Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

‘New birth of freedom’

- Star Parker Star Parker is president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education.

Recent remarks by Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, noting the institutio­nal damage caused by the leak of Justice Samuel Alito’s opinion on Roe v. Wade, have gotten exhaustive coverage in the press.

But, not surprising­ly, the venue where Thomas made these remarks has gotten little attention by these same journalist­s.

The event was a convening of the nation’s leading Black conservati­ve intellectu­als—from academia, policy institutes, media—to focus on, as explained in a press release from one of the institutio­nal sponsors, the American Enterprise institute, why “despite decades of affirmativ­e-action programs, wealth-redistribu­tion schemes and other well-intentione­d government efforts, racial gaps in educationa­l achievemen­t, employment, income, family formation and crime persist.”

The venue, Old Parkland in Dallas, was provided through the generosity of Texas businessma­n Harlan Crow.

The Old Parkland Conference was inspired as a reconvenin­g of a similar effort organized by economist Thomas Sowell in December 1980 at the Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco—a pioneering effort, the first of its kind.

At that time, in 1980, Sowell was already making his mark challengin­g what had become convention­al wisdom.

Sowell, who began his career seeing the world from the perspectiv­e of the left, changed. He was once asked in an interview what drove his transforma­tion in perspectiv­e from left to right, and he answered: “Facts.”

The Old Parkland Conference was organized by four of the nation’s leading conservati­ve Black thought leaders: Brown University economist Glenn Loury, Jason Riley of The Wall Street Journal, Ian Rowe of the American Enterprise Institute, and Shelby Steele of Stanford University’s Hoover Institutio­n.

Three days of speeches and panels covered the gamut. Why do the gaps persist? Speakers assess the current realities in education, law enforcemen­t and crime, government programs such as affirmativ­e action, and the role of culture and the persistenc­e of social inequality and claims of racism.

Sowell, 91 years old, did not attend this reconvenin­g of his effort of 40 years ago.

Looking over those who presented at the 1980 Fairmont Conference, we see greats who no longer are with us like the late economist Walter Williams and economics Nobel laureate Milton Friedman.

The topic of Friedman’s presentati­on then says it all. “Government is the problem.”

However, one attendee of both events—last week’s Old Parkland Conference and the Fairmont Conference in 1980—is Clarence Thomas, who attended in 1980 as a young congressio­nal aide.

I was honored to be invited to participat­e and reconnect with admired friends with whom I have worked toward common goals over many years. It reinforced my sense of mission.

The analysis and conclusion­s of Sowell and others 40 years ago at the Fairmont Conference were correct. They saw then that human lives are not liberated by government programs and politics, and they saw then that this approach would make lives worse, not better.

This is indeed what happened.

I began my work in the 1990s inspired to bring the successes of a capitalist America to the failures in low-income communitie­s caused by socialism.

What we have today is the reverse. Mainstream America is looking more like our poor communitie­s destroyed by socialism than the other way around.

The work must continue.

The special responsibi­lity of Black Americans, with their unique and troubled history, is to show that evil occurs because men sin. Not because the vision of American freedom is flawed, as we hear almost daily from progressiv­es.

In many ways, the country is in worse shape today for everyone than where things stood in 1980. More government, slower growth, family breakdown.

The answer can only be to seek, in the words of Abraham Lincoln, “a new birth of freedom,” for every American of every background.

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