The most consequential falsehood in American public policy
today is the idea that any racial disparity in any institution is by
definition the result of racial discrimination.
If a cancer research lab, for example,
does not have 13 percent black oncologists—the black share of the
national population—it is by definition a racist lab that discriminates
against competitively qualified black oncologists; if an airline company
doesn’t have 13 percent black pilots, it is by definition a racist
airline company that discriminates against competitively qualified black
pilots; and if a prison population contains more than 13 percent black prisoners, our law enforcement system is racist.
The claim that racial disparities are
proof of racial discrimination has been percolating in academia and the
media for a long time. After the George Floyd race riots of 2020,
however, it was adopted by America’s most elite institutions, from big
law and big business to big finance. Even museums and orchestras took up
the cry.
Many thought that STEM—the fields of
science, technology, engineering, and mathematics—would escape the
diversity sledgehammer. They were wrong. The American Medical
Association today insists that medicine is characterized by white
supremacy. Nature magazine declares that science manifests one of
“humankind’s worst excesses”: racism. The Smithsonian Institution
announces that “emphasis on the scientific method” and an interest in
“cause and effect relationships” are part of totalitarian whiteness.
As a result of this falsehood, we are
eviscerating meritocratic and behavioral standards in accordance with
what is known as “disparate impact analysis.”
Consider medicine. Step One of the
medical licensing exam, taken during or after the second year of medical
school, tests medical students’ knowledge of anatomy, physiology, and
pathology. On average, black students score lower on the grading curve,
making it harder for them to land their preferred residencies. Step One,
in other words, has a “disparate impact” on black medical students. The
solution, implemented last year, was to eliminate the Step One grading
disparity by instituting a pass–fail system. Hospitals choosing
residents can no longer distinguish between high and low achieving
students—and that is precisely the point!
The average Medical College Achievement
Test (MCAT) score for black applicants is a standard deviation below the
average score of white applicants. Some medical schools have waived the
submission of MCAT scores altogether for black applicants. The tests
were already redesigned to try to eliminate the disparity. A quarter of
the questions now focus on social issues and psychology. The medical
school curriculum is being revised to offer more classes in white
privilege and focus less on clinical practice. The American Association
of Medical Colleges will soon require that medical faculty demonstrate
knowledge of “intersectionality”—a theory about the cumulative burdens
of discrimination. Heads of medical schools and chairmen of departments
like pediatric surgery are being selected on the basis of identity, not
knowledge.
The federal government is shifting
medical research funding from pure science to studies on racial
disparities and social justice. Why? Not because of any assessment of
scientific need, but simply because black researchers do more racism
research and less pure science. The National Institutes of Health has
broadened the criteria for receiving neurology grants to include things
like childhood welfare receipt because considering scientific
accomplishment alone results in a disparate impact.
What is at stake in these changes? Future medical progress and, ultimately, lives.
Standards are falling in the legal
profession, which came up with the disparate impact concept in the first
place. Upon taking office in 2021, President Biden announced that he
would no longer submit his judicial nominees to the American Bar
Association for a preliminary rating. Why? According to a member of the
White House Counsel’s Office, allowing the ABA to vet candidates would
be incompatible with the “diversification of the judiciary.” This claim
was dubious.
The ABA, after all, cannot open its
collective mouth without issuing a bromide about the need to diversify
the bar. Its leading members are obsessed with the demographics of
corporate law firms and law school faculties. This is the same ABA that
gave its highest rating to a Supreme Court nominee who as a justice
would make the false claim during a challenge to Covid vaccine mandates
that “over 100,000 children are in serious condition [from Covid] and
many are on ventilators.”
State bar associations are also busy
watering down standards to eliminate disparate impact. In 2020,
California lowered the pass score on its bar exam because black
applicants were disproportionately failing. Only five percent of black
law school graduates passed the California bar on their first try in
February 2020, compared to 52 percent of white law school graduates and
42 percent of Asian law school graduates. The lack of proportional
representation among California’s attorneys was held to be proof of a
discriminatory credentialing system.
The pressure to eliminate the Law School Admission Test
(LSAT) requirement for law school admissions is growing, because it too
has a disparate impact. As a single mother told an ABA panel, “I would
hate to give up on my dream of becoming a lawyer just due to not being
able to successfully handle this test.” Note the assumption: the problem
always lies with the test, never with the test taker. The LSAT
requirement will almost certainly be axed.
The curious state of our criminal justice
system today is a function of the disparate impact principle. If you
wonder why police officers are not making certain arrests, or why
district attorneys are not prosecuting whole categories of crimes—such
as shoplifting, trespassing, or farebeating—it is because apprehending
lawbreakers and prosecuting crime have a disparate impact on black
criminals. Urban leaders have decided that they would rather not enforce
the law at all, no matter how constitutional that enforcement, than put
more black criminals in jail.
Walgreens, CVS, and Target would rather close down entire
stores and deprive their elderly customers of access to their
medications than confront shoplifters and hand them over to the law,
because doing so would disproportionately yield black shoplifters, as
the viral looting videos attest. Macy’s flagship store in New York City
was sued several years ago because most of the people its employees
stopped for shoplifting were black. The only allowable explanation for
that fact was that Macy’s was racist. It was not permissible to argue
that Macy’s arrests mirrored the shoplifting population.
Even colorblind technology is racist.
Speeding and red-light cameras disproportionately identify black drivers
as traffic scofflaws. The solution to such disparate impact is the same
as we saw with the medical licensing exam: throw out the cameras.
The result of this de-prosecution and
de-policing has been widespread urban anarchy and, in 2020, the largest
one-year spike in homicide in this nation’s history. Thousands more
black lives have been lost to drive-by shootings. Dozens of black
children have been fatally gunned down in their beds, in their front
yards, and in their parents’ cars. No one says their names because their
assailants were not police officers or white supremacists. They were
other blacks.
UNCOMFORTABLE FACTS
We need to face up to the truth: the
reason for racial underrepresentation across a range of meritocratic
fields is the academic skills gap. The reason for racial
overrepresentation in the criminal justice system is the crime gap.
And let me issue a trigger warning here: I
am going to raise uncomfortable facts that many well-intentioned
Americans would rather not hear. Keeping such facts off stage may
ordinarily be appropriate as a matter of civil etiquette. But it is too
late for such forbearance now. If we cannot acknowledge the skills gap
and the behavior gap, we are going to continue destroying our
civilizational legacy.
Let me also make the obvious point that I
am talking about group averages. Thousands of individuals within
underperforming groups outperform not only their own group average but
great numbers of people within other groups as well.
Here are the relevant facts. In 2019, 66
percent of all black 12th graders did not possess even partial mastery
of basic 12th grade math skills, defined as being able to do arithmetic
and to read a graph. Only seven percent of black 12th graders were
proficient in 12th grade math, defined as being able to calculate using
ratios. The number of black 12th graders who were advanced in math was
too small to show up statistically in a national sample. The picture was
not much better in reading. Fifty percent of black 12th graders did not
possess even partial mastery of basic reading, and only four percent
were advanced.
According to the ACT, a standardized
college admissions test, only three percent of black high school seniors
were college ready in 2023. The disparities in other such tests—the
SAT, the LSAT, the GRE, and the GMAT—are just as wide. Remember these
data when politicians and others vilify Americans as racist on the
ground that this or that institution is not proportionally diverse.
We can argue about why these disparities
exist and how to close them—something that policymakers and
philanthropists have been trying to do for decades. But in light of
these skills gaps, it is irrational to expect 13 percent black
representation on a medical school faculty or among a law firm’s
partners under meritocratic standards. At present you can have
proportional diversity or you can have meritocracy. You cannot have
both.
As for the criminal justice system, the
bodies speak for themselves. President Biden is fond of intoning that
black parents are right to fear that their children will be killed by a
police officer or by a white gunslinger every time those children step
outside. The mayor of Kansas City proclaimed last year that “existing
while black” is another high-risk activity that blacks must engage in.
The mayor was partially right: existing while black is far more
dangerous than existing while white—but the reason is black crime, not
white vigilantes.
In the post-George Floyd era, black
juveniles are shot at 100 times the rate of white juveniles. Blacks
between the ages of ten and 24 are killed in drive by shootings at
nearly 25 times the rate of whites in that same age cohort. Dozens of
blacks are murdered every day, more than all white and Hispanic homicide
victims combined, even though blacks are just 13 percent of the
population. The country turns its eyes away. Who is killing these black
victims? Not the police, not whites, but other blacks.
As for interracial violence, blacks are a
greater threat to whites than whites are to blacks. Blacks commit 85
percent of all non-lethal interracial violence between blacks and
whites. A black person is 35 times more likely to commit an act of
non-lethal violence against a white person than vice versa. Yet the
national narrative insists on the opposite idea—and too many dutifully
play along.
These crime disparities mean that the police cannot
restore law and order in neighborhoods where innocent people are most
being victimized without having a disparate impact on black criminals.
So the political establishment has decided not to restore law and order
at all.
CIVILIZATION AT STAKE
It is urgent that we fight back against
disparate impact thinking. As long as racism remains the only allowable
explanation for racial disparities, the Left wins, and our civilization
will continue to crumble.
Even the arts are coming down. Classical
music, visual art, theater—all are dismissed as a function of white
oppression. The Metropolitan Museum of Art mounted an astonishing show
last year called the Fictions of Emancipation. The show’s premise was
that if a white artist creates a work intended to show the cruelties of
slavery, that artist (in this case, the great 19th century French
sculptor Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux) is in fact arguing that the natural
condition of blacks is slavery. Prosecuting this nonsensical argument
required the Met to ignore or distort almost every feature of the
Western art tradition—including the representation of the nude human
body, artists’ use of models, and the sale of art.
Only Western art is subjected to this
kind of hostile interpretation. Chinese, African, and Indian cultural
traditions are still treated with curatorial respect, their works
analyzed in accordance with their creators’ intent. As soon as a critic
turns his eye or ear on Western art, however, all he can see or hear is
imperialism and white privilege. It is a perverse obsession. We are
teaching young people to dismiss the greatest creations of humanity. We
are stripping them of the capacity to escape their narrow identities and
to lose themselves in beauty, sublimity, and wit. No wonder so many
Americans are drowning in meaninglessness and despair.
We must stop apologizing for Western
Civilization. To be sure, slavery and segregation were grotesque
violations of America’s founding ideals. For much of our history black
Americans suffered injustice and gratuitous cruelty. Today, however,
every mainstream institution is twisting itself into knots to hire and
promote as many underrepresented minorities as possible. Yet those same
institutions grovelingly accuse themselves of racism.
The West has liberated the world from
universal squalor and disease, thanks to the scientific method and the
Western passion for discovery and knowledge. It has given the world
plumbing, hot showers in frigid winters, flight, clean water, steel,
antibiotics, and just about every structure and every device that we
take for granted in our miraculously privileged existence—and I use the
word “privilege” here to refer to anyone whose life has been transformed
by Western ingenuity—i.e., virtually every human being on the planet.
It was in the West that the ideas of
constitutional government and civil rights were born. Yes, to our shame,
we had slavery. What civilization did not? But only the Anglosphere
expended lives and capital to end the nearly universal practice. Britain
had to occupy Lagos in 1861 to get its ruler to give up the slave
trade. The British Navy used 13 percent of its manpower to blockade
slave ships leaving the western coast of Africa in the 19th century, as
Nigel Biggar has documented. Every ideal that the Left uses today to
bash the West—such as equality or tolerance—originated in the West.
***
The ongoing attack on colorblind
excellence in the U.S. is putting our scientific edge at risk. China,
which cares nothing for identity politics, is throwing everything it has
at its most talented students. China ranks number one in international
tests of K-12 math, science, and reading skills; the U.S. ranks
twenty-fifth.
China is racing ahead in nano physics,
artificial intelligence, and other critical defense technologies.
Chinese teams dominate the International Olympiad in Informatics.
Meanwhile the American Mathematical Association declares math to be
racist and President Biden puts a soil geologist with no background in
physics at the top of the Department of Energy’s science programs. This
new science director may know nothing about nuclear weapons and nuclear
physics, but she checks off several identity politics boxes and
publishes on such topics as “A Critical Feminist Approach to
Transforming Workplace Climate.”
What do we do in response to such
civilizational immolation? We proclaim that standards are not racist and
that excellence is not racist. We assert that categories like race,
gender, and sexual preference are never qualifications for a job. I know
for a fact that being female is not an accomplishment. I am equally
sure that being gay or being black are also not accomplishments.
Should conservative political candidates
campaign against disparate impact thinking and in favor of standards of
merit? Of course they should! They will be accused of waging a culture
war. But it is the progressive elites, not their conservative opponents,
who are engaging in cultural revolution!
Most conservatives today are not even
playing defense. How about legislation to ban racial preferences in
medical training and practice? How about eliminating the disparate
impact standard in statutes and regulations? Conservatives should by all
means promote the virtues of free markets and limited government, but
the diversity regime is the nemesis of both.
Lowering standards helps no one since
high expectations are the key to achievement. In defense of excellence
we must speak the truth, never apologize, and never back down.
I don’t know if that’s true or not, but historically generational changes can result for a host of reasons, but a lack of security as a result of failing to perform is foundation for such changes. Since the Pravda media is toast, they’re seeking out answers from other sources, but the idea they're getting their information from podcasts bothers me since there’s no time to lay foundation, and that’s the secret to understanding. Reading, especially books, allows for reflection and is the foundation for understanding.
We’re living through serious times with totally unserious people at the helm: They’re in the White House, Buckingham Palace (although mercifully merely symbolic there), and throughout the media. The old-time TV newsmen all leaned left, but they at least had the appearance of gravitas. This current crop is drawn from the back of the classroom and the bottom of the heap. They are ridiculous, ignorant people who risibly believe that they have both wisdom and knowledge. - Andrea Widburg
As DOGE is exposing the seditious corruption of the administrative state conservatives are shocked to find it’s far worse than they thought. Also, I think all this is clearly exposing the dangers a corrupt judiciary presents to the nation, and I believe there will be a fix for this judicial overreach in the near future. I’ve tried my best to track these rogue judges and the issues involved as a source article. For those interested here’s My Judiciary Gazette, which I keep updating the information regarding the judges, and the list is substantial.