@CathyYoung63's recent piece for @ArcDigi claims that, compared to James Lindsay's PragerU video on Critical Race Theory, my "defense" of CRT "isn't much more convincing." The problem? I never wrote a defense of CRT. cathy.arcdigital.media/p/the-fight-ov…
What I did write was a blog post (conceptualdisinformation.substack.com/p/james-lindsa…) explaining how the boogeyman James is selling is a complete strawperson representation of CRT, according to which critical race theorists think all human interactions are racist. Rick Roderick puts it best:
So the only sense in which I gave a defense of CRT: I criticized CRT's critics. A subtle distinction, but an important one.
Here I will do the same. First: these phenomena aren't things CRT is meant to explain. The theory of gravity can't explain why people go vegan -- so what?
Young continues, here claiming that CRT paints with a broad brush because... the 1619 project does? There is nothing in CRT that contradicts the claim that "the overall picture of race relations in the U.S. in 2021 is incredibly complex and multilayered."
Given the first sentence of this paragraph, it seems like Young is claiming that "microaggressions" are a tenet of CRT. But then she writes that the concept of microaggressions is "very much a part of" CRT, citing a Google Scholar search. This is not very convincing.
Also citing the discussion of microaggressions in a CRT book. But the fact that CRT scholars have addressed microaggressions does not in any way make it a tenet of CRT, any more than empiricists discussing billiards balls makes billiards a tenet of empiricism.
Now, the juicy stuff! As I said above, Lindsay claims CRT scholars think racism is literally everywhere, in every human interaction, relationship, etc. I criticized this. Young says that I am "doing definitional nitpicking" here, pointing to a tweet by a pro-CRT Education prof.
I understand why Young cites the prof's thread on CRT -- much of it is overstated, I think. Several claims that leave much interpretation to the reader. But the claim that CRT "starts with the broad presumption that [racism] exists in most interracial dynamics" doesn't appear.
Here Cathy seems to be begging the question -- suggesting that activism based on aggressive white privilege rhetoric, accusations of complicity, and imperatives to detoxify themselves of "whiteness" represent CRT, when no connection between those camps has been established.
My "defense" isn't more convincing that Lindsay's Prager U video. I point out that people use D&S' claim that CRT "questions... the liberal order" as proof of CRT being anti-liberal when it's anything but. Questioning mainstream ideas is central to liberal thought.
Also: while one can certainly claim it's anti-liberal to have anything but an absolutist stance on free speech, CRT scholars are far from the only ones to claim there ought to be exceptions--including many liberals! See: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fighting_…
Young then claims that my Bell reference was a quote that was "deeply skeptical of freedom of speech." That's one way to read it. I read it in the context of the very politicized obscenity case against 2 Live Crew. I don't think Bell would have sided with the prosecution.
The quote from which Young is drawing here contains more than just "emancipation" and "liberation" in its affirmation of the value of liberalism. But Young ignores all the other pro-liberalism language -- appraisals of modernism, enlightenment, and traditional civil rights.
I follow up my discussion of Harris by giving the most transparent appraisal of liberalism by a CRT scholar I know of, from an article by Mari Matsuda. Curiously, Young does not address this in her criticism of my piece, which, again, she compares to a PragerU video. Interesting!
I agree with the claim that some of the backlash against some so-called "antiracism" is against some genuinely terrible stuff; I have criticized what I think of as shoddy antiracism scholarship myself (see link in bio). Still, Young hasn't demonstrated that CRT is to blame. [fin]
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This is a thread on the 2022 right-wing documentary UNCLE TOM II, a film based entirely on the worldview and source material of the John Birch Society.
It has been promoted by Charlie Kirk & Jack Posobiec as proof that MLK & the civil rights movement were secretly Communist. 🧵
1. Leading up to MLK Day this year, Kirk & Posobiec decided they were going to abandon the standard Republican ritual (quoting King out of context, depicting the civil rights hero as a colorblind conservative).
Instead, they wanted to vilify MLK and the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
2. On the eve of MLK Day, Posobiec was promoting UNCLE TOM II and its narrator Chad O. Jackson as authoritative sources on King's connections to "Communists."
Kirk had already promoted UNCLE TOM II on Real America's Voice in 2022 after the film was released.
Because everyone is talking about Ibram Kendi: it is so deeply upsetting to me that when reading groups and book lists were popping up after George Floyd was murdered it was always the work of people like Kendi & DiAngelo. Imagine if everybody read Charles Mills instead 🥲
Robin DiAngelo made a shit ton of money telling other white people that white people are basically incurably racist and Ibram Kendi made a shit ton of money basically claiming to be the sole arbiter of what racism truly is and refused to acknowledge any critiques of his views
I get a bit more detailed with my critiques here, but I ultimately do have a lot more to say, been wanting to write something about this and maybe I will soon (if any media sites/mags are interested, DM me!)
Chris Rufo took a break from suing college students for "political violence" (read: getting spit on his shoes) to argue that conservatives should turn to Nixon "as our guide" in mobilizing a "counterrevolution" against things like CRT and DEI.
A quick thread on Nixon & Rufo 🧵
It is interesting that Rufo venerates Nixon, because Rufo likes to talk about how he is deeply opposed to racism, often pointing to the fact that he is in an interracial marriage and has biracial children.
Nixon was deeply racist. Ex 1: Nixon & Reagan discuss African diplomats
Being charitable, you might think that the Reagan phone call is not enough to call Nixon racist.
Ex 2: Nixon explains that, while he is against abortion in some cases, he thinks it is necessary to prevent the birth of interracial ("a black and a white") children.
The YouTube channel for Larry Elder’s documentary films uploaded the John Birch Society propaganda film ANARCHY USA, which claims the civil rights movement “is simply part of a worldwide movement, organized and directed by Communists, to enslave all mankind”
A thread, w/ clips🧵
ANARCHY USA was written & directed in 1966 by JBS member G. Edward Griffin, a prolific propagandist & first-rate quack. Griffin believes that HIV “doesn’t even exist” & that cancer is a dietary deficiency that can be cured with “an essential food compound” mediamatters.org/glenn-beck/who…
This upload of ANARCHY USA has become one of the most popular videos on the Uncle Tom YouTube channel. It has been viewed over 200k times in just eight months, whereas the film has been viewed fewer than 40k times in seven years on the official John Birch Society YouTube channel.
"Cultural Marxism" has entered mainstream political discourse, appearing in recent speeches by DeSantis and Hawley, Fox News broadcasts, and right-wing media from Breitbart to Ben Shapiro.
This is a thread, with clips, on the 25-year history of "Cultural Marxism" on the Right 🧵
1. We begin with the arch-conservative activist and TV host, Bill Lind.
He began his 1998 talk "The Origins of Political Correctness" by saying college campuses have become so authoritarian that he'd be put "literally on trial" for joking about women and shopping carts
2. Lind says political correctness is seen as something to laugh at, but in fact "it's deadly serious. It is the great disease of our century, the disease that has left tens of millions of people dead... the disease of ideology."