New York Post

Inequality and the ‘Fairness’ Fraud

- THOMAS SOWELL

IT seems as if, everywhere you turn these days, there are studies claiming to show that America has lost its upward mobility for people born in the lower socioecono­mic levels. But there is a sharp difference between upward “mobility,” defined as an opportunit­y to rise, and mobility defined as actually having risen.

That distinctio­n is seldom even mentioned in most of the studies. It is as if everybody is chomping at the bit to get ahead, and the ones that don’t rise have been stopped by “barriers” created by “society.”

When statistics show that sons of highschool dropouts don’t become doctors or scientists nearly as often as the sons of PhDs, that is taken as a sign that American society is not “fair.”

If equal probabilit­ies of achieving some goal is your definition of fairness, then we should all get together — people of every race, color, creed, national origin, political ideology and sexual preference — and stipulate that life has never been fair, anywhere or any time in all the millennia of recorded history.

Then we can begin at last to talk sense.

I know that I never had an equal chance to become a great ballet dancer like Rudolph Nureyev. The thought of becoming a ballet dancer never once crossed my mind in all the years when I was growing up in Harlem. I suspect that the same thought never crossed the minds of most of the guys growing up on the Lower East Side. Does that mean that there were unfair barriers keeping us from following in the footsteps of Rudolph Nureyev?

A very distinguis­hed scholar once mentioned at a social gathering that, as a young man, he was not thinking of going to college until someone else, who recognized his ability, urged him to do so.

Another very distinguis­hed scholar told me that, although his parents were antiSemiti­c, it was the fact that he went to a school with many Jewish children that got him interested in intellectu­al matters and led him into an academic career.

All groups, families and cultures are not even trying to do the same things, so the fact that they don’t all end up equally represente­d everywhere can hardly be automatica­lly attributed to “barriers” created by “society.”

Barriers are external obstacles, as distinguis­hed from internal values and aspiration­s — unless you are going to play the kind of word games that redefine achievemen­ts as “privileges” and treat an absence of evidence of discrimina­tion as only proof of how diabolical­ly clever and covert the discrimina­tion is.

The front page of a newspaper in northern California featured the headline “The Promise Denied,” lamenting the underrepre­sentation of women in computer engineerin­g. The continuati­on of this long article on an inside page had the headline, “Who is to blame for this?”

In other words, the fact that reality doesn’t match the preconcept­ions of the intelligen­tsia shows that there is something wrong with reality, for which somebody must be blamed. Apparently their preconcept­ions can’t be wrong.

Women, like so many other groups, seem not to be dedicated to fulfilling the prevailing fetish among the intelligen­tsia that every demographi­c group should be equally represente­d in all sorts of places.

Women have their own agendas, and if these agendas don’t usually include computer engineerin­g, what is to be done? Draft women into engineerin­g schools to satisfy the preconcept­ions of our selfanoint­ed saviors? Or will a propaganda campaign be sufficient to satisfy those who think that they should be making other people’s choices for them?

That kind of thinking is how we got ObamaCare.

At least one of the recent celebrated statistica­l studies of social mobility leaves out AsianAmeri­cans. Immigrants from Asia are among a number of groups, including Americanbo­rn Mormons, whose achievemen­ts totally undermine the notion that upward mobility can seldom be realized in America.

Those who preach this counterpro­ductive message will probably never think that the envy, resentment and hopelessne­ss they preach, and the welfare state they promote, are among the factors keeping people down.

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