Social justice might not be just at all but rather the
denial of justice for certain groups of people, according to Clay Routledge, Quillette
columnist and professor of psychology at North Dakota State University:
·
Though it might grant social and professional
benefits to members of the elite liberal class, engaging in scholarship and
activism that demonizes men, white people, or heterosexuals doesn’t make the
world more just, nor does providing students with empirically-unsupported
implicit-bias training and “toxic masculinity” workshops. These practices bake
the seeds of prejudice and discrimination into educational experiences that are
supposedly focused on fighting prejudice and discrimination. In fact, the use of
divisive and hateful language in the name of social justice is a red flag. https://quillette.com/2018/09/14/social-justice-in-the-shadows/
Misguided social justice initiatives have also hurt the
Black community and others they have touched. Walter E. Williams, professor of
economics, George Mason University, does not think that the problems that the
Black community are now experiencing are a product of slavery, Jim Crow, or
even systemic racism, but of welfare programs:
- A major part of the solution should be the elimination of public and private policy that rewards inferiority and irresponsibility. Chief among the policies that reward inferiority and irresponsibility is the welfare state. When some people know that they can have children out of wedlock, drop out of school and refuse employment and suffer little consequence, one should not be surprised to see the growth of such behavior. The poverty rate among blacks is about 30 percent. It’s seen as politically correct to blame today’s poverty on racial discrimination, but that’s nonsense. Why? The poverty rate among black intact husband-and-wife families has been in the single digits for more than two decades.
According to Williams, “social justice” has even undermined
largely black schools:
- Education is one of the ways out of poverty, but stupid political correctness stands in the way for many blacks. For example, a few years ago, a white Charleston, South Carolina, teacher frequently complained of black students calling her a white b—-, white m—–f—–, white c— and white ho. School officials told her that racially charged profanity was simply part of the students’ culture and that if she couldn’t handle it, she was in the wrong school.
Failing to hold students accountable for anti-social
behavior corrupts the school and diminishes the possibility of obtaining a good
education.
According to Williams, over-indulgent “social justice” policies
have de-motivated blacks by holding them to lower standards:
- Many whites are ashamed and saddened by our history of slavery, Jim Crow and gross racial discrimination. As a result, they often hold blacks accountable to standards and conduct they would never accept from whites. A recent example is black students at colleges such as NYU, UC Berkeley, UCLA and Oberlin demanding racially segregated housing. Spineless college administrators have caved to their demands. These administrators would never even listen to a group of white students demanding white-only housing accommodations. These administrators and other guilt-ridden whites have one standard of conduct for whites and a lower standard for blacks.
Different standards according to race and sexuality divide
and breed cynicism. White guilt and idealism hold blacks to a lower standard,
approving their racial prejudices while penalizing whites for the same. This
can only serve to further exclude blacks from white society.
Williams claims liberal policies have also made academic
excellence more unattainable:
- Black people can be thankful that racist forms of double standards and public and private policies rewarding inferiority and irresponsibility were not broadly accepted during the 1920s, ’30s, ’40s and ’50s. There would not have been the kind of intellectual excellence and spiritual courage that created the world’s most successful civil rights movement.
Instead of coming to grips with the negative impact of “social
justice” policies, leftists have instead invented alternative explanations for
black failure, including "white privilege" and "systemic
racism." What happened to the ideal M.L. King strove to achieve - to
judge, not by skin color, but by character?
Routledge knows something about legitimate social justice
having been the son of missionaries who had devoted themselves to the needy:
·
My family lived in a part of the world plagued
by mass poverty and disease. Here in the United States, I have seen up close
the people in our communities who are truly suffering or unable to provide for
themselves. And I realize that despite the fact that the Western world is
becoming increasingly open-minded and tolerant, we are still sadly cursed with
bigotry and hate. But I also know how to tell the difference between those
working for a cause and those making a cause work for them. Beware of the false
prophets of social justice.
These “prophets” have promoted a “justice” which divides. It
is a system of racial and sexual preference under which all are not equal, where some are
disenfranchised because of their color or gender. This system can only lead to
further division and distrust.
While the justice system must be color blind, as individuals,
the Routledge family was free, as we all should be, to show mercy to whomever.
No comments:
Post a Comment