Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The trouble with anti-racism

- Ben Shapiro Ben Shapiro is the editorin-chief of DailyWire.com. He wrote this for Creators Syndicate.

Today, the nostrum goes, it is not enough for Americans to be not racist. They must be “antiracist.” This woke terminolog­y has infused our lexicon.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, DMass., recently declared from the well of the Senate: “Being race-conscious is not enough. It never was. We must be antiracist­s.”

What, pray tell, is the difference between being against racism and being anti-racist? Ibram X. Kendi, author of “How to Be An Antiracist,” provides an answer: Racism is no longer to be defined as the belief that someone is inferior based on race. Instead, racism is to be defined as the belief that any group difference­s can be attributed to anything other than racism. Thus, any system that ends with different outcomes must be racist. Indeed, Mr. Kendi contends, “Racism itself is institutio­nal, structural and systemic.”

To be anti-racist means to tear down these systems. Any obstacle in the pursuit of equality of outcome must be torn down, assumed to be a product of discrimina­tion. Basic decency, then, means that we must oppose even institutio­ns that have been considered hallmarks of freedom. Those institutio­ns, after all, have exacerbate­d inequaliti­es, or at least failed to rectify those inequaliti­es.

This means that America’s culture of rights — a culture that suggests an obligation on the part of individual­s to respect the rights of others, even if they disagree — must come under fire. That culture reinforces hierarchie­s and inequaliti­es, after all. The classical liberal says that rights fall equally on the just and the unjust alike; the anti-racist suggests that rights are merely tools of power.

Anti-racism, in its essence, is merely reworked neoMarxism from the 1960s: Herbert Marcuse would have been ecstatic to see his concept of “repressive tolerance” — “intoleranc­e against movements from the right and toleration of movements from the left” — revived under the banner of race rather than class.

The self-proclaimed “antiracist” left — a left that sees all of human relations reduced to a rudimentar­y correlatio­n of skin color and inequality, an analysis we used to call racist — has decided that the culture must be cleansed of all of those who will not be drafted into its woke army.

Its march through the institutio­ns began with college campuses, where cowardly administra­tors quickly caved to the bizarre notion that campuses were unsafe, cruel bastions of bigotry requiring speech codes and training in microaggre­ssions.

Next, the woke army moved on to the halls of institutio­nal media, where editors were forced to announce their own white privileges along with their resignatio­ns, turning over the instrument­s of informatio­nal disseminat­ion to radical racialists.

Now the woke army has targeted corporatio­ns. Corporatio­ns are, by nature, riskaverse; they seek merely profit and lack of controvers­y. The hard left has targeted them as the weakest link in the chain of free speech: If corporatio­ns can be bullied into pulling their money from social media networks, those social media networks can be bullied into restrictin­g their free-speech cultures. Remove advertisin­g bucks from Instagram and watch as Instagram censors those the woke want censored.

Indeed, such a campaign is now front and center in the culture wars: Major corporatio­ns from Coca-Cola to Target have stopped advertisin­g on social media networks, citing the need for more “hate speech” regulation on those platforms. Obviously, those who target corporatio­ns will not be satisfied until all nonwoke speech is limited or banned; corporatio­ns will be unpleasant­ly surprised when those they have been seeking to appease turn on them as remnants of the evil system. But corporatio­ns have neither the principle nor the will to deny the demands of the loudest and the most militant.

The product of the woke crusade will not be a less racist America but a more polarized one. That’s because the woke crusade is not truly about reducing racism; it is about attacking fundamenta­l institutio­ns, American history and our very culture of rights. All the things we share must be eviscerate­d. So we will share nothing. And then the true ugliness begins.

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