Equality: Why We Can't Wait
Equality: Why We Can't Wait
Equality: Why We Can't Wait
1991
The Nation.
ARTICLES.
Equality: why We CantWait
733
Having laid this foundation, the Edsalls adorn it with manyof the standard
pieces of the new line. They presentDaniel
Patrick Moynihans racist,scurrilousand
J
i
m
Sleepers
in
The
CIosesl
of
StmnADOLPH REED JR. AND
ly
misogynous
1965 report, The Negro
gers:
Liberalism
and
the
Politics
of
Race
JULIAN BOND
in New York, champion the cause of Family: TheCasefor National Action, as
of prophetic inspecter is haunting liberal-left whites who feel threatened by feminist an unfairly scorned work
demands and liberal initiatives aimed at sight, and they even attempt to legitimize
intellectual life-the specter
of racist opportunism. From advancing racial equality. The most ex- it by linking it to W.E.B.Du Boiss 1899
prestigious sociology depart- tensive and coherent statementof the new study, The Philadelphia Negro-also a
ments to The Atlantic, The American orthodoxy by far, however, is Thomas standard move at the moment. (They neProspect, Dissent and In These Times, Byrne Edsall and Mary D. Edsalls new glect tomention, however, that Moyfrom Washington Post pundits to New tract, ChainReaction:The Impact of nihan called for correcting young black
YorkNewsday editors, its victim-blaming Race, Righfs, and Taxes on American mens putative character defects by shipmessage echoes:Liberal and progressive Politics. Because of its comprehensive- ping them intoa worldaway from
forceshave fallen onto hard times in ness the Edsalls volume epitomizes the women in the military, coincidentally
just as cannon-fodder needs were increasAmerican politics because they have be- current vogue.
ing along with escalations in Vietnam.)
come too closely identified with the exThe Edsalls attempt to vindicate Moycessive demands of blacks, feminists,etc.
nihan is part of a general attack on those
and have failed to give proper weight to
who have dissentedfrom victim-blaming
the concerns of the beleaguered white
rhetoric,
particularly regarding inner-city
working and middle classes. Thisstory is
poor
people.
Worse yet, the Edsalls say,
rapidly congealing into an unexamined
liberals
and
the
left have beenirresponorthodoxy, a ritual lament that seeks to
sible
not
only
in
failingto face up to poor
justify what is at best a failure of nerve.
blacks
socially
destructive
behavior but
In this lament, progressive agendas
also
in
pursuing
divisive
strategies
of solost credibility, and/or Democrats lost
cial engineering in struggles for the mtethe White House, because they deviated
gration of schools and public housing in
from the old New Deal coalitions focus
For the Edsalls the meter of history Northern cities likq Bostonand Chicago.
on universalistic programs and became starts runningin the mid-1960s. At that
They adduce these actionsto show how
identified with special interests. This point Goldwaterite Republicans began the spread of civil rights activism in the
alienated the Democratic Partys white what would become a successfql polar- North created a growing link between
working- and middle-class constituency, ization of American politics around the race and partisan allegiance-the core
which both carried the fiscal burden for issues of racialliberalism, the prolifera- of their argumentthat a chain reaction
the programs targeted to others and felt tion of groups claiming institutionalized driven by race has transformed the white
that many of the specific programs af- rights, and governmentspending-all
electorate. And who is to blame? Upperfronted their own traditional values. three of which cameto be identified with status white liberals and extremist or
Versions ofthis tale have proliferated. the Democratic Party.
undeserving blacks undermined the DemSome, likeTheda Skocpols inSustainThe Goldwaterites were aided in this ocratic coalition by challenging tradiable SocialPolicy: Fighting Poverty With- mission, the Edsalls say, by the violent tionally Democratic whites who were
out Poverty Programs (The American contagion of race riotsin northern slums, affronted by civil rights agendas. This
Prospect, Summer 1990) and William the inflammatory antics of black ex- combination of black bad behavior and
Julius Wilsons in The Truly Drsadvan- tremists (whoeven taught right-wingers white liberal insensitivity produced an
taged and Race-Neutral Policiesand the that confrontation andrejection of ac- ugly disenchantment with black aspiDemocratic Coalition (The American commodation were themselves mobiliz- rations, reaching from the bungalow
Prospect, Spring 1990), concentrate on ing strategies) and the reluctance of wards of Chicago. . . to prominent pubbemoaning the alleged hijacking of lib- liberalism and the Democratic party to lic intellectuals like Norman Mailer.
eral social policy in the 1960s by small- forthrightlyacknowledge and address the
In the context of this backlash, the
minded black militants whoinsisted
interaction of crime, welfare dependency, Edsalls portray ordinary citizens, the
on race-targeted programs and censored joblessness, drug use, and illegitimacy average working man and woman (to
public discussion of social pathologies with the larger questionsof raceand pov- be average and ordinary, of course,
among the black poor. Others, like Jon- erty. Although blacks bad and insensi- one must be white), as repelled by liberathan Rieders in Canarsie: The Jews and tive behavior is pivotal in the Edsalls als forsaking of standardized meritItalrans of Brooklyn Agarnst Lrberalism, story, others also contributed to the new oriented criteria for racial preferences
polarization by threatening the most en- in hiring and in education. Listen careAdolph Reed Jr. ISa professorofpolitical trenched traditions of the middle class; fully to their historyof the period: Lawscience at Northwestern University. Julianamong them were those who fought to se- suits forcing court-ordered hiring
and proBond IS a longtime crvil rights activist cure constitutional protection for crimi- motion in unions and in police and fire
and avisrtingprofessor at Harvard Uni- nal defendants, advocates of reproduc- departments were driving a wedge beversity and American University.
tive libertyand proponents of gayrights. tween formerly Democratic white work-
I t is instructive thatthe
EaTsalk identifvrace
rather thanracism as
thepivotal issue.
The Nation.
734
ers and . . . black competitors;affirmative action was forcing divisive conflicts between . . . Jews and blacks.
[Emphasis added.]
But thisformulation, in presuming
a prior compatibility, denies the reality of explicitly racial stratification within the working class and a history of
white working-class antagonism toward
blacks-coexisting, certainly, with many
exemplary instances of interracial solidarity-that stretches back through the
1863 New York draft riot. This antagonism was visible after Reconstruction in
the widespread expulsion of blacks from
December 9,I991
point. Take their view of deindustrialization: Jobs leave, local economies change
and wage scales drop asa result of economic forces. That construction sets the
stage for jeremiadsabout theexigencies
of global competition, which leaves
little or no room for traditionalliberal
Democratic policies sheltering the disadvantaged. With that, they issue what
amounts to a warning to theleft to shut
up and get with the program:
Intensified international competition
will exert increasingly brutal pressure
on America's economic and political
systems, and on pollcies offering special protection, preference, or subsdy to groups withinthe populationwhether they be ethnic or racial minorities,
unskilled
workers, prisoners,
elected offdals, the elderly, the disabled, AIDS vlctims, or single mothers.
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Yet this storys inexorability is a function of its narrow perspective. A different, moretextured explanation of the
foundations of the postwar governing
synthesis and the tensions within it is provided by Alan Wolfes Americas Impasse; Barry Bluestone and Bennett Harrisons TheDerndustrializationof America; and Samuel Bowles, David Gordon
and Thomas Weisskopfs Beyond the
WmteLand.These authors demystify the
public sectodprivate sector distinction,
demonstrating the ubiquity of government interventionto cement loyalties by
using public policy to channel the flow of
material resources. They illuminate the
extent to which corporate choices and
American public policy-foreign and domestic-are implicated in urban, regional andnational deindustrialization.Had
they taken this analysis into account, the
Edsalls might have been constrained (a)
to explain why only certain categories of
domestic public spending become stigmatized as welfare and (b)to come out
from behind their smokescreen of claptrap about the
exigencies of global competition and affirm as their own the vision they project to be the ineluctable
course of American politics and policy.
Similarly, they simply recycle the canard-legitimized by William Julius Wilsons black imprimatur-that the left
was responsible for the backlash against
antipoverty policy because of its refusal
to confront theissue of social pathology
among the poor. That charge is a complete falsehood, andonethe
Edsalls
elide (likethe blank in the Watergate t
a
p
e
)
with the gaps in their bibliography. In
fact, thepervasive spread of meanspirited rhetoric about poverty in the 1980s
December 9, 1991
The Nation.
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Here arevivld descrlptlons of camp hfe among theblack troops, inslghts mto the
white officers, descrlptlons of mllltary engagements and seemmgly obJective accounts of the fall of Richmond and the beginnings of Reconstructlon What I S
unique is that all of these things are seen from the vantage polnt not so much of
the Yankees as of the black Amerlcan
Richmond Trrnes-Dispatch
$13 95
1991
December 9,
The Nation.
December 9,1991
737