tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8695598.post112699834968589817..comments2023-12-17T19:35:07.459-08:00Comments on Bouphonia: Cultivating GrievancesPhilahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15849261651028725772noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8695598.post-1127717291117776542005-09-25T23:48:00.000-07:002005-09-25T23:48:00.000-07:00"this assumes that test scores are a valid measure..."<I>this assumes that test scores are a valid measure of a useful education, which is questionable.</I>"<BR/><BR/>Certainly not a complete measure, but are you telling me that someone's performance on the SAT does not convey a great deal of information about their education?<BR/><BR/>Do you think that someone who scores, say, 560 combined on the math/verbal is ready for anything beyond low-skilled work?<BR/><BR/>"<I>things you've said betray what I consider to be an incomplete grasp of complex questions that are still very much in dispute.</I>"<BR/><BR/>The claim of complexity is often used as reason to expect nothing to be done until some nebulous problem is ALL solved (and we achieve Utopia). I don't buy into that.<BR/><BR/>"<I>why should an employer hire someone who stands a better than average change of displaying pathological behavior?</I>"<BR/><BR/>Indeed, why? Which is a good reason to provide data like juvenile-crime records to employers, so entire groups don't get tarred with the reputations of their bad apples.<BR/><BR/>"<I>Obviously, you can have lazy, stupid, and corrupt white employees...but are you likely to draw conclusions about "white culture" from that, and change your hiring policies accordingly? Probably not.</I>"<BR/><BR/>Employers have already been forbidden to use IQ tests as a means of weeding out stupid applicants. One of the reasons for the otherwise-meaningless insistence upon college degrees for jobs which do not require them appears to be as a substitute credential; the education establishment does what the employer is not allowed to do. It costs a great deal of money and time, but that's one of the unintended consequences of anti-discrimination law.<BR/><BR/>"<I>I see more far-reaching pathology and destructive behavior in America's boardrooms than in its ghettoes...but perhaps I'm indulging in liberal sophistry.</I>"<BR/><BR/>I'm not happy with them either (I'm particularly fond of ripping on ADM, and general corporate governance appears to be a sham), but those aren't the issues you brought up in this post.<BR/><BR/>"<I>There's no such thing as "feel good" programs; it's a gratuitous, simplistic, pejorative term you invented for the occasion.</I>"<BR/><BR/>Oh, I did, did I?<BR/><A HREF="http://www.joannejacobs.com/mtarchives/013992.html" REL="nofollow">Joanne Jacobs</A><BR/><A HREF="http://talldarkandmysterious.ca/archives/2004/10/18/back-to-basics/" REL="nofollow">Möbius Stripper</A><BR/><A HREF="http://educationation.org/blog/?p=3" REL="nofollow">Professor Plum</A>, <A HREF="http://educationation.org/goodreading.htm" REL="nofollow">a book in his suggested reading</A><BR/><BR/>I'm flattered that you think I invented the term, but as you can see I can claim no credit whatsoever.<BR/><BR/>"<I>if I grow up ingesting deleterious amounts of lead in a public housing project that no one cares to cite for safety hazards, my "failures" are hardly my fault.</I>"<BR/><BR/>Indeed, but it would still make someone unfit for many jobs. And it sure as heck wouldn't be racial discrimination!<BR/><BR/>"<I>it's also a predictable outcome of oppression, which has been seen again and again in cultures throughout the world.</I>"<BR/><BR/>And the left-liberal response appears to be to <A HREF="http://www.joannejacobs.com/mtarchives/015563.html" REL="nofollow">sit on their hands</A> until the consequences of that very problem have been remedied... how?<BR/><BR/>It won't go anywhere as long as people accept excuses. The job is doable; there are existence proofs out there. Refusing to take action on those factors we can influence is abdication of our moral responsibility.Engineer-Poethttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06420685176098522332noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8695598.post-1127374194018748472005-09-22T00:29:00.001-07:002005-09-22T00:29:00.001-07:00E-P, Unfortunately, I suspect no one'll be wanderi...E-P, <BR/><BR/>Unfortunately, I suspect no one'll be wandering back this far. But you went to a fair amount of trouble and deserve to be answered, so I'll take a stab at it my own self.<BR/><BR/>Most of what I have to say is expressed in the next post up, which deals with "caste-like minorities" and the like. I'd suggest that it answers, to some extent, some of your complaints about cultural resistance to "acting white," which is not quite as simple or widespread a phenomenon as you make it sound.<BR/><BR/>It's late, but I'll try to address a few more points:<BR/><BR/><I>Health-care institutions don't discriminate by skin color. They can't.</I><BR/><BR/>What's legally allowable and what happens are two different things. There are studies showing a difference in treatment and diagnosis between blacks and whites, which (unfortunately) I don't have at my fingertips. Cervantes, if he happens back this way, may, since public health is his specific field of expertise.<BR/><BR/><I> (if you look at a scatter plot of test scores vs. per-pupil spending you'll find some amazingly poor performance at the high-spending end and a number of high performers at the low-spending end).</I><BR/><BR/>True, but this assumes that test scores are a valid measure of a useful education, which is questionable. <BR/><BR/>I realize that there are high performers at the low end of the pay scale (I'm obliged to, since my wife teaches low-income, developmentally disabled children), but this, to an alarming extent, relies on a "missionary effect," in which personal moral conviction trumps financial rewards. Really gifted teachers shouldn't have to make this trade-off.<BR/><BR/><I>But it takes something extra to accuse peers who aren't failing of "acting white". That's racism... by the supposed victims.</I><BR/><BR/>It may be, but it's also a predictable outcome of oppression, which has been seen again and again in cultures throughout the world. Again, this is why discrimination is problematic; it evokes self-defeating and dangerous "coping" strategies. Again, see the post above for more details.<BR/><BR/><I> And while they're at it, they could adopt some of the values and strategies which will practically eliminate their odds of being poor:<BR/><BR/>1. Graduate from high school. (A GED is not equivalent.)<BR/>2. Get married before having children.<BR/>3. Have no more than two children.<BR/>4. Work full time.</I><BR/><BR/>This is arrant nonsense. I can't begin to tell you how many people I know who've done all of these things, and then some. None of these actions "practically eliminate your odds of being poor"; to say that they do is pure bluster. <BR/><BR/>You're fairly forthright in your criticisms (which I enjoy, by the way), so I'm going to assume you can take a bit of constructive criticism yourself. Were I to go on your site and make fanciful pronouncements about, say, torque ratios, you'd probably think I was being arrogant and foolish. By the same token, some of the stuff you've said here betrays outright ignorance; other things you've said betray what I consider to be an incomplete grasp of complex questions that are still very much in dispute. I'd like to suggest that you try to develop the same respect for other disciplines that I'm sure you demand for your own. <BR/><BR/><I>(The same probably needs to happen in some white subcultures as well, but the problem either is not as big or gets a lot less news coverage.)</I><BR/><BR/>A little of both, IMO. I do think it's quite true - as I suggested above - that white pathology tends to be individualized, while black pathology tends to be seen as representative. Given that the costs of white-collar crime, for instance, far outstrip the cost to society of street crime, I'd argue that this is somewhat irrational, and (you guessed it) racist.<BR/><BR/><I>As opposed to seeing education as a way to qualify for jobs that will keep me sheltered, fed and in goodies? Anybody should be able to see that; if they can't or won't, there isn't much that anyone else can do for them... or should be expected to.</I><BR/><BR/>See my remarks on effort optimism, in the post above. What you've been setting up here is a situation where the putative horrors of "black culture" makes a certain amount of discrimination seem commonsensical; why should an employer hire someone who stands a better than average change of displaying pathological behavior? Obviously, you can have lazy, stupid, and corrupt white employees...but are you likely to draw conclusions about "white culture" from that, and change your hiring policies accordingly? Probably not. The very arguments you've been making here - which have been common as dirt for decades - demonstrate precisely why minority efforts will not necessarily lead to a good outcome. It seems as though you want to insist that blacks are particularly prone to pathological behavior, while acting as though this fairly widespread supposition has no effect on hiring policies and the like. Correct me if I'm wrong.<BR/><BR/><I>Defending dysfunctional behaviors (one's own or others') as "cultural values" isn't oppression, it's an excuse. </I><BR/><BR/>Huh? We seem to be talking past each other. I'm not defending dysfunction as a cultural value; I'm recognizing dysfunction where it exists, and addressing problems that clearly contribute to it. Personally, I see more far-reaching pathology and destructive behavior in America's boardrooms than in its ghettoes...but perhaps I'm indulging in liberal sophistry.<BR/><BR/><I> Especially when some race-baiter attempts to use it as cause for the status quo to continue no matter what else is done.</I><BR/><BR/>Again...huh? Outside of racists and a handful of economic theorists, I don't know of anyone who wants the status quo maintained.<BR/><BR/><I>If there's anything that educational psychology has to teach us, it's that "feel good" programs are destructive.</I><BR/><BR/>No, no, and no. You're a very intelligent person, and you really need to apply more of your intelligence to this debate. Educational psychology is an extremely wide-ranging field that has many things to teach us, along with certain things that are base and worthless, and certain propositions that are currently undecidable. There's no such thing as "feel good" programs; it's a gratuitous, simplistic, pejorative term you invented for the occasion. And there are many "destructive" policies and problems in America today, which tend to work in concert with one another. You're engaging in prejudicial oversimplification here...and if I applied the same approach to, say, nuclear plants (as I've undoubtedly done), I don't think it would impress you at all.<BR/><BR/><I>Know the easiest and most immediate thing we could do to help these folks find jobs and start feeling good about themselves? Deport all the illegal aliens who've been driving down the wages for unskilled labor and cutting the rungs off the bottom of the economic ladder.</I><BR/><BR/>You're probably right about that. But our economy - and the ideology behind it - <I>depends</I> on driving down wages, and also on disempowering the labor force to the greatest extent possible, which makes illegal workers absolutely ideal. So don't hold your breath.<BR/><BR/><I>It's been forty years since the Great Society. </I><BR/><BR/>Two generations since <I>legal</I> segregation ended, which means that a man who refused to work alongside blacks at age 20 is now age 58. Duly noted. <BR/><BR/><I>calling for the end of those things which perpetuate the problem isn't whining, it's a long-overdue dose of sanity.</I><BR/><BR/>That might be true, if it were really evident that those policies were solely responsible for perpetuating the problems we're talking about. But as it isn't...<BR/><BR/><I>And of course you just know that I'm one of those racist white public voices, despite my characterization of the policies of the Gretna county sheriffs, FEMA and others toward the refugees in New Orleans as beyond outrageous. But that was a week and a half ago and any credit I get for that must have expired, eh?</I><BR/><BR/>To be fair, Kate may not have read that comment of yours, so your sarcasm may be misplaced. <BR/><BR/>But let me make it clear: I don't think you're a racist. But I do think that your "objective" view of these matters is more subjective and irrational than you seem to think.\<BR/><BR/><I>There are black people who believe that acadamic achievement "isn't black", that doing well in school is "acting white", and so forth.</I><BR/><BR/>Again, I'd suggest first that this attitude is not as widespread as you believe, and second that it can sometimes be reinforced by teachers who attempt to separate higher-achieving black students from their peers, which is problematic. There are studies suggesting as much; again, no time to dig 'em up. The cases cited above'll have to do for now.<BR/><BR/><I>What will improve if we don't talk about it? Riddle me that.</I><BR/><BR/>If we don't talk about it? We're talking about it now. As a society, we talk about it constantly. "The Bell Curve" alone has resulted in ten solid years of ongoing, heated debate...always with the subtext that people who are "objective" about race are being "repressed" (e.g., by having their logical fallacies and misuse of data pointed out). Talk about the culture of victimhood!<BR/><BR/><I>Whatever they are, failures and refusal to take responsibility are not legitimate grounds for grievance against others.</I><BR/><BR/>Look, chum...if I grow up ingesting deleterious amounts of lead in a public housing project that no one cares to cite for safety hazards, my "failures" are hardly my fault. If I work hard, and am denied a job because some guy read somewhere that blacks are somehow culturally allergic to hard work and achievement, that's not my fault either. White racism is not the cause of all failures, but neither is black culture. The causes are complex, tangled, and hard to tease apart, and they tend to reinforce each other (as, indeed, do the ideas <I>you're</I> espousing). We can't replace one set of simplistic assumptions with another, and expect solutions. Not all, but too many of your ideas are just the flipside of the crude and simplistic ideas you claim to object to (many of which you've gone out of your way to exaggerate or misrepresent, as I've noted above).<BR/><BR/>That's what I think, anyway. Lots of room for disagreement on these questions, as usual, and it's unlikely there'll be any agreement. <BR/><BR/>On the other hand, I'd be interested to hear what you have to say, from an engineering standpoint, about my post on Ray Kurzweil.Philahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15849261651028725772noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8695598.post-1127354848597274232005-09-21T19:07:00.000-07:002005-09-21T19:07:00.000-07:00Cervantes said:"The alphafetoprotein (AFP) test is...<A HREF="http://bouphonia.blogspot.com/2005/09/cultivating-grievances.html#c112723552944673842" REL="nofollow">Cervantes said</A>:<BR/><BR/>"<I>The alphafetoprotein (AFP) test is a screening test using maternal blood, usually between 15-17 weeks gestation, to help find babies who suffer from neural tube defects (NTD) or Down Syndrome. Use of this test is an indicator of good prenatal care in the first trimester. Gavin found that of Medicaid recipients in 3 states, pregnant women of color were substantially less like to have received this test than were white, non-Hispanic women. Again, same insurance, same access, different treatment.</I>"<BR/><BR/>Down's syndrome is strongly correlated with maternal age. Non-hispanic white women tend to have their children older than the others, and so would be at higher risk for a Down's child. In addition, there is no treatment for NTD's except abortion. If the mother is not willing to consider abortion, what is the reason for doing an AFP test?<BR/><BR/>Unless the examples were matched for age and personal preferences, a difference in test rates means that the doctors were doing what was medically appropriate.<BR/><BR/><A HREF="http://bouphonia.blogspot.com/2005/09/cultivating-grievances.html#c112716490283878790" REL="nofollow">monkeygrinder says</A>:<BR/><BR/>"<I>black children from a poor environment<BR/><BR/>- don't have adequate nutrition to focus in school.<BR/><BR/>- access to health care depends on the American State they live in.<BR/><BR/>- access to good schools depends on the neighborhood they live in. In America, this is the tax base, and it reflects on the quality of the education.</I>"<BR/><BR/>You're making racist distinctions.<BR/><BR/>1. There are more poor whites than poor blacks in the USA, yet you're concentrating on problems of blacks (racial as opposed to socioeconomic distinction). Why?<BR/>1a. Are poor whites not susceptible, or as susceptible, to these pathologies?<BR/>1b. If not, why not? Why can't we expect blacks to use the same coping strategies?<BR/>1c. If so, why are you ignoring people just because they're white?<BR/><BR/>2. If poor black children don't have adequate nutrition (despite WIC, free lunches, and every other program designed to help) why not?<BR/>2a. Again, is this a problem particular to poor blacks or all the poor?<BR/>2b. If it's particular to blacks, what's the difference? Are poor black parents making poor choices that the rest of the poor do not?<BR/>2c. If it's not particular to blacks, why are you ignoring people just because they're white?<BR/><BR/>3. Health-care institutions don't discriminate by skin color. They can't. (Communication with patients may suffer and cause differences in treatment, but I've seen nothing to rule out language/cultural differences as the sole cause of that.)<BR/><BR/>4. Schools are what the parents and students make of them. Money has little to do with quality of schools (if you look at a scatter plot of test scores vs. per-pupil spending you'll find some amazingly poor performance at the high-spending end and a number of high performers at the low-spending end). There have been a bunch of examples of schools full of children qualified for free lunches (poor) in minority areas where management was able to produce stellar increases in achievement (here's <A HREF="http://www.joannejacobs.com/mtarchives/015508.html" REL="nofollow">something about Downtown College Prep</A>, and <A HREF="http://www.joannejacobs.com/mtarchives/015500.html" REL="nofollow">a note about a KIPP school</A>.). The failure to attempt to reproduce their results nationwide is one of the biggest errors of the education establishment... which appears more concerned with "constructivist" teaching methods and other drivel. Oh, and it leans strongly to the political left.<BR/><BR/>The success of some schools in producing high achievement with the (poor, minority) student body they've got shows that money isn't the key factor. It may not even be a significant factor. The crucial difference appears to be what the students feel is expected of them and expect of themselves: the culture of the school. If they come to school holding conflicting values or absorb them in the school itself, they're unlikely to get anywhere.<BR/><BR/>I know only too damn well how anti-intellectual general American culture is; I encountered a great deal of it myself, in a high-achieving school mere blocks from one of the top research universities in the nation, in a neighborhood full of professionals and professors. But it takes something extra to accuse peers who aren't failing of "acting white". That's racism... by the supposed victims.<BR/><BR/>That's a cultural value held by too many, and they're going to have to ditch it themselves. Nobody can do it for them. And while they're at it, they could adopt some of the values and strategies which will practically eliminate their odds of being poor:<BR/><BR/>1. Graduate from high school. (A GED is not equivalent.)<BR/>2. Get married before having children.<BR/>3. Have no more than two children.<BR/>4. Work full time.<BR/><BR/>Of these 4 factors, only employment is at all extrinsic. The black dropout rate, black illegitimacy rate (68.8% in 1999 vs. 26.7% for non-Hispanic whites), birth rate and unemployment rate show how much the culture has to change. (The same probably needs to happen in some white subcultures as well, but the problem either is not as big or gets a lot less news coverage.)<BR/><BR/>Nobody can change another person's cultural affiliation. Feeding the victim mentality with sympathy over self-inflicted wounds sends the message that it's someone else's responsibility to fix things; if this message is internalized, it will defeat efforts to change them.<BR/><BR/><A HREF="http://bouphonia.blogspot.com/2005/09/cultivating-grievances.html#c112717343462050450" REL="nofollow">Phila writes</A>:<BR/><BR/>"<I>Beyond that, you have the ability to see education as an abstract ideal that's more or less context-independent.</I>"<BR/><BR/>As opposed to seeing education as a way to qualify for jobs that will keep me sheltered, fed and in goodies? Anybody should be able to see that; if they can't or won't, there isn't much that anyone else can do for them... <B>or should be expected to</B>.<BR/><BR/>"<I>In the first place, there are plenty of white people having kids without a "family structure" to raise them; it's an issue of class as much as race.</I>"<BR/><BR/>Exactly. It is an issue of class, specifically <B>culture</B>. The parents of 73.3% of white children have those values; only the parents of 31.2% of black children do. Not that 26.7% failures is a good thing; it's still a problem to be addressed.<BR/><BR/>"<I>The reason racial oppression is destructive - or one of the reasons - is because it causes serious functional and adaptive problems for the people subjected to it...that's simply a fact.</I>"<BR/><BR/>Defending dysfunctional behaviors (one's own or others') as "cultural values" isn't oppression, it's an excuse. An excuse that has no logical defense, an excuse that we cannot afford, an excuse that ought to be attacked without apology whenever it is put forward. <B>Especially</B> when some race-baiter attempts to use it as cause for the status quo to continue no matter what else is done.<BR/><BR/>If there's anything that educational psychology has to teach us, it's that "feel good" programs are destructive. The only way that people learn anything is by working at it, and the only way that people feel good about themselves is by accomplishing things.<BR/><BR/>Know the easiest and most immediate thing we could do to help these folks find jobs and start feeling good about themselves? Deport all the illegal aliens who've been driving down the wages for unskilled labor and cutting the rungs off the bottom of the economic ladder.<BR/><BR/>"<I>To whine about the completely predictable persistence of those problems is, again, to decide for oneself the timetable and means by which people should "get over" injustice. This is a trifle imperious, in my view, especially given that the injustice is ongoing.</I>"<BR/><BR/>It's been forty years since the Great Society. People have been predicting the ways that it would fail almost from its beginning; calling for the end of those things which perpetuate the problem isn't whining, it's a long-overdue dose of sanity.<BR/><BR/>It would be easier to take accusations of racism seriously (as opposed to despicable attempts to deflect blame away from the accuser's own misdeeds) if it wasn't for hundreds of examples like <A HREF="http://federalism.typepad.com/crime_federalism/2005/09/good_riddance_e.html" REL="nofollow">Ernest Newton</A>.<BR/><BR/>And <A HREF="http://bouphonia.blogspot.com/2005/09/cultivating-grievances.html#c112719452996547006" REL="nofollow">Kate says</A>:<BR/><BR/>"<I>it is racist to make the blanket statement that black culture 'devalues education,' and it's dishonest.</I>"<BR/><BR/>Unlike your straw-man, I did not make a blanket statement (my exact words are <A HREF="http://bouphonia.blogspot.com/2005/09/cultivating-grievances.html#c112714781593565674" REL="nofollow">here</A>, you might want to re-read them). There are many confirmed examples of people saying that it is part of "black culture", so the phenomenon certainly exists. Accusations of racism against people who say that this is part of the problem are also fact.<BR/><BR/>You just provided another. You are excusing (indeed, indulging in) the race-baiting behavior, which makes you part of the problem.<BR/><BR/>What message do you send if you allow people who say that academic achievement is "not black" to go unchallenged? The statistics show the results.<BR/><BR/>"<I>Considering that overall Americans score in the lower 10th percentile in math and science worldwide (while thinking they are in the top 10th) shows that our entire larger culture (of which every black person is a part of, just like you) devalues education to a certain extent.</I>"<BR/><BR/>Tell me something I don't know. The level of ignorance I see (mostly mediated by journalists, but still) has appalled me for at least sixty percent of my life. Stuff that I knew cold as a teenager is mangled by people who ought to know better... and they not only see nothing wrong, some have the gall to get self-righteous when corrected.<BR/><BR/>Claiming ignorance (or worse, revisionist nonsense like "afrocentrism", which ranks right up with the distinction between "German science" and "Jewish science" for racist odiousness) as a cultural value is only worse in degree, not in kind. It all has to be rebutted, because it's going to be a near-impossible stumbling block for anyone who believes it.<BR/><BR/>"<I>I won't even address the idea that black people have it better than white people in our country.</I>"<BR/><BR/>If you aren't going to address it, WHY DID YOU BRING IT UP?<BR/><BR/>"<I>It is flatly foolish to think that there are no remnants of our nation's horrific racist past today.</I>"<BR/><BR/>It's flatly foolish to think that there are no remnants of the British Civil War in our nation today. That doesn't mean that it determines who and what we'll be tomorrow; what we believe and do today will make a difference. Self-flagellation doesn't improve things, and neither does making excuses for failure.<BR/><BR/>"<I>To say that the compounded disaster in New Orleans had nothing to do with race is naive.</I>"<BR/><BR/>Who said that? Oh, right... you did, by allusion. Why?<BR/><BR/>"<I>... nearly everyone with a public voice (and who happen to be white, right?) is denying that race has played a part in the Katrina disaster just as many in the black community are making it clear that they know it has.</I>"<BR/><BR/>And of course you just <I>know</I> that I'm one of those racist white public voices, despite my characterization of the policies of the Gretna county sheriffs, FEMA and others toward the refugees in New Orleans as <A HREF="http://ergosphere.blogspot.com/2005/09/beyond-outrageous.html" REL="nofollow">beyond outrageous</A>. But that was a week and a half ago and any credit I get for that must have expired, eh?<BR/><BR/>"<I>we have a bunch of fundamentalists in charge who shroud their classist and racist policies in euphemistic language and blanket denials.</I>"<BR/><BR/>And a host of other things which led me to ask <A HREF="http://ergosphere.blogspot.com/2005/06/dare-we-call-it-treason-yet.html" REL="nofollow">if it was time to call the administration's policies treason yet</A>. (I'm a completely equal-opportunity attacker of erroneous statements and mistaken policies.) But that was, like, months ago.<BR/><BR/>"<I>As for "politically correct," the reality is that it is politically correct today to argue against multi-culturalism, to say that there is "no racism" while simultaneously enacting racist policies.</I>"<BR/><BR/>Again you're making the racist equivalence between ancestry and culture. Cultures are tool-sets for living and adapting. They evolve over time. Cultural values which fail to provide people with what they need should be abandoned for ones which do; if an entire culture is deficient or defective, people should leave it behind and adopt one that serves better. It's been done.<BR/><BR/>There are black people who believe that acadamic achievement "isn't black", that doing well in school is "acting white", and so forth. Who does this serve? (I could list a number of people whose careers depend on it, but they do not appear to be among the victims.) What purpose is served by letting it go unremarked, the claim unrebutted?<BR/><BR/>What will improve if we don't talk about it? Riddle me that.<BR/><BR/>Whatever they are, failures and refusal to take responsibility are not legitimate grounds for grievance against others.Engineer-Poethttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06420685176098522332noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8695598.post-1127240860696146372005-09-20T11:27:00.000-07:002005-09-20T11:27:00.000-07:00Thanks for the excellent comments, everyone! Espec...Thanks for the excellent comments, everyone! <BR/><BR/>Especially you, Kate...that was beautifully said. And your discussion of the shift in "political correctness" is very valuable...it's something I'll be thinking about a lot, I have a feeling.Philahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15849261651028725772noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8695598.post-1127235529446738422005-09-20T09:58:00.000-07:002005-09-20T09:58:00.000-07:00Eloquent as usual Mr. Lethes.One field where we ha...Eloquent as usual Mr. Lethes.<BR/><BR/>One field where we have a ton of data to prove that racial discrimination continues in the U.S. of A. is in health care. The ubiquity of disparities in care has been extensively documented, including the famous Institute of Medicine review ('Unequal Treatment); and the annual reports mandated by Congress from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. For example, African Americans enrolled in an HMO were found to be less likely than white patients to receive appropriate medications. They're all in the same HMO, they have the exact same insurance. The alphafetoprotein (AFP) test is a screening test using maternal blood, usually between 15-17 weeks gestation, to help find babies who suffer from neural tube defects (NTD) or Down Syndrome. Use of this test is an indicator of good prenatal care in the first trimester. Gavin found that of Medicaid recipients in 3 states, pregnant women of color were substantially less like to have received this test than were white, non-Hispanic women. Again, same insurance, same access, different treatment. And please don't try to tell me that African Americans don't <B>want</B> the right medications, or the right prenatal care. Doctors treat them differently -- the best educated, upper class, progressive, enlightened white folks around. They don't think they're racist, they abhor racism, but they don't give the best care to black people.<BR/><BR/>You could look it up.Cervanteshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11302076828795198187noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8695598.post-1127194529965470062005-09-19T22:35:00.000-07:002005-09-19T22:35:00.000-07:00E-P, it is racist to make the blanket statement th...E-P, it is racist to make the blanket statement that black culture 'devalues education,' and it's dishonest. Considering that overall Americans score in the lower 10th percentile in math and science worldwide (while thinking they are in the top 10th) shows that our entire larger culture (of which every black person is a part of, just like you) devalues education to a certain extent. Many black people value education, even when their communities do not value their education and offer them only sub-par segregated schools (as was the case in New Orleans -- I taught at the community college and the public university there up until last December, and frankly I'd never seen such segregation and racism in action as in that city's education system and I'm from Chicago). <BR/><BR/>Yes, it is also about class. It happens to be, though, that in New Orleans and most other urban centers the class divisions are also racial divisions. Which one came first? It's not too easy to figure out that one, given that it's been less than fifty years since the voting rights and civil rights acts were passed. <BR/><BR/>I won't even address the idea that black people have it better than white people in our country. I just can't believe there are thinking people who are so divorced from reality. <BR/><BR/>It is flatly foolish to think that there are no remnants of our nation's horrific racist past today. It wasn't that long ago that white Louisianans picnicked beneath the hanging corpses of lynched black men, or white Mississippians harrassed and sometimes murdered civil rights workers, black and white, who thought black people were equal to white people. This heritage is alive and well today and it affects both the white and black communities (and our shared community, the dominant one you seem to think black people are separate from). <BR/><BR/>To say that the compounded disaster in New Orleans had nothing to do with race is naive. Every aspect of it had to do with race, from the evacuation plans that were for people with resources while 40% of the city lived below the poverty level (and 70% of the city's residents were black), to the sorry, pathetic response of our federal government. Some commentators have argued that it can't be about race because Mayor Ray Nagin is black, giving no thought at all to the fact that New Orleans has a long history of white and creole rule, the "talented tenth" of the African-American community most recently in charge. There are skin tone racisms too, brought down from the days of blood quantums and mulatto differentiations. This is no better expressed than in the casta paintings of Mexico, direct expressions of the racial delineations that came from the slave trade as it made its way from West Africa to the Caribbean to Veracruz to New Orleans. <BR/><BR/>As for "politically correct," the reality is that it is politically correct today to argue against multi-culturalism, to say that there is "no racism" while simultaneously enacting racist policies. Since the entire government is run by the radical right, there is no way to argue that what was "politically correct" in 1990 is still today. The opposite is true, in fact, which is why nearly everyone with a public voice (and who happen to be white, right?) is denying that race has played a part in the Katrina disaster just as many in the black community are making it clear that they know it has. I always hated that "politically correct" argument because it seemed simplistic and reactionary, but now I find it pathetic and insulting given that we have a bunch of fundamentalists in charge who shroud their classist and racist policies in euphemistic language and blanket denials. Today it is "politically correct" to value corporate interests over human ones, to dismiss those with less than you as meaningless leeches and therefore undeserving of basic human dignity.<BR/><BR/>Phila, I'm glad you posted this. I think it's important, especially during our time of "creating reality" when so many in our country deny what is right in front of us.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8695598.post-1127191906608398132005-09-19T21:51:00.000-07:002005-09-19T21:51:00.000-07:00MG & Phila -- thank you. As a white male, it is v...MG & Phila -- thank you. As a white male, it is very unusual to find this level of quality debate about racism in America. It is a great service to my own sense of reality to find it happening so thoroughly and thoughtfully, here. I can only hope to find a way to speak so candidly myself.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8695598.post-1127173434620504502005-09-19T16:43:00.000-07:002005-09-19T16:43:00.000-07:00E-P,Briefly...A culture which devalues education.E...E-P,<BR/><BR/>Briefly...<BR/><BR/><I>A culture which devalues education.</I><BR/><BR/>Existing within a culture that devalues the education of that culture (cf. Jensen on Head Start, 1969), as well as education in general. There's something of a chicken-and-egg question here. Beyond that, <I>you</I> have the ability to see education as an abstract ideal that's more or less context-independent. Black families don't necessarily have that luxury.<BR/><BR/><I>People who think nothing of having children without making a family structure to raise them.</I><BR/><BR/>In the first place, there are plenty of white people having kids without a "family structure" to raise them; it's an issue of class as much as race. In the second place, there's more to raising healthy kids than the mere presence of two adults. I'd argue that white people in this country are doing a <I>miserable</I> job of raising and educating their children, and that the resulting pathology is at least as pernicious as anything that's happening on the black side of the equation.<BR/><BR/><I>The general devaluation of majority culture as "the other" and throwing out its virtues as well as its vices (baby with bathwater).</I><BR/><BR/>I agree...you shouldn't throw virtues out with vices. But again, it's a chicken-and-egg debate. Who's <I>really</I> the "other" here, ultimately? The reason racial oppression is destructive - or one of the reasons - is because it causes serious functional and adaptive problems for the people subjected to it...that's simply a <I>fact</I>. To whine about the completely predictable persistence of those problems is, again, to decide for oneself the timetable and means by which people should "get over" injustice. This is a trifle imperious, in my view, especially given that the injustice is ongoing. <BR/><BR/><I>The problem is that we aren't allowed to talk about the behavior without being branded racists by the Politically Correct</I><BR/><BR/>I've been hearing this line of talk for decades, and it doesn't impress me much. It's quite true that "political correctness" can be silly, hypocritical, and even oppressive; I said as much in my post. <BR/><BR/>But that doesn't mean that every faux-objective, blinkered dissection of "black pathology" is entitled to a respectful hearing. There's a tendency - particularly on the libertarian side of the debate - to blame "political correctness" for the rejection of arguments that are, in reality, based on shoddy reasoning, received wisdom, dubious statistics, wishful thinking, and willful ignorance.<BR/><BR/>I'll be addressing issues having to do with effort optimism soon enough, so I'll break this off for now.Philahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15849261651028725772noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8695598.post-1127164902838787902005-09-19T14:21:00.000-07:002005-09-19T14:21:00.000-07:00E-P:It is fair -- and true to say -- that white pe...E-P:<BR/><BR/>It is fair -- and true to say -- that white people are scared to discuss black issues, for fear of being called a racist. <BR/><BR/>All of your examples of a healthy culture are probably things that the black middle class shares with you, generally speaking, music videos notwithstanding.<BR/><BR/>Now, if you say "(don't be) a culture which devalues education." to a poor black family, realize that in judging them, you are ignoring some typically white, middle class priviledges:<BR/><BR/>black children from a poor environment<BR/><BR/> - don't have adequate nutrition to focus in school.<BR/><BR/>- access to health care depends on the American State they live in.<BR/><BR/>- access to good schools depends on the neighborhood they live in. In America, this is the tax base, and it reflects on the quality of the education.<BR/><BR/>Class issues like these enforce racism in America. It is not enough to speak truth unto power.<BR/><BR/>That is another reason why white people may not like to talk about race -- the idea that there are structural class differences in America flies in the face of the so-called class-less American dream.<BR/><BR/>And I haven't even discussed overt racism, which Phila covered in his post.JMShttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06199754488740884930noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8695598.post-1127147815935656742005-09-19T09:36:00.000-07:002005-09-19T09:36:00.000-07:00The flip side of this is that some people claim ra...The flip side of this is that some people claim racism whenever someone of the wrong skin tone (i.e. not Bill Cosby) talks about:<BR/><BR/>- A culture which devalues education.<BR/>- People who think nothing of having children without making a family structure to raise them.<BR/>- The general devaluation of majority culture as "the other" and throwing out its virtues as well as its vices (baby with bathwater).<BR/><BR/>Now, it's entirely legit to take someone to task for their personal failings or defective world view. The problem is that some people take a whole bunch of dysfunctional stuff and want it granted immunity as part of "black culture" which is somehow genetically ingrained in everyone of African descent (a very racist notion)... and the consequence is that everyone else has to wonder if any particular AA has subscribed to any of those excuses for bad behavior.<BR/><BR/>The problem is that we aren't allowed to talk about the behavior without being branded racists by the Politically Correct; the consequence is that the idea of racism as a personal fault is being discredited, and real racism grows in the shadows.<BR/><BR/>Sunlight is needed as disinfectant on BOTH sides, no matter how little the people in power want light to shine on things.Engineer-Poethttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06420685176098522332noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8695598.post-1127082120208813392005-09-18T15:22:00.000-07:002005-09-18T15:22:00.000-07:00finally...somebody just said it.finally...somebody just <I>said it</I>.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8695598.post-1127079544940754662005-09-18T14:39:00.000-07:002005-09-18T14:39:00.000-07:00Well. That certainly gave me the heebie-jeebies -...Well. That certainly gave me the heebie-jeebies - I think I may need a shower.<BR/><BR/>This is the Republican blind spot - they look at the policies that are in place to protect minorities and the poor, and "special privileges" are *all* they see, like with the wingnut (whose name escapes me) who referred to those so poor they didn't have to pay taxes as "lucky duckies".<BR/><BR/>Yes, it *is* true that there are some ways in which a pinky is on the scale in favor of minorities, but it's only there in a half-assed attempt to counterbalance the meaty fist that's pressing down on the other side. Black disadvantages, institutional and otherwise, far outweigh any preferential treatment they receive, like those sweet digs in the Astrodome, for example.Elihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16044541756968514349noreply@blogger.com