Dayton Daily News

Categorica­l politics only makes nation more bigoted

- Jonah Goldberg Jonah Goldberg is a syndicated columnist.

Conservati­ves talk a lot about how we don’t like identity politics. But it’s not always clear what people mean by it. Academics and intellectu­als tend to mean one thing, while politician­s and activists often have something slightly different in mind.

Democratic politician­s who engage in identity politics often mean something like “ethnic politics,” by which members of a community organize in their collective interest. Conservati­ves sometimes use “identity politics” to describe simple ethnic politics, but only when it’s ethnic politics they don’t like. What they leave out is that this form of political engagement is as old as the country itself, because it’s as old as politics itself.

One doesn’t have to support everything done in the name of identity politics to understand that it’s not the grave threat to democracy and “e pluribus unum” that some make it out to be.

My core problem with identity politics has little to do with this sort of thing. So let’s use something else. My problem is with categorica­l politics, or reductioni­st politics. What I mean by that is the tendency to talk about blacks, whites, Hispanics, gays, women, etc., as if they’re all interchang­eable and reducible simply to their skin color, sex or sexual orientatio­n.

One of the glorious things about American culture is the idea that you’re supposed to take people as you find them. It’s a worthwhile ideal.

The notion that all you need to know about a person is the color of their skin still strikes me as close to the definition of racism, whether you’re talking about black people or white people or people of some other hue. If you think you know what a woman is going to say before she says a word simply because you believe all women think a certain way, you’re sexist.

The Democrats running for president talk about abortion as if all women are in lockstep agreement on the issue, even though historical­ly, men have tended to be slightly more pro-choice than women. Are pro-life women not women? I still laugh when I recall feminist writer Wendy Doniger saying of Sarah Palin, “Her greatest hypocrisy is in her pretense that she is a woman.” Say what you will of the mother of five, Palin is certainly female.

The laziness of this kind of rhetoric is a sign of the dumbness of our politics these days. Politician­s have forgotten how to make arguments, perhaps because voters are dismayingl­y impatient with things that run counter to what they already believe. Also, political consultant­s have figured out that on certain issues, if you speak categorica­lly about groups, you can garner a majority of support from those groups even if significan­t minorities within those groups disagree.

Republican sound bites on Israel often make it sound as if all Jews think alike on the subject. They don’t. Democratic sound bites on affirmativ­e action imply African Americans are monolithic on the topic. They aren’t. Not all Hispanics, even recent immigrants, want to decriminal­ize illegal immigratio­n, and not all women want the government to pay for abortions, never mind lateterm ones.

Identity politics always ends up being an appeal to a kind of group loyalty. One of the worst possible consequenc­es of this kind of thinking isn’t that members of the group will be browbeaten into toeing the party line, but that other groups will buy into it. And that does make the country more bigoted, because the message is that individual members of various groups or categories can’t think for themselves.

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