Texarkana Gazette

Shameful blackout of Sowell, Thomas and Williams

- Larry Elder

Clarence Thomas, one of nine members of the Supreme Court and the second black to ever join the Court, is not in the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C. Asked to explain Thomas’ absence, the chief spokeswoma­n for the Smithsonia­n said, “The museum’s exhibition­s are based on themes, not individual­s.”

Yet the museum plans to add a popular local D.C. television news broadcaste­r. The museum’s founding director, Lonnie Bunch, said the broadcaste­r “symbolized that it was really important that America was changing and his presence was a symbol of that change.” And Thomas, raised in poverty to become only the second black to sit on the Supreme Court, is not “a symbol of that change”?

Left-wing blacks—and that’s the overwhelmi­ng majority— feel that black conservati­ves like Thomas do not just have different or wrongheade­d or illogical views. Thomas’ views, to them, damage the black community. Never mind that most Clarence Thomas-haters could not identify a single case Thomas decided with which they disagree.

One line of attack against Thomas goes as follows. Thomas “took advantage” of race-based preference­s to get into college and law school, but then “turned his back on those behind” by arguing that such preference­s violate the 14th Amendment.

What these critics assert is that but for race-based preference­s, Clarence Thomas would likely be working the deep-fryer at McDonald’s. Assume, for the moment, that but for racebased preference­s, Thomas would not have gotten into the particular schools he attended, College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachuse­tts, and Yale Law School. But in America thousands of colleges and universiti­es, from community colleges to Harvard, accept students of varying abilities with financial assistance readily available. Surely the driven, hardworkin­g, academical­ly oriented Clarence Thomas could have and would have found admission into schools matching his skills and ability.

Here’s another problem with race-based preference­s. Studies document a disproport­ionately high college-dropout rate for minority students admitted with lower test scores and grades than their peers selected without preference­s. How is this mismatchin­g of value to the “beneficiar­y” if it leads to a higher dropout rate, with the frustrated student giving up and leaving school in debt? The student often blames his failure to succeed at this high level on unfair, if not racist, professors.

The African-American Museum’s discrimina­tion against Thomas provides just one example of the black anti-conservati­ve bigotry. Here’s another. Every year, the black monthly magazine Ebony lists its “Power 100,” defined as those “who lead, inspire and demonstrat­e through their individual talents, the very best in Black America.” Each year Thomas is conspicuou­sly absent. Apparently, as a sitting black justice on the Supreme Court of the United States, Thomas does not “lead, inspire and demonstrat­e … the very best in Black America.” Ebony not only excludes Clarence Thomas but also shuts out prominent conservati­ves Thomas Sowell and Walter Williams.

As for Sowell, he’s only an economist and writer whom playwright David Mamet once called “our greatest contempora­ry philosophe­r.” Sowell, who never knew his father, was raised by a great-aunt and her two grown daughters. They lived in Harlem, where he was the first in his family to make it past the sixth grade. He left home at 17, served as a Marine in the Korean War, graduated magna cum laude from Harvard, earned a master’s degree at Columbia University the next year, followed by a Ph.D. in economics at the University of Chicago.

Sowell, at 87, authored some four dozen books (not counting revised editions) and wrote hundreds of scholarly articles and essays in periodical­s and thousands of newspaper columns. In 2015, Forbes magazine said: “It’s a scandal that economist Thomas Sowell has not been awarded the Nobel Prize. No one alive has turned out so many insightful, richly researched books.” Yet, thanks in part to the Ebony shutout, many blacks have never heard of him.

How does Ebony justify excluding economist and writer Walter Williams, former chairman of the economics department of George Mason University, where he still teaches? Raised by a single mother, he lived in Philadelph­ia’s Richard Allen housing projects. He served as a private in the Army before earning a bachelor’s degree at a state university, followed by a master’s and a Ph.D. in economics at UCLA. Williams has written a dozen books on economics and race, including the inspiratio­nal “Up From the Projects: An Autobiogra­phy,” and was recently the subject of a documentar­y about his life.

The exclusion of people like Clarence Thomas, Thomas Sowell and Walter Williams explains why there’s no serious discussion in the black community about government dependency; school choice; the damage done by high taxes, excessive regulation and laws like minimum wage; and why blacks should rethink their allegiance to the Democratic Party.

The failure to acknowledg­e conservati­ve blacks is a failure to engage their ideas, to the detriment of the community. This is not merely an injustice to them: It is an injustice to all Americans.

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