Article by John Derbyshire |
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| White
Like Me “That’s
white of you, Derbyshire.” I
am just old enough to have had those words addressed to me in earnest,
without, so far as I could discern, any facetious intent.
The addresser was an Englishman I knew in my Hong Kong days 30
years ago. A middle-aged
expatriate, he lived in the same seedy Kowloon rooming house from which I
was just embarking on my lifelong vocation of impecunious idling.
This Englishman had held some decent position in the Hong Kong
civil service, but had been cashiered for taking advantage of Chinese
boys. (Not an unusual case in
the Hong Kong civil service. There
was even an item of expat jargon identifying people of that kind:
“rice queens.”) Having
destroyed his career, and apparently not desiring to return to the mother
country (a very common non-desire among white men in the Far East), this
fellow had decided to drink himself to death, and was pretty far along
with the project. I don’t
know whether his civil service pension had survived the cashiering, but he
seemed to live mainly by sponging, at which he was skillful and
persistent. After successfully sponging HK$20 from me one day, he said
the thing I have just said he said: “That’s
white of you, Derbyshire.” (Or
it might have been: “You’re
a white man, Derbyshire,” I can’t recall the precise formula. At any rate, my whiteness was an essential component of his
gratitude.) Yes,
it was pathetic, but he was a pathetic character, which is one reason I
yielded to his sponging. Another
reason was, that as an innocent young man just learning the ropes about
life in distant places, I was susceptible to appeals based on racial
solidarity — the beleaguered solidarity, I mean, of tiny numbers of
Europeans scattered among native hordes, the solidarity you find echoed in
Kipling
and Sir
Henry Newbolt, Somerset
Maugham and Paul
Scott. Being
myself, so far as acquaintance with the natives was concerned, still at
that early point where they seemed strange and forbidding, rather than
just fellow human beings who happened to speak a different language, I was
receptive to the the idea that we white men must stick together. I
think that was the last time anyone made anything of my whiteness.
Beyond that one brief frisson of racial solidarity 30 years
ago, I can’t say that being white has ever meant much to me. Imagine
my surprise, therefore, to learn from the Washington
Post that “whiteness studies” is now a respectable
academic discipline, taught in at least 30 American universities,
including Princeton, UCLA, and the University of Massachusetts.
The proponents of this new field of scholarly inquiry put out a
great deal of blather about the “need to understand” this and that,
but it is perfectly obvious from a scrutiny of the subject matter that the
main purpose of “whiteness studies” is to make white students hate
their ancestors, and preferably also themselves.
For
example: One item that we
have been told about is the “privilege
walk.” Students
stand shoulder to shoulder in a line across the room.
Then each student either takes a step back, or a step forward, or
stays put, in response to sentences read out by the instructor.
Here are the sentences. I
have appended my own responses in brackets after each sentence:
plus one for a step forward, minus one for a step backward, zero
for staying put. I have also
added any comments that occurred to me. 1.
If your ancestors were forced to come to the USA not by choice,
take one step back. (0. Those white Americans whose ancestors came over as indentured
servants would be entitled to step back, I should think.) 2.
If your primary ethnic identity is American, take one step forward.
(0. This one doesn’t
make sense. “America,”
unlike, say, “Israel,” or “Japan,” or “Finland,” is not the
name of an ethno-state. There
is a good case to be made that the founding fathers thought it should
be; and I know some people in our own time who wish it were; but as
things have worked out, it just isn’t.) 3.
If you were ever called names because of your race, class,
ethnicity, gender, or sexual orientation, take one step back.
(-1. Are they kidding?
As a columnist who regularly speaks his mind on matters of “race,
class, ethnicity, gender, or sexual orientation,” I can submit 100,000
reader e-mails in evidence.) 4.
If there were people of color who worked in your household as
servants, gardeners, etc., take one step forward.
(0.) 5.
If you were ever ashamed or embarrassed of your clothes, house,
car, etc. take one step back. (-1.
Again, are they kidding? What
proportion of the population, of any color, would not step back
here? I estimate 5 percent of
men, some much smaller proportion of women.) 6.
If your parents were professionals:
doctors, lawyers, etc. take one step forward.
(0.) 7.
If you were raised in an area where there was prostitution, drug
activity, etc., take one step back. (0.
There was a time, reader — truly there was, and not so long ago
— when poor people took pride in being honest, chaste, and respectable.
They looked down with scorn on those who took poverty as an excuse
for antisocial behavior. I am
not making this up!) 8.
If you ever tried to change your appearance, mannerisms, or
behavior to avoid being judged or ridiculed, take one step back.
(-1. See my note to
sentence 5.) 9.
If you studied the culture of your ancestors in elementary school,
take one step forward. (+1. My own children, currently in U.S. public schools, are not so
privileged. Their history
lessons thus far have featured mainly Sacajawea, Pocahontas, Frederick
Douglass and Harriet Tubman. I
am sure those were all worthy people;
but I suspect that my kids are acquiring the impression that there
were no white folk at all in the United States until John F. Kennedy
descended from the sky in a golden chariot.) 10.
If you went to school speaking a language other than English, take
one step back. (0.) 11.
If there were more than 50 books in your house when you grew up,
take one step forward. (+1. When
I was a kid, poor people of an unsocial temperament either drank a lot or
read a lot. Hardly ever both
— it’s difficult to read when you’re pickled.
My family were mostly readers.) 12.
If you ever had to skip a meal or were hungry because there was not
enough money to buy food when you were growing up, take one step back.
(0. Oh, for goodness
sake! After 40 years and
several trillion dollars of spending on welfare, are there really any
American college students who can step back here?) 13.
If you were taken to art galleries or plays by your parents, take
one step forward. (0. Unless Christmas pantomime counts — everybody in
England went to those.) 14.
If one of your parents was unemployed or laid off, not by choice,
take one step back. (-1. If I got one step back for every time my Dad was laid off,
I’d be in the next county. He
was wellnigh unemployable. “A
difficult man,” was what everyone said.
“He couldn’t take orders,” was my mother’s explanation.) 15.
If you attended private school or summer camp, take one step
forward. (0.) 16.
If your family ever had to move because they could not afford the
rent, take one step back. (-1.) 17.
If you were told that you were beautiful, smart and capable by your
parents, take one step forward. (0.
These blinkered idiots don’t know jack about any culture outside
late-20th-century middle-class America.
My parents, or any other English parents, would no more have
thought to say such things to me than they would have thought of embracing
me and murmuring: “I love
you, Johnnie.” If they had
done either, I would have called the police.) 18.
If you were ever discouraged from academics or jobs because of
race, class, ethnicity, gender or sexual orientation, take one step back. (-1. Where I
grew up, it was taken as a given that people of our background could not
become judges, diplomats, surgeons, professors, senior civil servants, and
a whole range of other things. Did
some of us manage to do so anyway? Yes:
but that’s not the question.
Discouraged? You bet.) 19.
If you were encouraged to attend college by your parents, take one
step forward. (0.
I don’t recall being positively discouraged on this.
When the school sent home a letter saying that I could get a
university place and should submit an application, my mother said:
“That’s nice.” I
can’t remember Dad saying anything, though I feel sure he was pleased.) 20.
If you were raised in a single parent household, take one step
back. (0.
This wonderful modern regime of easy divorce and welfare-supported
bastardy had not yet taken hold in my childhood. For which I thank God daily.) 21.
If your family owned the house where you grew up, take one step
forward. (0.) 22.
If you saw members of your race, ethnic group, gender or sexual
orientation portrayed on television in degrading roles, take one step
back. (-1. Yet again,
I can’t believe they are serious. My
“gender” [by which I assume they mean my sex]?
Degrading? Have
these cretins ever watched any TV sitcom?
Those shows, I mean, where the men are all dithering doofuses,
being herded and corraled by sharp-witted women?
My race, too: starting
with Roots 25 years ago, there has been a whole flourishing genre
of TV dramas featuring cruel, evil white people doing beastly things to
colored folk. For crying out loud: If
a TV drama has a white person and a black person in it, which one is more
likely to be the villain? Can
I step back two here?) 23.
If you were ever offered a good job because of your association
with a friend or family member, take one step forward.
(0.) 24.
If you were ever denied employment because of your race, ethnicity,
gender or sexual orientation, take one step back.
(-1. Yep.
In my Hong Kong days again, I went to interview for a job I’d
seen advertised in the newspaper. It
was a Chinese firm. The lady
took one look at me and told me rather sniffily that they did not employ
expats. End of job interview.) 25.
If you were paid less, treated unfairly because of race, ethnicity,
gender or sexual orientation, take one step back.
(0.) 26.
If you were ever accused of cheating or lying because of your race,
ethnicity, gender, or sexual orientation, take one step back.
(-1. ...If having been
English counts. It is an
article of faith with the wilder sort of Irish Republican that all English
people are liars and thieves, and I have had an earful of that. In any case, isn’t this whole “whiteness studies”
business premissed on the axiom that being white, male and heterosexual is
ipso facto evidence of having cheated your way into high society?) 27.
If you ever inherited money or property, take one step forward.
(0. Though on a
technicality. My mother saved
a small amount from her pension, and bequeathed it to us.
At the time of her death, though, the accumulated sum only amounted
to just enough to cover funeral expenses, so I am not going to count it.) 28.
If you had to rely primarily on public transportation, take one
step back. (-1.
Another dumb one. The
entire population of New York City could step back on this.) 29.
If you were ever stopped or questioned by the police because of
your race, ethnicity, gender or sexual orientation, take one step back. (0. This one’s
a fix. A crime is committed.
Witnesses report that the perp is black.
The cops go looking for a black person.
Another crime is committed. Witnesses
report that the perp is white. The
cops go looking for a white person. So
sometimes the cops are looking for a black person, sometimes for a white
person. How often, in each
case? That depends on the
levels of criminality in the two communities.
Which are what, exactly? That
you may not ask! What are
you, some kind of racist?) 30.
If you were ever afraid of violence because of your race,
ethnicity, gender or sexual orientation, take one step back.
(-1. Late one night in
1973, I was riding through the streets of Mount Vernon, New York, on a
borrowed bicycle. A gang of
black youths saw me, howled what the newspapers call “racial
epithets,” and started to chase me.
Thank God it was a 10-speed bike.
My leg muscles hurt for a week.) 31.
If you were generally able to avoid places that were dangerous,
take one step forward. (0.) 32.
If you were ever uncomfortable about a joke related to your race,
ethnicity, gender or sexual orientation but felt unsafe to confront the
situation, take one step back. (0. Occasionally, among Chinese people. Not really sure if this counts.) 33.
If you were ever the victim of violence related to your race,
ethnicity, gender or sexual orientation, take one step back.
(0. I can only record
a couple of narrow escapes on this one — see sentence 30. I have never been the victim of any kind of violence.
I have been in fights, but they were mostly, as most fights are,
unco-ordinated and inconclusive scuffles, stopped by bystanders after a
few seconds.) 34.
If your parents did not grow up in the United States, take one step
back. (-1.
But what does immigration have to do with whiteness?
The idea here seems to be that immigrants of any origin are
honorary blacks, rather as the Nazis considered Japanese to be honorary
whites. Hey, I’ll take what
I can get.) 35.
If your parents told you you could be anything you wanted to be,
take one step forward. (0. See my response to sentence 17.) As
you can see, my own responses caused me to end up ten steps back — and
that is after giving the benefit of any doubts to the questionnaire.
May I have an affirmative action slot, please? You
might object that, as an older guy, I am not really part of the target
population here. To the
contrary, I would say that it’s not me that is out of date, but the
self-flagellating dipsnicks who thought up this “privilege walk.”
Just look at the assumptions underlying some of these sentences.
Number 4, for instance. How
many 18-year-old Americans grew up enjoying the attentions of “servants,
gardeners, etc.”? (And why,
in any case, should we assume that such menials could not possibly have
been white? New York City’s first black mayor, David Dinkins, was fond
of boasting that his mother had been in domestic service.
Big deal: my
mother’s first job was in domestic service.
Millions of white Americans must share this claim.
I am told that domestic-service agencies in Manhattan have large
numbers of Russians and East Europeans on their lists.
There is nothing wrong with domestic service, anyway.
Why is it less dignified to cook a millionaire’s breakfast in a
kitchen, than to cook his books in a business office?
As a matter of fact, I have long nursed the sneaking desire to try
work as a butler. I think
I’d be rather good at it. You
rang, Sir?) Similarly
with number 22. Good old Stepin
Fetchit! He
can be relied on for an example of the “degrading” roles black
Americans were forced to play in the movies.
Let it be noted, however, that the last movie of that kind was made
half a century ago, and no TV channel would have dared to run it at any
time since about 1970. And
that even half a century ago, by far the dominant style of portrayal of
black Americans in movies was the Noble Negro: Lilies
of the Field came out in 1963, and was by no means the
first of its kind. And number
22 actually deals with TV. When
were black Americans portrayed in a degrading manner on TV?
Not in my time; not in the time of any entering college freshmen. Likewise
with number 6. The United
States, God bless her, now includes millions of middle-class black
citizens holding down good jobs — yes, even as “doctors, lawyers,
etc.” Some of the most interesting recent sociological studies
concern the plush suburbs where these citizens live — John Ogbu’s
recent Black
American Students in an Affluent Suburb, for example.
Don’t the kids of these well-heeled middle-class black people go
to college? The
assumptions underlying the other sentences are equally anachronistic, or
just plain silly. Number 14:
white people never get laid off.
This will be interesting news to several million victims of the
recent recession. (As a
matter of fact, since recessions hurt the private sector much more than
the public, whereas black people are much better represented in public
than in private employment, it seems probable to me that those laid off in
a recession are disproportionally white.)
Number 23: patronage
rackets are a white thing. Really?
Let me introduce you to the New York City school system.
Number 12: there are
people in America so poor they go to bed hungry.
No there aren’t. No
there aren’t. There
are, of course, people who go to bed hungry because they have a $200-a-day
drug habit, but that is not the same thing. One
must always try to be charitable, in a proper Christian spirit.
The... persons who thought up this “whiteness studies”
fandango are at least trying to deal with a real issue:
the still-awful condition of the disproportionately-huge
black-American underclass. Most of the rest of us just prefer not to think about this
too much. True, the
“whiteness studies” crowd are dealing with this issue in an
exceptionally crass and lame-brained way;
but that is because the kinds of people who rise to positions of
authority in the non-science departments of American universities are
exceptionally crass and lame-brained people.
Let’s see, what can we do to improve the condition of the
black poor? I know —
we’ll work on raising the self-esteem of black kids! [30 years later] Hmmm.
That didn’t work too well. Those
kids have terrific self-esteem now, but they are still stuck in the
ghetto, or in jail, unable to read or do arithmetic.
What else can we try? Got
it! — Since raising the self-esteem of black kids wasn’t much use,
let’s try lowering the self-esteem of white kids!
Maybe that will help... It won’t help, of course. Far, far more people will scoff at these course than will attend them. But what will help? My impression is that nobody has a clue, and that most Americans have given up bothering about the issue. The black underclass? Throw them (or, more precisely, those politicians and middle-class black intellectuals who claim to speak for them) a bone now and then — affirmative action, a ban on “racial profiling,” a couple of trillion more taxpayer dollars shoveled into the bank accounts of public-sector union bosses, “whiteness studies.” Okay: that, together with a few more super-size jails, should keep ‘em quiet for another 20 years. Let’s get on with our lives. |
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