed us.

This is also an organizational issue–the school is a workplace where teachers have managerial authority over the students they teach. Research on work and organizations has long established how those with authority are prone to abusing their power, especially against people who are otherwise marginalized. And in most city schools, the children are racially and economically marginalized and young. So, should what I witnessed really surprise us?

This type of everyday harassment and bullying–like being labeled as sexual predators, thieves, morally bankrupt–by adults who are meant to protect them can in fact alter children’s physiology. Researchers have found that psychological stressors such as everyday harassment activate the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis stress system. The hormones released by the HPA axis help us adapt; however, chronically elevated levels during childhood and adolescence can damage this system. Stress, like that from slow violence, can negatively alter a child’s brain.

Alongside engaging a deep conversation interrogating schools as they exist, we can demand a stronger teacher’s union that fights for better pay and working conditions for teachers; that fights for Black, brown, immigrant, and queer teachers inside the classroom.

What Kind of Diversity?

Let me respond to a few articles and papers. They cover different aspects of diversity. I have long been bothered by some of the issues involved and how they are handled. It is disappointing and frustrating to see the endless flow of low quality discussion and analysis, not to mention the inadequate research.

I’ll begin with The Costs of Ethnic Diversity With Garett Jones from The Economics Detective. It’s an old argument, that diversity is bad, bigotry gussied up in scientific language. I’m not racist because I’m a good liberal, says the author; it’s just the damning facts speaking for themselves. Yet other facts say otherwise, as it always depends on which facts one uses and interprets, behind which can be hidden beliefs and biases. To emphasize this point, one could note that fairly high diversity is found among some of the wealthiest, not to mention among the most stable and influential, countries in the world: UK, US, Canada, Australia, Spain, etc. And most of the struggling and dysfunctional countries are extremely homogeneous (or at least perceived as ‘homogeneous’ from the perspective of the Western racial order). That isn’t to blame homogeneity instead, as there are other factors involved such as post-colonial legacies and neo-imperial meddling. But obviously there is no consistent global pattern in lack of diversity, however defined, and societal problems. Even outside of the West, there are diverse societies that manage to get positive results — Amanda Ripley writes (The Smartest Kids in the World, pp. 160-161):

“In Singapore, the opposite happened. There, the population was also diverse, about 77 percent Chinese, 14 percent Malay, 8 percent Indian, and 1.5 percent other. People spoke Chinese, English, Malay, and Tamil and followed five different faiths (Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, Taoism, and Hinduism). Yet Singaporeans scored at the top of the world on PISA, right beside Finland and Korea. There was virtually no gap in scores between immigrant and native-born students.
“Of course , Singapore was essentially another planet compared to most countries. It was ruled by an authoritarian regime with an unusually high-performing bureaucracy. The government controlled most of the rigor variables, from the caliber of teacher recruits to the mix of ethnicities in housing developments. Singapore did not have the kind of extreme segregation that existed in the United States, because policy makers had forbidden it.”

Other research shows that segregation is a key factor. Diversity only correlates to social problems when populations are segregated. As Eric Uslaner explained (Segregation and Mistrust, Kindle Locations 65-73): “[C]orrelations across countries and American states between trust and all sorts of measures of diversity were about as close to zero as one can imagine… [L]iving among people who are different from yourself didn’t make you less trusting in people who are different from yourself. But that left me with a quandary: Does the composition of where you live not matter at all for trust in people unlike yourself? I had no ready answer, but going through the cross-national data set I had constructed, I found a variable that seemed remotely relevant: a crude ordinal measure (from the Minorities at Risk Project at my own university, indeed just one floor below my office) of whether minorities lived apart from the majority population. I found a moderately strong correlation with trust across nations – a relationship that held even controlling for other factors in the trust models I had estimated in my 2002 book. It wasn’t diversity but segregation that led to less trust.” Then again, high inequality studies show that economic segregation causes the exact same problems as racial/ethnic segregation. Maybe it isn’t diversity itself that is problematic but how some societies have failed to deal with it well.

It’s interesting that these people who criticize diversity of race, ethnicity, religion, language, etc rarely if ever talk about other forms of diversity such as socioeconomic class, involving issues of vast differences in funding and resources, education and healthcare, environmental racism and toxicity rates, police brutality and ghettoization, biases and prejudices, opportunities and privileges, power and influence. Capitalism (specifically in the form of corporatism, plutocracy, inverted totalitarianism, and social darwinism) causes high levels of income and wealth diversity, i.e., inequality. If diversity was bad, then so is capitalism that causes class diversity. But maybe the main problem of class diversity or any other form of diversity is social division that leads to political divisiveness. Diversity wouldn’t necessarily be problematic, if there were movement between populations. Without racial/ethnic segregation, there is more racial/ethnic integration and assimilation. And without economic segregation, there is more economic mobility and cross-generational wealth accrual. That means the solution is to not isolate populations out of xenophobia and bigotry, especially to not create permanent underclasses of any variety.

Here is the complaint I have with this kind of people, besides some of them expressing anti-diversity fear-mongering or else complicitly going along with it. Between them and I, we are focusing on different evidence which is fine to an extent. But the difficulty is that, generally speaking, I know their evidence while most of them don’t know mine. And I can explain their evidence while they can’t explain mine. It isn’t usually a meeting of minds through fair debate based on mutual respect and mutual concern for truth-seeking. Their arguments almost always come down to cherrypicked data. That isn’t to say their data shouldn’t be accounted for. It’s just it’s hard to take them seriously when they refuse to even acknowledge the data that disproves, undermines, and complicates their dogmatic beliefs or half-thought opinions. I admit that diversity is problematic under particular circumstances. What most of them can’t acknowledge is that diversity is beneficial under other circumstances. That would force them to admit that it isn’t diversity itself that is the crux of the matter. That said, the above piece from The Economics Detective does admit the profit motive for businesses being diversity-friendly and so I’ll give the author some credit for genuinely being a good liberal, but I must take off a few points for his all too typical carelessness in not being fully informed.

Now to the next example. Someone stated that: “The article below said that people are less willing to give when different groups are different status/class/privilege, not necessarily when different in and of itself” This person was referring to the following: Economic versus Cultural Differences: Forms of Ethnic Diversity and Public Goods Provision by Kate Baldwin and John D. Huber. I’d point out there was further research that showed it is more complicated than the original paper’s conclusion: Ethnic divisions and public goods provision, revisited by Rachel M. Gisselquist. Even taking the original paper as is, it still doesn’t answer my criticisms. They aren’t dealing with social identity (race, class, etc) as social construction and social perception created through social control and maintained through social order. That is where such things as segregation come in.

I’m not seeing much good research to explore these more fundamental issues, which leaves them as confounding factors that remain uncontrolled and unaccounted for. There are so many problems and limitations in this area of research. The world we live in was created by centuries of colonial imperialism that has been continuously racist and classist up into the present. What is being measured in any of these countries is not necessarily about diversity but about the legacies of systemic and institutional racism and classism on a global scale. And I’d argue there is no way to separate the racism from the classism, which should be obvious to anyone who has given it much thought. We are talking about complex systems with inseparable factors, such as segregation/ghettoization and integration/assimilation. With diversity, this issue is who gets to define and enforce social identities. Colonial imperialism gave birth to both a particular social/racial/class order and what became the WEIRD culture. The researchers are the inheritors of this all and then enforce their biased views onto their research.

I don’t trust that many of these political and economic researchers understand what is involved. An anthropologist would better understand what I’m talking about, not just the diversity of subjects but more importantly the diversity between scientist and subjects. Researchers from entirely different cultures might approach this far differently. Anthropologists have done much interesting work that probes much deeper than most research (David Graeber could be a useful anthropologist to look into about these overlapping issues). For example, how would an anthropologist who is a Native American study the diversity of Native Americans in states or regions where multiple tribes live, specifically across a history of white supremacy in creating the reservation system? Also, how does the perceived diversity of European-Americans in earlier US history compare to perceived homogeneity of Europeans at present? Might it be important who was in power when diversity was enforced on a population in contrast to when homogeneity was enforced? What about the power dynamic of mostly WEIRD researchers have in a WEIRD society in imposing their views and biases? Is Asia, the majority of the world’s population, diverse as Asians experience it or homogeneous as Westerns perceive it?

Here are the last two I’ll respond to: Why Does Ethnic Diversity Undermine Public Goods Provision? by Habyarimana, Humphreys, Posner, & Weinstein; and Ethnic diversity, social sanctions, and public goods in Kenya by Edward Miguel & Mary Kay Gugerty. These miss a major point. Diversity and homogeneity are built on social constructs. They are dependent on public perception and social control. A society can choose to maintain diversity or not. If we don’t economically and racially/ethnically segregate people while instead treating people fairly and equally, promoting integration and assimilation, and ensuring the social democratic resources and opportunites for all, including geographic and economic mobility… if we do that, then diversity will over the generations turn into homogeneity, as has been historically proven across the world many times over. It has happened repeatedly since the beginning of the species. The Germanic tribes were once diverse, but now they just think of themselves as Germans. The British were once diverse, but have slowly developed a common identity. The Piraha originated from separate ethnic tribes that came together, but now they are just the Piraha. The opposite can happen as well. Take people from the same society and treat them differently. In a short period of time, the two invented groups will immediately take on the new social identities. To go along with this, it won’t take them long to create new cultures, traditions, attire, and ways of talking. You can see this when people join an organization, convert to a religion, get a new group of friends — they will change their appearance and behavior.

Whether enforced from above or taken on by individuals, social influences are powerful. One great example of this was Jane Elliott’s eye color experiment. Along these lines, a ton of interesting studies have been done about the observer-expectancy effect, subject-expectancy effect, Pygmallion/Rosenthal effect. Hawthorne/observer effect, golem effect, etc. I’d add stereotype effect to this list, which deals with group identities more directly. How people are identified doesn’t just shape how they identify but also determines how they are treated and how they behave. Basically, these are self-fulfilling prophecies. Such experiments were only done over short periods. Imagine the results attained by continuing the same experiment across multiple generations or even centuries. Social constructs should be taken seriously, especially when made socially real through disenfranchisement, impoverishment, high inequality, segregation/ghettoization, systemic prejudice and biases, concentrated power, an authoritarian state, police enforcement, and much else. When we are talking about ethnic diversity in terms of immigration and refugee crises, this includes centuries of colonialism, resource exploitation, military actions, covert operations, political intervention, economic sanctions, and on and on. There are long, ugly legacies behind these racial, ethnic, and national divides. In many cases, ethnic immigrants come from countries that were former colonies and have borders that were artificially created by empires. First and foremost, there is the immeasurable diversity of justice and injustice, power and oppression. Diversity as racial order didn’t naturally develop but was violently enacted, a racial ideology shaping racial realities.

So what do these people think they are studying when they research diversity? And what are they actually studying? The confounding factors are so immense that it’s hard to wrap one’s mind around it. About people who study and discuss these kinds of topics, one gets the sense that many of them aren’t deep and careful thinkers. Things that seem obvious to me never occur to them. Or else these things do occur to them but for ideological reasons they can’t acknowledge them. I wonder what some people even think diversity means. As I’ve said before, I have more in common with a non-white Midwesterner than I have with a white Southerner. And I have more in common with a non-white American than a white European. Diversity of skin color doesn’t necessarily correlate to diversity of ethnicity, language, religion, etc. The average African-American shares the same basic culture as other Americans. A large part of African-Americans should technically be called European-Americans, both in terms of genetics and culture. As Thomas Sowell argues, African-Americans don’t have an African culture, rather a Southern culture. What makes African-Americans stand out in the North is that because of segregation they have more fully maintained their Southern culture. But that depends on where one lives. Here in Iowa City, most of the African-Americans are either immigrants of African ethnicties or individuals whose families have been in the region so long that they are assimilated to Midwestern culture, but African-Americans with Southern culture are rare around here.

If cultural diversity is what is deemed problematic, then that has nothing directly to do with skin color. But if we are talking about conflict based on skin color, that is simply an issue of racism. So, what exactly are we concerned about? Let’s get clear on that first. And then only after considering all the evidence, let’s begin the process of honest debate and informed analysis.

The Master’s Tools Are Those Closest At Hand

For the master’s tools will never dismantle the master’s house. They may allow us temporarily to beat him at his own game, but they will never enable us to bring about genuine change.

That is an awesome quote by Audre Lorde. It was published in the 1984 Sister Outsider, but originally was written as comments to a 1979 feminist conference. It has stood the test of time. If anything, it is more relevant than ever.

In discussing Ursula K. Le Guin’s take on it, I wrote a long piece a few years ago exploring what it means. It is a deceptively simple metaphor, the master’s house and the master’s tools, but the implications are hard-hitting. As Le Guin considered,

“Are there indeed tools that have not been invented, which we must invent in order to build the house we want our children to live in? Can we go on from what we know now, or does what we know now keep us from learning what we need to know? To learn what people of color, the women, the poor, have to teach, to learn the knowledge we need, must we unlearn all the knowledge of the whites, the men, the powerful? Along with the priesthood and phallocracy, must we throw away science and democracy? Will we be left trying to build without any tools but our bare hands?”

All around us are the master’s tools for this is the master’s house. Everything here is the master’s, unless someone has smuggled something in from elsewhere. Otherwise, we’ll have to get out of the master’s house in order to find new tools. But how do we escape without using the tools we have at hand, even if they belong to the master?

Lorde was writing as a black lesbian and radical feminist. I’m a straight white guy who, in my heart of hearts, would love to be in a world where sane moderate liberalism ruled — a rather utopian vision, I know. I’m a reluctant radical, at best. I’ll join the revolution when it starts, but I don’t see myself trying to start a revolution, even as I increasingly see it as inevitable. White male privilege aside, I’m no more happy dwelling in the master’s house than anyone else. If all that white male privilege gets me is a working class job along with severe depression and growing hopelessness, I’d like to get a refund.

That is the problem. In reading Lorde’s essay, she obviously wasn’t speaking to people like me. I wasn’t the intended audience. As a white guy, I guess I’m supposed to feel identified with the masters, but what does my skin color matter when the powerful don’t see me and what does my masculinity matter when I feel politically impotent. It’s not like I’m going to find comfort and inspiration from a new white patriarch elected to rule over the land.

Whites right now are the only demographic with worsening mortality rates. Plus, suicide and homicide always get worse under Republican administrations, as the data shows. Drug addiction, specifically opioid addiction, for whatever reason hits whites more than minorites and right now Americans are dropping like flies from opioid overdose. These are probably not accidental deaths, considering that whites have disproportionate rates of both drug addiction and suicide. Some of the data indicates that the worsening mortality rates among whites is at least partly caused by drug addiction.

Yet Lorde writes in the same essay that,

“Women of today are still being called upon to stretch across the gap of male ignorance and to educated men as to our existence and our needs. This is an old and primary tool of all oppressors to keep the oppressed occupied with the master’s concerns. Now we hear that it is the task of women of Color to educate white women — in the face of tremendous resistance — as to our existence, our differences, our relative roles in our joint survival. This is a diversion of energies and a tragic repetition of racist patriarchal thought.”

I get the point she is making. It is true, if limited.

Most poor people are white. Most welfare recipients are white. Most police brutality victims are white. And most prisoners are white. This was even more true several decades ago when Lorde wrote the above words. Yet no where in her collection of essays and speeches, Sister Outsider, does she talk about poor whites and their plight. Why is it the responsibility of poor whites to stretch across the gap of the ignorance of middle class black feminists?

The problem is that even radicals like Lorde don’t take their radicalism far enough. Being a poor white single mother, a mentally ill homeless white veteran, or a politically disenfranchised white ex-con is also about intersectionality. Someone like Lorde had more in common with the middle class white feminists she complained about than she had in common with the majority of whites on the bottom of society. These poor whites apparently were invisible to her. Or worse, she simply dismissed them out of hand. It didn’t mean she was a bad person. It just shows she was a human like the rest of us, with cognitive biases and blindspots. What she didn’t fully appreciate is that identity politics is yet another of the master’s tools.

That was something Martin Luther King, jr very much understood. Right before his assassination, he reached out to poor whites in the hope of creating a movement that cut across racial divides. Even early Black Panthers somehow were able to realize that their fate was tied with the fate of poor whites. In expressing his gratitude, William Fesperman said in 1969,

“Our struggle is beyond comprehension to me sometimes and I felt for a long time [that poor whites] was forgotten … that nobody saw us. Until we met the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party and they met us and we said let’s put that theory into practice.”

Identity politics is one of the master’s most useful tools. The political right will always be better at wielding such a tool. Consider Clinton’s clumsy attempt to use racial and feminist identity politics, as compared to Trump’s ease with identity rhetoric. Identity politics is a blunt tool that leads to blunt results. It smashes everything down, inevitably being turned against those who are different.

The oppression we face is not demographic. It’s systemic. Angela Davis, long known for her early association with the Black Panthers, wrote that,

“More than once I have heard people say, “If only a new Black Panther Party could be organized, then we could seriously deal with The Man, you know?” But suppose we were to say: “There is no Man anymore.” There is suffering. There is oppression. There is terrifying racism. But this racism does not come from the mythical “Man.” Moreover, it is laced with sexism and homophobia and unprecedented class exploitation associated with a dangerously globalized capitalism. We need new ideas and new strategies that will take us into the twenty-first century.”

To be fair, Lorde touched upon this insight by way of a related observation about the human condition. Another piece from the collection is “Age, Race, Class and Sex”. In it, she wrote:

“The old definitions have not served us, nor the earth that supports us. The old patterns, no matter how cleverly rearranged to imitate progress, still condemn us to cosmetically altered repetitions of the same old exchanges, the same old guilt, hatred, recrimination, lamentation, and suspicion.

“For we have, built into all of us, old blueprints of expectation and response, old structures of oppression, and these must be altered at the same time as we alter the living conditions which are a result of those structures. For the master’s tools will never dismantle the master’s house.

“As Paulo Freire shows so well in The Pedagogy of the Oppressed, the true focus of revolutionary change is never merely the oppressive situations which we seek to escape, but that piece of the oppressor which is planted deep within each of us, and which knows only the oppressors’ tactics, the oppressors’ relationships.”

From one of the last pieces in Lorde’s book (“Learning from the 60s”), she furthers this thought. She states that,

“As Black people, if there is one thing we can learn from the 60s, it is how infinitely complex any move for liberation must be. For we must move against not only those forces which dehumanize us from the outside, but also against those oppressive values which we have been forced to take into ourselves. Through examining the combination of our triumphs and errors, we can examine the dangers of an incomplete vision. Not to condemn that vision but to alter it, construct templates for possible futures, and focus our rage for change upon our enemies rather than upon each other. In the 1960s, the awakened anger of the Black community was often expressed, not vertically against the corruption of power and true sources of control over our lives, but horizontally toward those closest to us who mirrored our own impotence.”

So, she realized the danger. The easiest target for the oppressed has always been other people who are oppressed. Those in power, no matter the political party, want nothing more than to keep the American public divided. The specific danger is that the master’s tools are those most familiar to us, the ones nearest at hand. We should never forget that, if we ever hope to find different tools to build a new society.

American Class Bigotry

“The system is still structured in such a way that one percent of the population owns 43 percent of the wealth, you end up with an embrace of gay and lesbian brothers and sisters, especially upper–middle class and above, but the gay poor, the lesbian poor, they’re still catching hell . . . It’s not just black. It’s white. It’s brown. It’s the structure of a system . . . it’s worse [than ever].”
~ Cornel West

American society is divided by class and, ideology and parties aside, united according to class. Class identity and class conflict are the defining features.

That is because the lives of Americans are determined by class more than anything else, more than even race. Poor whites and poor blacks have more in common than either has with wealthy whites and wealthy blacks. This is seen in the most basic aspects of lives. The poor are more likely to live next to, work with, attend school with, be friends with, or even marry a poor person of another race than they are to do any of those things with a wealthy person of the same race. The class social order creates entirely different realities that Americans live within.

Racial animosity among the poor is often a result of proximity, not distance. But even then race is rarely the most important issue in the average person’s life. Most people simply worry about daily concerns of life, of getting by and making ends meet. It’s primarily the more economically privileged who have greater ability to racially segregate themselves by living in suburbs, gated communities, and gentrified neighborhoods, by attending elite colleges and sending their kids to private schools.

It is the middle-to-upper classes, a minority of the population, that hold not just most of the wealth but also most of the power and influence along with the privileges, opportunities, and resources that go with it. They don’t tend to worry about their next pay check, medical bills, paying rent, factory closings, home foreclosures, etc. In their greater luxury, these people are free to concern themselves about political galas, partisan campaigning, fundraising events, party primaries, political activism, identity politics, and culture wars. The rest of the population is mostly too busy living their lives and too disenfranchised from the system to worry about what concerns the economically well off.

It’s only the political class, not the majority of Americans, that are divided or like to pretend to be divided. But when it comes to issues of real political power and social privilege, most Republicans and Democrats of the political class are equally neocons and neoliberals. The political rhetoric that is used to create a mood of melodrama and divisiveness is rather superficial and misleading. Most Americans agree about most issues. Most Americans are for BOTH gun rights AND gun regulations, for BOTH abortion rights AND abortion limits, etc. Yet the divide and conquer strategy is quite effective, if only in terms of a sleight-of-hand diversion. It’s easy to rile people up momentarily or simply to demoralize them with the media-propagated sense of conflict.

There is a cynicism in how the political and media elite use these kinds of issues. They create an image of public opinion that doesn’t match the reality of public opinion. The ruse would be shown for what it is, if more of the population were to vote or revolt. It works so effectively because each individual realizes that the media-portrayed reality doesn’t match their own positions and experiences, which makes them feel disconnected from others and alienated from mainstream society, never realizing that people like them are the majority. It’s a highly developed form of social control, since it’s much easier for an elite to rule if the majority doesn’t realize they’re a majority.

The elite have a superior and often condescending attitude toward the rest of society. This expresses itself in many ways, from smug paternalism to righteous judgment, from fear of the dirty masses to opportunistic manipulation. You find it in how politicians of both parties act and in how the media talks. Listen to what Charles Murray says about poor whites in Fishtown, how Thomas Sowell talks about redneck culture, J.D. Vance’s admonishments of hillbillies, Bill Cosby’s criticisms of inner city blacks, etc. And that is just from the political right. The liberal class is known for this as well, specifically among the Clinton New Democrats and the mainstream media that is aligned with them. Smug liberalism was particularly bad this past campaign season and the arrogance of the liberal media was breathtaking.

Speaking of an elite can be misleading, though. The class divide can be remarkably slim at times. With economic troubles increasing and economic mobility decreasing, it’s getting easier and easier for the  upper class to slip down to the middle class and the middle class middle class to slip down to the working class while the working class itself falls further behind. But class identity maintains itself long after such changes occur, because as the entire class spectrum shifts downward almost everyone maintains their relative position within the hierarchy. It’s easy to forget how many Americans are on the bottom of society and how little it takes to gain a bit of class privilege.

The perceived or self-identified elite isn’t always extremely distant, either economically or geographically. Most Americans are working class without a college education. So, simply getting a college education leading to even the most minimal of professional jobs makes one a class above most of the population. It doesn’t matter that the public school teacher or county naturalist may make less money than someone with a good factory job. Class is ultimately an identity and having a college education can give someone a sense of superiority, no matter how slight it can sometimes be in economic terms.

What the college education can give an individual is potentially a position of authority, as even the most lowly of professional jobs can offer. A public school teacher can speak with authority to parents and the county naturalist can speak with authority to small farmers, and in both cases they have government backing their authority, even if that authority has little real force of power. It’s still a greater social position within the social hierarchy and that comes with certain privileges that are easily seen by those further down the ladder of respectability.

This is even seen in some traditionally working class jobs. Someone I know recently got a college degree and was hired on with the city department of parks and recreation. The previous head of the department liked to hire people who grew up on farms as they have practical knowledge about machinery, tools, etc. But the new head of the department prefers to hire college grads who have professional training as naturalists and so have expertise in forestry management, prairie restoration, controlled burns, etc. So, the newly hired employees are treated with more respect in the department and likely they’ll be promoted more quickly and paid more than the older workers. Working class experience and abilities are becoming increasingly irrelevant and of less economic value, hence of less social value. This person, simply by going to college, is now in a better position than most Americans. That certainly creates conflict in society and in the workplace.

It isn’t just that someone goes to college. It’s also what makes that possible. This person was raised upper middle class by college-educated parents. They made sure he took college preparation classes in high school, always encouraged him to go to college, and were willing and able to pay part for his college education. Plus, they modeled certain behaviors for him and helped him in school when asked. Most Americans never get these kinds of advantages that are the norm for middle-to-upper class families. At the most basic level, this is a very real class privilege, even when it is far from being part of the ruling elite.

I know many liberals who didn’t spend most of their lives in big cities in coastal states. They have all resided more years in rural farm states than anywhere else, but that has included living in liberal places like this Iowan college town. This creates a different mentality from someone in the same state who grew up on a farm or in an industrial town and who never went to college or lived in a college town. There are many college graduates in this liberal college town with working class jobs, but it is nothing like being working class in most places in the country working at some crap job like McDonald’s or Walmart.

I see how this different mentality effects people. Many of the people I know are good liberals. None of them are wealthy, often only a generation from working class, and yet they tend to have a strong sense of class identity, not unusually looking down on the poor. One liberal I know has made fun of coworkers for missing teeth. And another refuses to let his daughter play with the poor white children in the neighborhood. They dismiss poor whites as methheads and talk about tweakers for Trump. This also includes some fear and judgment of poor minorities, perceived as moving in from Chicago. It’s a strong sense of those other people being somehow inferior and unworthy, sometimes simply condescension but not unusually mockery. It’s not that they would openly be cruel toward the poor, but the attitude of superiority has to leak out even if unconsciously and I’m sure others pick up on it.

Some of that class consciousness was probably inherited from the larger society, learned from the behavior of older generations and absorbed from the media. That still wouldn’t explain how it came to be expressed so strongly in those who one might think, as liberals, shouldn’t be prone to class bigotry. Maybe it’s because many people I know, as with many of our generation, haven’t done as economically well as the previous generation. This creates class anxiety which is clear in many people having economic worries. The one thing they’ve got going for them is a college education. It’s what they have to prove their worth in the world and they hold the class attitude of seeing the lower classes as ignorant. Many of these people are of the liberal class of professionals, even if only barely.

This isn’t limited to liberals, of course. It’s just that I’ve become more aware of it among liberals. And it somehow seems worse when I observe it in liberals, as it contradicts how liberals see themselves. Many conservatives see no shame in class bigotry, as it is part of the conservative worldview of meritocracy and Social Darwinism. But in liberals, it feels particularly hypocritical.

For liberals, this also mixes up with identity politics. I’ve heard Democrats try to dismiss Bernie Sanders supporters and Donald Trump supporters by invoking what, to the liberal mind, are supposed to be protected groups. It was assumed that minorities, women, and LGBTQ people all supported Hillary Clinton. This was total bullshit, but it’s how a certain kind of liberal sees the world. In reality, Sanders won the majority of young and the poor, including among minorities and women and probably the LGBTQ as well. Then some of these people apparently went over to vote for Trump, as impossible as that seems to the liberal class.

This is an example of class disconnection. Economics doesn’t seem all that important when one has no serious and immediate economic problems. If you are of the liberal class, even on the lower end, most of the minorities and gay people you know are going to also be of the liberal class. This creates a distorted view of demographic identities. If you are a poor minority woman, Clinton’s middle class white feminism means little to you. If you are a working class gay man who lost his job when the factory closed, your most pressing concern at the moment isn’t same sex marriage. Worrying about such things as transgender bathrooms is a class privilege.

For most lower class people, gender and sexuality issues are far down the list of priorities. Even among working class straight white males, they don’t particularly care about culture war issues. Democrats have been pushing social liberalism for decades and yet the majority of the white working class kept voting for them. It was economics, stupid. The white working class isn’t going to vote against their own interests. It’s just that this election they didn’t see a corporatist candidate like Clinton as being in their best interest, whether that meant they chose to vote for another candidate or not vote at all.

The response of the liberal class is a clueless class bigotry. And if they’re not careful, Democrats will become the new party of class bigots, protecting the interests of the shrinking middle class against the interests of the growing working class. That would be a sad fate for the once proud working class party. The working class would be abandoned, left to fend for themselves with no party that represents them. Then the class divide will be complete, as economic inequality becomes a vast chasm. And the further the divide grows, the worse conflict will become. We might see some real class war, of the kind not seen for generations.

Is the smug satisfaction of class bigotry worth the harm it causes? As the economy worsens, perceived class position won’t save anyone nor will a sense of superiority be much comfort. Instead of Americans turning on one another, it would be to everyone’s advantage to see their interests more in line with the lower class majority than with the wealthy ruling elite. Even the rich would be better off in a society with less wasteful divisiveness and greater benefit for all.

Racists Losing Ground: Moral Flynn Effect?

I’ve been ‘debating’ with the new variety of racist who denies being racist. He claims that it isn’t his fault that he is prejudiced against blacks, because he believes their supposed inherent inferiority means they don’t deserve to be treated as equal.

See? He isn’t racist. He is just being realistic. It’s race realism.

Then again, I’m not sure this kind of racism is genuinely new. Your average Klansman or slave owner probably never thought of themselves as racists. They too surely thought they were being realistic. It was just the way the world was. The races were distinctly different. Some people were just better than others from birth. It requires no modern understanding of genetics to think this way.

Anyway, what blows my mind about this ‘realism’ is how unrealistic it is. This guy will point to a few facts and argue it proves he is right. Yet at the same time he will dismiss or simply ignore the dozens of sources of data that I offer. Then later on he will act like all that contrary info doesn’t exist.

It’s a strange cognitive blindness. In some ways, I think he is absolutely sincere in his unacknowledged racism. He isn’t being a troll. He just lacks any sense of objectivity. He simply cannot see what doesn’t fit his worldview. It is the ultimate form of political correctness. He doesn’t merely deny the validity or moral worth of what he disagrees with, for he denies its very existence. What isn’t politically correct in his mind has no compelling sense of ‘reality’ in his experience.

At times, I’d call this willful ignorance. But as I’ve come to believe, I doubt that such people have enough self-awareness to be willful about much of anything. It is so deep in their psyche that it isn’t a decision they make. Their brains are straight-up incapable of processing divergent information.

He is a perfect example of confirmation bias and the backfire effect, which according to studies does strongly correlate to social conservatism and prejudice. One of the saddest results of this is that it has been demonstrated that white people, when presented with evidence of racism, become more racially biased (and undoubtedly, along with it, more socially conservative).

I’d bet a similar pattern is even found with white liberals. It might be along the lines of how liberals who saw video of the 9/11 attacks became more supportive of Republican policies of War on Terrorism. Liberalism gives some protection against such reactionary stances, but even liberalism has a tough time resisting the persuasion of fear.

The difference is important, though, in that conservatives live in a near permanent state of fear that is just below the surface. This takes the form of a background sense of anxiety, a need for order, and a strong disgust response. It is why social conservatism isn’t just correlated to prejudice, but also repulsion toward rotten fruit and hypochondria.

It is also why social conservatives and racists have on average lower IQs. In the studies, it is shown that conservatives have less capacity for abstract thought and cognitive load. To put it simply, they can’t deal well with either complex thought processes or anything that demands too much simultaneous cognitive activity.

This is why conservatives prefer highly focused activities. Conservatives do have a talent for excluding things from their focus, what is called a thick boundary (and for some activities this is an advantage; e.g., surgery). This is obviously related to such things as racism and xenophobia, as a thick boundary also means excluding people from their psychological experience and social identity.

Categories seem more rigid to those on the political right, and racists embody this most clearly. They take reification to heart. An idea like race is never just an idea to them. It doesn’t matter to them that a scientific consensus has formed in support of the view that the folk taxonomy of races is a social construct, rather than a scientifically valid category.

Those on the political right are constantly complaining about liberal political correctness. I’m not saying that political correctness isn’t found on the left, but I don’t think that is what is fueling the complaint. There is an obvious component of projection involved.

I’m not being politically correct when I disagree with racists. I’m not denying the data they cherrypick. I simply point out that they are ignoring a lot of data and alternative interpretations. The data doesn’t speak for itself. There is nothing about the data that forces one to become a racist. Prejudice is what we bring to the data, not what the data proves.

I’ve often argued with racists that I’m not arguing for any particular position. I don’t have a dogmatic ideology to defend, as does the racist. I’m open to multiple perspectives. I’m even open to genetics and culture playing a role, but I’m also open to there being a complex interplay between those factors and everything else, from epigenetics to environmental conditions. Anyone who has to defend a preconceived conclusion and deny all that contradicts it isn’t taking the issue seriously on its own terms.

The problem is there isn’t an even playing field in such ‘debates’. The average non-racist is more intelligent than the average racist. It isn’t even about education, as even when confounding factors such as education are controlled for, this IQ disparity persists. Even more well educated racists tend to have lower IQs than those of comparable education levels.

The ironic part of this is that this phenomenon is largely environmental. As Stephanie Pappas over at Live Science explained:

“People with lower cognitive abilities also had less contact with people of other races.

“”This finding is consistent with recent research demonstrating that intergroup contact is mentally challenging and cognitively draining, and consistent with findings that contact reduces prejudice,” said Hodson, who along with his colleagues published these results online Jan. 5 in the journal Psychological Science.”

So, interacting with those who are different not only decreases prejudice but also increases intelligence. The two are inseparable. This supports the argument for the Moral Flynn Effect, rising cognitive capacity parallels rising moral capacity, for both depend on brain health and mental development.

The other irony is that it is low IQ racists who are prone to dismiss blacks because of their lower on average IQs. The two demographics are similar, as both demographics have higher rates of social conservatism. The hatred racists feel toward blacks probably is closely linked to an awareness of their similarities. It’s the reason my working class grandfather hated blacks. It’s why so many groups in American society have clung to their group identities, of course seeing their group as better than all others.

Social conservatism also correlates to lower economic class. When one lacks economic security, a sense of group solidarity becomes all the more important, be it solidarity of race, ethnicity, religion, or whatever. Furthermore, the conditions of being on the poorer end of the scale are less conducive toward optimal brain development. The lower classes are more likely to have nutritional deficiences, to live in food deserts, to miss meals because of lack of money, to be exposed to toxic environments, to experience more social stress and child abuse, etc. Studies again and again show the massive impact this has on the developing brain.

An example of this is that social conservatives, both white and black, have stronger support for spanking children. Studies have shown that spanking children correlates to lower IQ. I’m not sure the causal link is proven, but it seems plausible that the regular stress of being hit by one’s parents could cause stunting of cognitive development. It is known that other forms of stress have a direct causal impact on brain growth.

Sure, poor minorities get hit the worst by these dire conditions. But it’s not as if all whites are middle and upper class. Poor whites show all the same kinds of cognitive issues and social problems.

Racism is a bit different, though. The more overt forms of bigotry are more common among the lower classes. Yet, even when poverty is controlled for, racists still show lower IQs. Other aspects of the social environment are just as important as poverty. For example, white flight to the suburbs and later gentrification created the conditions of low diversity, the very factor most closely associated with prejudice. What these wealthier whites share with the poorer whites is this racial homogeneity of their respective communities, as even poor whites tend not to live around as many blacks, poor or otherwise.

On the opposite side, it doesn’t take wealth to make someone more likely to be socially liberal as an adult. It only requires a diverse environment in childhood, especially in the context of a large peer group. The more friends a child has and the more diverse are those friends the more that the child will likely be socially and cognitvely challenged, which is to say that later on they will more likely be less racist and more intelligent, specifically fluid intelligence that includes abstract thinking skills.

When dealing with racists, you are on average dealing with people who have less cognitive capacity. They aren’t pretending to not understand what seems obvious to the non-racist. They really don’t understand.

Dogmatic ideology and groupthink are heuristics. They are ways to simplify thinking. When someone has less capacity for complex thought and abstract thought, they need to rely more on heuristics. A lower IQ racist doesn’t treat people as individuals, which would require greater cognitive load than they are capable of. Instead, they just have to see the outward physical features and apply the appropriate ideological category. This allows for easy pre-formed responses to complex realities.

The Moral Flynn Effect gives us some hope. Even the average conservative has a higher IQ than in the past. They are also less overtly bigoted. I think there is a connection between the two. Racism, if it is to continue to decrease, will have to lessen across generations. Those who are racist right now will likely remain racist, but their children will on average be slightly less racist than they are. This is particularly true as the younger generations move into more diverse urban areas.

However, there are other factors moving in the opposite direction. Some police departments are intentionally refusing to hire anyone with IQs that are too high. This means that they are purposely selecting for police officers who will be more prejudiced. Research has also confirmed that police with less education are more likely to abuse their authority and to support violent tactics used in their departments. It is disturbing to consider that the average police officer has an IQ lower than that of the average secretary and the police profession has an IQ range about the same as that of auto mechanics.

It’s unsurprising that one of the results seen is all the data showing that police have racial biases, which they act on (e.g., more likely to shoot an unarmed black person than an armed white person, and this with the data showing whites are more likely to carry illegal weapons). I’m willing to bet the higher IQ officers act in less biased ways. The problem is that policing plays right into racist beliefs. Racially biased cops arrest more blacks even for crimes whites commit at higher rates. Then racist whites point to this arrest data as proof blacks are more violent and criminal.

An interesting point to consider is that studies show, as lower educated police are more abusive, lower educated and lower IQ people in general are more abusive. Most hate crimes are racially motivated. I’m sure lower IQ racists are on average more likely to be violent and criminal, or at the very least more condoning of the violence used against minorities (both private and state-sanctioned). Stand-your-ground laws, for example, have been shown to increase the number of blacks who get legally killed and the number of whites who get away with such murders. Of course, social conservatives, in particular the most racially biased, are fine with this.

There isn’t much we can do about the present generation of racists. The best response is to promote the factors that decrease the dynamic of low intelligence and high prejudice. For certain, we should make sure that the most important positions in society are filled by the most intelligent people, even as we seek to raise up the intelligence of the entire population.

I disagree with race realists that IQ is genetically determined. Even the average low IQ of racists isn’t simply a fate we must accept. Racists are as much victims of their environments as are the minorities they are racist against.

* * * *

Bright Minds and Dark Attitudes:
Lower Cognitive Ability Predicts Greater Prejudice Through Right-Wing Ideology and Low Intergroup Contact
by Gordon Hodson and Michael A. Busseri

Do Racism, Conservatism, and Low I.Q. Go Hand in Hand?
Lower cognitive abilities predict greater prejudice through right-wing ideology.
by Goal Auzeen Saedi

Low IQ & Conservative Beliefs Linked to Prejudice
by Stephanie Pappas

Intelligence Study Links Low I.Q. To Prejudice, Racism, Conservatism
by Rebecca Searles

Liberal or Conservative: Study Finds Childhood Influence
Did you talk back to your parents? Were you fearful or focused?
by U.S. News

White People Are Fine With Laws That Harm Blacks
The futility of fighting criminal justice racism with statistics.
by Jamelle Bouie

The Science of Why We Don’t Believe Science
How our brains fool us on climate, creationism, and the vaccine-autism link.
by Chris Mooney

High IQ = Liberal, Atheist, Monogamous
by James Joyner

Can Someone Be Too Smart To Be A Cop?
By Katie Rucke

Too smart to be a good cop
By Razib Khan

Police Brutality and Deadly Force; How Bias, Power and Lower IQs Kill
by Thomas Parisi

Ferguson And Keeping High-IQ Folks Out Of The U.S. Police Force
by Gary Robinson

Do You Have A High IQ Score And Want To Be A Cop?… Forget It!
Submitted by SadInAmerica

Modern IQ ranges for various occupations
By IQ Comparison Site

Average IQ by occupation (estimated from wordsum scores)
by Audacious Epigone

The Impact of Higher Education on Police Attitudes Regarding Abuse of Authority
by Cody Webb Telep

Use of Force in Minority Communities is Related to Police Education, Age, Experience, and Ethnicity
by Christopher Chapman

Young Poor Darker-Skinned Minority Men

The recent incidents of cops killing poor black men puts the issues into context.

Some have pointed out that poor whites and black women also get killed by cops. But the point is that they don’t get killed as often as poor black men. Also, rich black men don’t get killed either very often. Bill Cosby doesn’t have to worry about being shot.

It isn’t just getting disproportionately shot that is the problem. The entire criminal system directs itself most strongly against poor black men. Actually, it is young poor black men. To be yet even more precise, it is young poor darker-skinned minority men, as research shows that darker skin leads to greater racial bias.

Simply being a lighter-skinned young poor black man will likely save you some grief with the police. Or being a woman will make a major difference in how likely you are to be arrested and convicted for the exact same crimes committed by a man. Or just aging a bit transforms a dangerous threat to society into a wise old black man.

It isn’t just a race issue. It isn’t just a conflict between whites and blacks. It involves a centuries-old class war and much else besides.

It’s this combination of factors that is so strange to my mind. All of it gets mixed up. Why is the young poor black man the ultimate in bigoted scapegoating and police targeting? What does this stereotype represent in our collective psyche?

Paranoia of a Guilty Conscience

A big issue in the city I live in, Iowa City, is the racial disparity in arrests. This is a problem all across the country, but the data shows that this town has one of the highest disparities in the country. That contradicts the liberal self-image of this middle class white college town.

This relates to the majority white population here being freaked out about black people from Chicago. White people and wealthy people from Chicago, however, are perfectly fine. Just not those low class gangbangers and welfare queens.

When my parents moved back to town in 2008, there was an unusual spike in criminal activity or at least a spike in the media’s attention on criminal activity. I always wondered if there was any real change in crime, though. There was some youth gang activity, but it mostly seemed like high schoolers pretending to be in gangs.

The black issue became all the buzz, despite the fact that the spike of murders that year all came from middle class white people, including a banker and a mother who separately killed their families. Of course, no one fear-mongered about the dangers of middle class white people going berzerk. But some black youth shoplifting sure did get a lot of attention.

A recent article in the local alternative media (Study Shows IC Police Stop Minority Drivers At Disproportionate Rates) cleared up something I’ve been wondering about for some years now:

“However, despite the 2008-2009 uptick, data show violent crime has still trended downward over time, even in those so-called high-crime neighborhoods.”

Even as the media obsessed over violent crime incidents, the actual rate of violent crime was going down. This has been true nation-wide. Many people think violent crime is worse right now in the US, despite it being at the lowest point in my lifetime.

How can we have a rational public debate when the public’s view of reality is so distorted by media? This irritates and frustrates me.

I did find some data on crime rates in Iowa City (from usa.com). It even breaks it down, although not in as much detail as i’d prefer. It only includes data between 2005 and 2012 and so, unfortunately, the larger trends can’t be seen.

Within that limited timeframe, it shows Iowa City’s crime rates are about the same as for all of Iowa. And Iowa’s crime rates are generally low by national standards.

For example, Iowa City’s murder rate is extremely low for most years. But there was that temporary jump in the murder rate for 2008. The murder rate for that particular year stands out as the murder rate for years before and after it are so low, typically at zero for most years. Iowa, in general, has one of the lowest homicide rates and one of the lowest gun homicide rates in the entire country, and that should be put in the context that Iowa has a high gun ownership rate.

The only Iowa City crime rate that is above the national average is for rape. And that is probably because it is a college town. I would guess that all college towns with on average younger populations have higher than average rates of rape. Whereas towns with on average older populations probably have lower rates of rape. Young people tend to rape more than old people. Also, as other data shows (from insideprison.com), the high rate of rape in Iowa City is mostly rape by acquaintances that occur in residences/homes, not roving gangs of Chicago black thugs randomly defiling young white maidens.

The violent crime rates have been going down in this town, in this state, in this country, and across the world. We haven’t seen such low rates of violent crime since a half century ago when it dropped down from a high rate earlier in the 20th century. What is this obsession with imaginary violence? And why are real blacks getting blamed for it?

As the data shows, blacks are less likely to commit crimes such as using illegal drugs, carrying illegal drugs, and carrying illegal guns. Yet blacks are more likely to be stopped, searched, arrested, harshly judged, and imprisoned for these crimes. Most of the murders in this country aren’t committed by blacks. Besides, most of the murders by blacks are committed against blacks, just as most murders by whites are committed against whites. In a majority white place like Iowa City, why are people so worried about blacks who are a tiny percentage of the population?

It is hard to see how this can be explained by anything besides racism. In Racism: A Very Short Introduction (p. 11), Ali Rattansi puts it in the context of one particular piece of data:

“It is even more difficult to decide exactly how racism might be involved in, say, the fact that in the USA black men are 10 times more likely to go to prison than whites, and 1 in 20 over the age of 18 is in jail. Or, as revealed in an Amnesty International report of 2004, why black defendants convicted of killing whites have been sentenced to death 15 times more often than white defendants convicted of killing blacks. Also, blacks convicted of killing other blacks in the USA are only half as likely to suffer the death penalty as when they are convicted of killing whites. Is this racism at work? Where does this and similar instances fit into the American, and indeed general, narrative of racism?”

One should be forgiven for jumping to the conclusion that American society puts a lesser value on the lives of blacks. I sometimes wonder if the real fear that many white Americans have is that the maltreatment and injustice committed against blacks might one day come home to roost, that blacks would do the same to whites if given the opportunity. Basically, it seems like the paranoia of a guilty conscience.

* * * *

6/22/14 – I came across something that fits this post perfectly.

It is a review of a book about racism and the media in Iowa City. That is awesome that someone went to the trouble to write a book about it. Now if only Iowa City residents would read it and learn something about the community they live in.

The book is A Transplanted Chicago: Race, Place, and the Press in Iowa City by Robert E. Gutsche, Jr. The review is How the Media Stokes Racism in Iowa City – and Everywhere by Eleanor J Bader (source: Truthout). Here is part of the review:

“His answer: Unabashed racism. In fact, Gutsche concludes that virtually every news item about the southeast conforms to stereotypes depicting African Americans as lazy, uneducated, dependent on government handouts and prone to criminal or immoral behavior. To make his case, he cites a newspaper article about the opening of a new shelter for homeless families. The story was illustrated by a photo of a black woman leaning against a window. The caption identified her as a Chicago native who had been living in the shelter with her five children for nearly a year. “Just that single sentence says it all,” Gutsche writes, “Poor blacks (especially mothers) continue to come to Iowa City with their children, (far too many for the woman to care for) and take advantage of the city’s good will and resources (by staying in the shelter for nearly a year) . . . The caption was wrong. The woman and her children had only been living in the city – and at the shelter – for a couple of months . . . What is interesting about this caption and photograph is how it matches with dominant discourse surrounding Iowa City’s southeast side and the migration of folks from Chicago to Iowa City.”

“Central to this discourse, of course, is the belief that low-income women, aka “welfare queens,” are taking advantage of government programs and feeding at the trough of public generosity. “Chicago has come to mean more than just another city,” Gutsche concludes. “It signals the ghetto, danger, blackness – and most directly, of not being from here.” That two-thirds of the low-income households registered with the Iowa City Housing Authority were elderly and disabled – not poor, black or from Chicago – went unacknowledged by reporters. Similarly, the drunken escapades of mostly white University of Iowa students have been depicted by reporters as essentially benign and developmentally appropriate. “Just as news coverage explained downtown violence as a natural college experience, news coverage normalized southeast side violence as being the effect of urban black culture,” Gutsche writes. “News stories indicated that drunken packs of college students were isolated to the downtown, whereas southeast side violence was described as infiltrating the city’s schools, social services and public safety.””

* * * *

6/23/14 – Another article compares the safety of states:

“By safety, we’re not referring exclusively to protection from violence and crime. The term encompasses various categories, among them workplace safety, natural disasters, home and community stability, traffic safety and, of course, financial security.”

Both Iowa and Illinois are in the top 10 safest states in the country. Illinois is even ranked at number 3 for the lowest number of assaults per capita. Many people think of Illinois in terms of the media image of Chicago. It turns out that overall Illinois is one of the safest states in the country, even with all those supposedly dangerous inner city blacks. Maybe it is because these are such safe places to live that any act of violence stands out.

 

Class and Race as Proxies

“Perhaps what binds them all together, though, is class. Rural or small town, urban or suburban, the extreme Right is populated by downwardly mobile, lower-middle-class white men. All of the men I interviewed—all—fitted this class profile. When I compared with other ethnographies and other surveys, they all had the same profile as well.

“In the United States, class is often a proxy for race. When politicians speak of the “urban poor,” we know it’s a code for black people. When they talk about “welfare queens,” we know the race of that woman driving the late-model Cadillac. In polite society, racism remains hidden behind a screen spelled CLASS.

“On the extreme Right, by contrast, race is a proxy for class. Among the white supremacists, when they speak of race consciousness, defending white people, protesting for equal rights for white people, they actually don’t mean all white people. They don’t mean Wall Street bankers and lawyers, though they are pretty much entirely white and male. They don’t mean white male doctors, or lawyers, or architects, or even engineers. They don’t mean the legions of young white hipster guys, or computer geeks flocking to the Silicon Valley, or the legions of white preppies in their boat shoes and seersucker jackets “interning” at white-shoe law firms in major cities. Not at all. They mean middle-and working-class white people. Race consciousness is actually class consciousness without actually having to “see” class. “Race blindness” leads working-class people to turn right; if they did see class, they’d turn left and make common cause with different races in the same economic class.”

America’s angriest white men: Up close with racism, rage and Southern supremacy
by Michael Kimmel
from Salon
November 17, 2013

Minority-Majority, Us-Vs-Them, and Racism

There is a Science Daily article about the phrasing and hence framing of the minority-majority issue. It is about research on public opinion and how it can shift, depending on the wording used. I take three main points from the article.

First, there is still plenty of racism in the US. When elicited by an us-vs-them framing, this racism motivates public opinion which leads to political action. Racism, unsurprisingly, will turn otherwise independent white Americans into Republicans.

“They found that participants who had read that California is a majority-minority state tended to lean more towards the Republican Party and rate their ideological attitudes as more conservative than participants who simply read that the Hispanic population had become equal in size to the Black population in the United States.

“Importantly, participants’ political attitudes shifted to the right despite the fact that all of the participants had labeled themselves as politically independent.”

Second, the crux of the matter with us-vs-them is status. White Americans become more conservative when they fear losing status. It is a win-lose mentality, when framed as us-vs-them. This is why racism is inseparable from classism in American society.

“According to Craig and Richeson, the possibility of a majority-minority shift may threaten White American’s perceived status in the long term, thereby making them more likely to endorse conservative policies in the short term.

“Indeed, participants who read that “White Americans are expected to continue to have higher average incomes and wealth compared to members of other racial groups” despite a majority-minority shift did not report more conservative attitudes, presumably because they did not perceive a threat to status.”

Third, framing really does matter. There are many important factors to consider in influencing positive change, but the simple issue of wording should not be overlooked. How something is phrased can determine if the majority of the population responds with support or opposition.

“”We’re working on ways to present information regarding these very real and important shifts in the country’s racial demographics that don’t engender these type of threat responses and, instead, promote positive relations among members of the majority and minority groups,” Craig concludes.”

There is plenty of racism just below the surface. It doesn’t take much to bring it to the forefront, without any explicit racism ever being involved. Racism is so integral to our society that we should tread carefully.