The Denver Post

Why Wokeness will fail

- By Bret Stephens © The New York Times Co. Bret L. Stephens joined The New York Times as an Op-ed columnist in April 2017.

American history is, in many ways, a story of grand protests. They generally come in two types.

There are protest movements that, even in ferocious dissent, believe that the American system is ultimately geared to fulfill its inner promises — of equality, unalienabl­e rights, the pursuit of happiness, e pluribus unum, a more perfect union. This is what Frederick Douglass had in mind when, in an otherwise scathing indictment of America’s hypocrisy, he called the Constituti­on a “glorious liberty document.”

And there are protest movements that have turned against the system, either because they don’t think the system can meet its promises, or because they never agreed with the promises in the first place. “We didn’t land on Plymouth Rock,” Malcolm X said memorably. “The rock was landed on us.”

The experience of nearly 250 years is that the first type of movement generally succeeds: emancipati­on, suffrage, civil rights, marriage equality. They have aimed to build the country up, and bring Americans more closely together, on foundation­s already in place.

The second type — from the Confederac­y to the white supremacy of the Jim Crow era to Black nationalis­m in the 1960s — always fails. These movements want to tear things down, divide Americans, reject and replace our national foundation­s.

The ideology-cum-protest movement loosely referred to as Wokeness belongs to the second type. Last week it had its first major encounter with electoral democracy, not only in the governor’s race in Virginia but also in a referendum on replacing the Police Department in Minneapoli­s and on law-and-order issues in Seattle. Wokeness got clobbered, and not for the last time.

What’s wrong with a movement that, on its narrowest terms, aims to make Americans more aware of racial injustices, past and present? Nothing. In cases like those of

Eric Garner, George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery, non-black America has had a long-overdue education about the fact that

Black lives can still be subject to the same casual cruelties of a century ago.

But, like many movements that overspill their initial causes of action, Wokeness now connotes much more than an effort to reform the police or denounce racial injustice when it occurs. It is, instead, an allegation that racism is a defining feature, not a flaw, of nearly every aspect of American life, from its inception to its present, in the books we read, the language we speak, the heroes we venerate, the roads we drive, the way we do business, the way we select for merit and so on.

And it is a prescripti­on, not for genuine dialogue and reform, but for indoctrina­tion and extirpatio­n, based on a relentless form of race consciousn­ess that defies the modern American creed of judging people by the content of their character, not the color of their skin.

The problem with the allegation isn’t that it’s flatly wrong: America’s past is shot through with racism and, as Faulkner put it, “The past is never dead. It’s not even past.” But the allegation is also incomplete, distorted, ungenerous to former generation­s that advanced America’s promise, and untrue to the country most Americans know today.

Wokeness operates as if there had been no civil rights movement, and that white Americans hadn’t been an integral part of it. It operates as if 60 years of affirmativ­e action never happened, and that an ever-growing percentage of Black Americans don’t belong to the middle and upper class (and that they are, incidental­ly, concentrat­ed in the American South). It operates as if we didn’t twice elect a Black president and recently bury a Black general.

It operates as if, in city after city, American police forces aren’t led by Black police chiefs and staffed by officers of diverse background­s. It operates as if white supremacy is still being systemical­ly enforced, while ignoring the fact that a previously marginaliz­ed ethnic minority, namely Asian Americans, enjoys higher income levels than white Americans.

Above all, Wokeness pretends that incidents such as George Floyd’s murder, which are national scandals, are actually national norms. They aren’t, despite current injustices. Most Americans, I suspect, not only sense the falseness of the allegation. They are, increasing­ly, insulted by it.

The insult turns to injury when it comes to the solutions Wokeness prescribes, and in the way that it prescribes them.

A typical example: The American Medical Associatio­n recently published its “Guide to Language, Narrative and Concepts,” which includes such recommenda­tions as replacing the term “disadvanta­ged” with “historical­ly and intentiona­lly excluded,” “social problem” with “social injustice,” “vulnerable” with “oppressed,” and “blacklist” and “blackmail” with words that don’t suggest an associatio­n between the word “black” and “suspicion or disapprova­l.” This isn’t silly. It’s Orwellian. This is why Wokeness will fail. In the long run, Americans have always gotten behind protest movements that make the country more open, more decent, less divided. What today is called Woke does none of those things. It has no future in the home of the free.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States