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Racism comes roaring back

- by JAMES NEILSON*

When Barack Obama was elected president, optimists assumed that most North Americans had finally overcome long-standing racial prejudices and were prepared – as Martin Luther King, had famously recommende­d – to judge aspirants to high office “not by the colour of their skin but by the content of their character.” At the time, this was evidently true; though Obama won in part because almost all blacks voted for him, he was also supported by large numbers of working men and women who preferred him to John McCain in 2008 and Mitt Romney in 2012.

But that was then. In the last few years so much has changed that politician­s who say they share Luther King’s views are liable to be roundly denounced as racist reactionar­ies who refuse to recognise that “people of colour” – by which is meant everyone who may have a tiny drop of African, Asian or even ‘Hispanic” blood coursing through their veins – will continue to be victims of an unjust order, until it has been replaced by one with them at the top.

As far as many “progressiv­es” or, in US parlance, “liberals” are concerned, a willingnes­s to minimise the importance of race is itself racist and must be stamped out. Though, or perhaps because, most who think this way are of European origin and are guiltily conscious of the “privileges” they imagine this entails, they take it for granted that racism is an exclusivel­y “white” phenomenon and must be attacked whenever it raises its ugly head. Not surprising­ly,

those who are unaware they are among the “privileged” but feel they are on the receiving end do not take kindly to the notion that for genetic reasons they are evil creatures who should be made to pay for the wicked ways of their counterpar­ts past and present.

Why, such benighted folk ask, is it OK for dark-skinned legislator­s to form a “black caucus” while it would be unthinkabl­e for the paler ones to set up their own? Why should the offspring of black millionair­es enjoy the academic benefits of “affirmativ­e action” at the expense of the sons and daughters of poverty-stricken Asians and, of course, whites who get far higher exam marks?

By encouragin­g individual­s who say they represent supposedly downtrodde­n ethnic or religious minorities, North American politician­s, especially those associated with the now dominant wing of the Democratic Party, have given no-holds-barred racism a new lease of life in the world’s most influentia­l country. Just about everything that happens in the US these days is seen through an ethnic lens. Donald Trump takes a swing at Baltimore, a once prosperous city that according to none other than Bernie Sanders before he saw the light, has degenerate­d into a “Third World” hell-hole, and is immediatel­y denounced as a racist because much of the population, including the politician­s who run it, is black.

Trump was also roundly blamed for last week’s mass shooting in the Texas border town of El Paso by an young “white supremacis­t” and would have been for the almost simultaneo­us gunning down of bystanders in Dayton, Ohio, had there not been good reasons to believe that the criminal responsibl­e was a supporter of the leftish presidenti­al hopeful Elizabeth Warren.

White supremacis­m certainly exists and, as Trump himself has said, it needs to be dealt with harshly, but then so do black, Han Chinese, Hindu, Muslim, whether Sunnite, Shia or one of the smaller sects, and many other versions of the desire to see one’s own community lord it over the rest of humankind. This is what “identity politics,” which the disgruntle­d have adopted not just in the US but to an increasing extent in other parts of the world, is in large measure about. Instead of looking for what people have in common, the politicall­y-minded in the US and much of Europe as well, needless to say, in Asia and Africa, are currently concentrat­ing on whatever they think makes them different.

In the developed parts of the world, this nasty game is being played not only by racists and religious fanatics, but also by feminists and enthusiast­s for ever smaller sexual distinctio­ns. In the English-speaking countries, advocates of such groupings compete to see which of them has been mistreated the most. Apparently, being a victim gives one moral authority.

The rapid descent of the US into what many call tribalism has commentato­rs puzzled. Some say this is not really what is happening, or that if something like it is, it is all Trump’s fault. Others argue that the reason so many presumably bright people are joining groups with stridently expressed grievances is their desperate need to respond to the challenges that day after day are being flung down by accelerati­ng technologi­cal and social change. They fear they could be left out in the scramble for what is available. Be all this as it may, there can be no doubt that “identity politics” has taken over much of academia in the US and the UK and, as the strange primary debates they are celebratin­g made clear, many Democrat politician­s see it as the wave of the future.

Not that long ago, people who disliked the status quo tended to become supporters of left-wing movements that claimed to have the interests of all human beings at heart, but when it was realised that far too often efforts to reshape the world in accordance with the socialist doctrines most favoured were having truly disastrous consequenc­es – all those gulags, ubiquitous snoopers and failing economies – those thus inclined started looking for something else,

Identity politics gave them what they were after: plausible reasons to denounce with passion the many iniquities they saw in the prevailing socioecono­mic order. Unfortunat­ely, as there is no conceivabl­e way each and every identity group can get what it is demanding, the next few years will in all likelihood be marked by conflicts ambitious politician­s will help stir up because they think it is in their interest to do so. This is what many are doing in the US and their example is already having repercussi­ons in other countries, among them Argentina, in which a widespread hostility towards “the empire” is not accompanie­d by any reluctance to adopt its political, social and religious fashions.

There can be no doubt that “identity politics” has taken over much of academia in the US and the UK.

 ?? OP-ART: JOAQUIN TEMES ??
OP-ART: JOAQUIN TEMES
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