Two Facts and Three Questions About Systemic Racism

Ross Douthat has an interview with a hard right evangelical Christian podcaster named Allie Beth Stuckey in today’s NYT. Most of the interview revolved around her views on culture war issues; I have not yet decided how, if at all, to respond to them. As a sort of throw-away, however, she argued that white people should not be blamed for what happened to black people 200, or even 50, years ago. That is a typical response to questions about systemic racism by reactionaries. Is it the correct way to analyze the problem?

No. Here are two facts about racism that cannot be disputed:

  1. Black people were subjected to both de jure and de facto racism from the beginning of colonization until, at the very earliest, the middle of the 1960s.
  2. Black people have less wealth, lower incomes, shorter life spans, poorer housing, and less education than white people on average as of the day I am writing this.

Individual “blame” is not really the issue. Here are the pertinent questions:

  1. Do you agree that #2 above is the result of #1? If not, how do you explain the discrepancy?
  2. If your answer to the first question is yes, do you think this is a problem that government is required to address, or do you believe average conditions are irrelevant, because America is a nation built purely on individuals, not groups?
  3. If you think the discrepancies should be addressed by government, what is the best way to deal with them?

The hard right never gets to #3. To the center and the left, it is the only issue that is reasonably debatable.