Chattanooga Times Free Press

RACE AND THE COMING LIBERAL CRACKUP

- Bret Stephens

Americans breathed a collective sigh of relief last week after Derek Chauvin was convicted of murdering George Floyd. The crime was heinous, the verdict just, the moral neat. If you think that systemic racism is the defining fact of race relations in 21st-century America, then Chauvin’s knee on Floyd’s neck is its defining image.

But what about a case like that of Ma’Khia Bryant, a Black teenager who was shot and killed last week by Nicholas Reardon, a white police officer in Columbus, Ohio, at the instant that she was swinging a knife at a woman who had her back against a car?

Ben Crump, the Floyd family’s lawyer, accused the Columbus police in a tweet of killing “an unarmed 15yo Black girl.” Valerie Jarrett, the former Obama adviser, tweeted that Bryant “was killed because a police officer immediatel­y decided to shoot her multiple times in order to break up a knife fight.” Jarrett wants to “Demand accountabi­lity” and “Fight for justice.”

An alternativ­e view: Maybe there wasn’t time for Reardon, in an 11-second interactio­n, to “de-escalate” the situation, as he is now being faulted for failing to do. And maybe the balance of our sympathies should lie not with the wouldbe perpetrato­r of a violent assault but with the cop who saved a Black life — namely that of Tionna Bonner, who nearly had Bryant’s knife thrust into her.

That’s a thought that many, perhaps most, Americans share, even if they are increasing­ly reluctant to say it out loud. Why reluctant? Because in this new era of with-us-oragainst-us politics, to have misgivings about the left’s new “anti-racist” narrative is to run the risk of being denounced as a racist. Much better to nod along at your office’s diversity, equity and inclusion sessions than suggest that enforced political indoctrina­tion should not become a staple of American workplace culture.

And yet those doubts and misgivings go to the heart of what used to be thought of as liberalism. The result will be a liberal crackup similar to the one in the late 1960s that broke liberalism as America’s dominant political force for a generation.

Morally and philosophi­cally, liberalism believes in individual autonomy, which entails a concept of personal responsibi­lity. The current model of anti-racism scoffs at this: It divides the world into racial identities, which in turn are governed by systems of privilege and powerlessn­ess. Liberalism believes in process: A trial or contest is fair if standards are consistent and rules are equitable, irrespecti­ve of outcome. Anti-racism is determined to make a process achieve a desired outcome. Liberalism finds appeals to racial favoritism inherently suspect, even offensive. Anti-racism welcomes such favoritism, provided it’s in the name of righting past wrongs.

Above all, liberalism believes that truth tends to be many-shaded and complex. Anti-racism is a great simplifier. Good and evil. Black and white.

This is where the anti-racism narrative will profoundly alienate liberal-minded America, even as it entrenches itself in schools, universiti­es, corporatio­ns and other institutio­ns of American life.

It’s possible to look at Floyd’s murder as the epitome of evil and not see a racist motive in every bad encounter between a white cop and a minority suspect, including the recent shootings of Adam Toledo in Chicago and Daunte Wright in Minnesota. It’s possible to think that the police make too many assumption­s about young Black men, sometimes with tragic consequenc­es, and still recognize that young Black men commit violent crimes at a terribly disproport­ionate rate. It’s possible to believe that effective policing requires that cops gain the trust of the communitie­s they serve while recognizin­g that those communitie­s are ill served when cops are afraid to do their jobs.

It is also possible to recognize that we have miles to go in ending racism while also objecting to the condescend­ing assumption­s and illiberal methods of the anti-racist creed. The idea that white skin automatica­lly confers “privilege” in America is a strange concept to millions of working-class whites who have endured generation­s of poverty while missing out on the benefits of the past 50 years of affirmativ­e action programs.

Similarly, the idea that past discrimina­tion or even present-day inequality justifies explicit racial preference­s in government policy is an affront to liberal values, and will become only more so as the practices become more common. In Oakland, California, the mayor backed an initiative that was to provide $500 a month to low-income families, but not if they were white. In Vermont, the state has given people of color priority for COVID vaccines.

Ibram X. Kendi, the most important anti-racist thinker today, argues that “the only remedy to past discrimina­tion is present discrimina­tion. The only remedy to present discrimina­tion is future discrimina­tion.” Some liberals will go along with this. Many others will find themselves drifting rightward, much as a past generation of disaffecte­d liberals did.

Joe Biden’s resounding victory and his progressiv­e policies are supposed to mark the real end of the Reaganite era of American politics. Don’t be surprised if they’re a prelude to its return, just as the last era of progressiv­e excess ushered in its beginning.

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