The
Coddling of the Capitalist, White-Supremacist,
Patriarchal American Mind
By Robert
Jensen
[This
is an edited version of a talk given to
Common Ground for Texans in Austin, TX,
March 5, 2016.]
March 08, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "Crossing
Genres
"
-
To avoid being
conned, politically and intellectually, it’s
important to examine how a debate is framed and what
ideology is advanced by that framing. What is the
scope of the question? How was the direction of the
inquiry decided? Who set the boundaries of the
conversation?
Let’s ask
those questions in regard to the contemporary
conversation in the United States about allegedly
dangerous trends on college campuses concerning
“political correctness,” “microaggressions,” and
“trigger warnings.”
A spirited
public discussion of these issues was touched off
most recently by an article in
The Atlantic
magazine titled
“The Coddling of the American Mind.” I want to
challenge the framing and ideology of that article,
and of the dominant culture, by suggesting a better
title would be “The Coddling of the Capitalist,
White-Supremacist, Patriarchal American Mind.”
CAPITALIST
Educators are
right to be concerned about non-rational or
anti-intellectual factors that can shut down the
conversation in a classroom; emotion and politics
can impede open inquiry. Let’s use that as a
definition of political correctness — a narrowing of
the scope of inquiry, especially to avoid certain
controversial ideas out of a fear of offending
someone, falling out of step with peers, or being
disciplined by authorities.
There is one
academic unit on most every campus where political
correctness severely limits students and undermines
the quality of intellectual work: The business
school. I have been teaching at the University of
Texas at Austin for 24 years, and I ask students
from the business school how often in their classes
they are asked to challenge, or presented with a
challenge of, capitalism. The answer typically is
“never.” Despite the many trenchant critiques of
capitalism, the easily demonstrated failures of the
system, and experiments with alternatives, it
appears that the word “business” in “business
school” actually means “business as it is narrowly
defined in capitalism.” This limit, policed with an
efficiency that Stalin would envy, is so routine
that even in the sectors of a business school where
one might assume challenges are welcome, such as
courses on ethics or social responsibility, serious
critiques are rarely presented.
Another
troubling example of this ideological subordination
to capitalism comes in most economics departments.
While there are challenges to capitalism allowed at
some schools — those departments typically are
described as “heterodox,” which implies that most
economics departments are “orthodox,” a term most
often used to describe adherence to religious
doctrine — most economics curricula embrace
neo-classical economics, which simply means the
doctrines of contemporary capitalism. Once again,
the critiques, failures, and alternatives are
ignored or sidelined.
Let’s pause to
ponder the consequences of this narrow approach to
the crucial question of how we produce, distribute,
and consume goods and services. One of the key
problems facing the human species — I would say the
central problem — is that a
high-energy/high-technology world is undermining the
capacity of the ecosphere to sustain large-scale
human societies, and that a continued pursuit of
“growth” on a finite planet will intensify the
multiple, cascading ecological crises that are
unfolding around us. In other words, modern
mass-consumption capitalism is ecocidal.
Some
economists recognize this and have for several
decades been advocating
“ecological economics,” an approach based on the
notion that the laws of physics and chemistry (let’s
call that “reality”) trump the theories of
economists (let’s call that “the theories of
economists”). Ecological economics is reality-based.
One might think that all of economics, a field that
likes to think of itself as a science, would embrace
real scientific principles. One might assume that
ecological economics would be a synonym for
“economics for rational economists.” Instead, it is
a small subfield that is routinely ignored within
the discipline.
Why would this
reality-denial strategy be dominant? Because of the
coddling of the capitalist mind. Capitalists
apparently are so emotionally fragile and
intellectually limited, that any challenge to
orthodoxy feels like aggression and threatens to
trigger a breakdown. Why do we coddle capitalists?
Capitalists apparently have considerable influence,
perhaps because the concentration of wealth in the
system allows the wealthiest capitalists to have
disproportionate influence in politics through
campaign contributions and in education through
philanthropy.
One of the
renegades,
Richard Norgaard, marks the non-rational quality
of orthodox economics with the phrase
“the Church of Economism,” describing the
contemporary economy as “the world’s greatest
faith-based organization” that “replaces belief in
God’s control over human destiny with the belief
that markets control our fate.” Norgaard, a central
figure in ecological economics, points out that some
honest economists have acknowledged the religious
nature of their discipline, including Frank Knight,
one of the founders of the neo-liberal Chicago
school of economics, who in a 1932 article wrote:
The point is
that the “principles” by which a society or a group
lives in tolerable harmony are essentially
religious. The essential nature of a religious
principle is that not merely is it immoral to oppose
it, but to ask what it is, is morally identical with
denial and attack.
There must be
ultimates, and they must be religious, in economics
as anywhere else, if one has anything to say
touching conduct or social policy in a practical
way. Man is a believing animal and to few, if any,
is it given to criticize the foundations of belief
“intelligently.
Certainly the
large general [economics] courses should be
prevented from raising any question about
objectivity, but should assume the objectivity of
the slogans they inculcate, as a sacred feature of
the system.
Political
correctness is real, and the most intellectually
sanitized spaces on most campuses — the business
school and economics department — encourage us to
roll the dice of the future of the planet based on
non-rational doctrines that are more theologically
than empirically based. That is a cause for concern.
WHITE
SUPREMACIST
From the class
politics that define the modern university, let’s
turn to race, where most of the debate has been
focused the past year, and start with a
definition of microaggressions:
the everyday
verbal, nonverbal, and environmental slights, snubs,
or insults, whether intentional or unintentional,
which communicate hostile, derogatory, or negative
messages to target persons based solely upon their
marginalized group membership. In many cases, these
hidden messages may invalidate the group identity or
experiential reality of target persons, demean them
on a personal or group level, communicate they are
lesser human beings, suggest they do not belong with
the majority group, threaten and intimidate, or
relegate them to inferior status and treatment.
I am not part
of any identifiable marginalized groups, but I’ve
spoken with many students at UT and other
universities in my 24 years of teaching, and I’ve
read a lot about these issues, and all this evidence
leads me to conclude that microaggressions are real
and often have a negative effect on students, though
there is considerable individual variation in
non-white students’ reactions. So, what training
and/or policies should a university implement to
deal with this problem?
Before we get
to that question, let’s ask where microaggressions
come from. In matters of race, they are a product of
white supremacy, the ideological system that for 500
years has shaped the domination of the world by
Europe and its offshoots, such as the United States.
White supremacy is obviously a part of our history,
but there is considerable debate about how relevant
that ideological system is to contemporary life.
This debate
goes on at the University of Texas at Austin, where
for several decades students, faculty, and community
members have called for the removal of statues of
Confederate officials, calls that have been met by
spirited defenses of those public monuments. The
statue of Jefferson Davis, the president of the
Confederacy, was finally
removed this past summer, but statues of Robert
E. Lee (leader of the Confederate Army), Albert
Sidney Johnston (a Confederate officer) and John
Reagan (postmaster general for the Confederacy)
still stand. Public monuments to one of the most
morally depraved political units in modern history
remain on the UT campus to this day.
UT is, of
course, in Texas, where many people celebrated the
election to the presidency of sort-of native son
George W. Bush, who once joked that his success
proved that “C students: You too, can be president,”
reflecting his less than stellar academic record,
suggesting that his admission to Yale and Harvard
universities for undergraduate and master’s degrees
might have been based more on family connections
than on merit. Many of the same people who raise no
objection to such legacy admissions will claim that
UT is admitting black and brown students who are
unqualified and that affirmative action policies are
unfair and/or a threat to the integrity of higher
education.
More nuanced
defenses of this white-supremacist ideology (“it’s
about heritage, not hate” in the case of the
statues, or “we should live in a meritocracy” in the
case of affirmative action) have in recent years
given way to more overt racist rhetoric and images,
no doubt sparked in large part by the election of a
black president (who, because he is black, is deemed
illegitimate by some) and an economic malaise (which
is easier for some to blame on immigrants than on
the people who capture a disproportionate share of
the country’s wealth).
So, we have
mainstream institutions that find it hard to remove
symbols of white supremacy from prominent positions,
let alone deal with the deeper ideological
manifestations, let alone deal with the material
realities of racialized disparities in wealth and
power. And we see a resurgence of conservative
political forces that are comfortable with more
overt expressions of white supremacy. In that
context, should we ask whether some non-white
students are too sensitive about microaggressions?
Sure, that’s a reasonable question, but it might
help to think more about the context first.
Why does the
contemporary United States, liberal and
conservative, find it so hard to come to terms with
white supremacy? A quick review of our history helps
clarify that. We know that there would be no United
States if not for the nearly complete extermination
of indigenous people by Europeans, the first
American holocaust, an extermination program
justified by the ideology of white supremacy. We
know that the United States’ move into the
industrial era was supported by cheap cotton, which
provided the raw material for the textile mills of
New England and a commodity for sale abroad to
generate capital, and that the slave system that
made that possible — another crime of holocaust
proportions — was justified by the ideology of white
supremacy. U.S. dominance of the world has
intensified after WWII in part because of the use of
military forces in the Third World, also producing
holocaust levels of death and destruction, and such
wars have been easier to sell when the people being
killed are not white (think about terms such as gook
and raghead).
There would be
no country called the United States, nor would it
likely be the wealthiest country in the history of
the world, without these racist and/or racialized
crimes. It’s not hard to see why we don’t deal with
the question honestly. How does a country come to
terms with the reality that its prosperity is built
on such extermination, exploitation, and empire? So
far, we have avoided that reckoning, and much of
white America seems determined to continue that
avoidance strategy. Should we be coddling the
white-supremacist mind?
PATRIARCHAL
The
contemporary debate about campus politics also has
intersected with concerns about gender, including
the use of trigger warnings which alert students
that a reading, video, or lecture may contain
material that could cause emotional distress. The
mental health of rape victims/survivors was one of
the first concerns that gave rise to trigger
warnings. So, let’s talk about the reality of rape.
Rape is a
vastly underreported crime; most women who are raped
do not go to law enforcement agencies, and therefore
crime statistics tell us little about the prevalence
of rape. But the feminist movement’s activism
against men’s violence led to research based on
women’s experiences rather than on crime reporting,
and those studies have found varying rape rates.
On a global
scale, 30% of women over the age of 15 have
experienced
“intimate partner violence,” defined as
physical, sexual, or emotional violence, based on
data from 81 countries. The rate in North America is
21%. For many years, anti-rape activists in the
United States quoted the statistic that
one in three girls is sexually abused and that 38%
of the women reported sexual abuse before age 18.
A recent review of the data by well-respected
researchers concluded that in the United States,
at least one of every six women has been raped
at some time in her life, a figure that is now
widely accepted. Much of this sexual violence is
directed at young people; in the National Violence
against Women Survey, slightly more than half of the
14.8% of women who reported being raped said
it happened before age eighteen.
Those
statistics address acts that meet the legal
definition of rape, but women and girls face a much
broader range of what we can call “sexual
intrusions,” sexual acts that they do not request
and do not want but experience regularly — sexually
corrosive messages and calls, sexual taunting on the
streets, sexual harassment in schools and
workplaces, coercive sexual pressure in dating,
sexual assault, and violence that is sexualized. In
public lectures on these issues, I list these
categories and women’s heads nod, an affirmation of
the routine nature of men’s intrusions into their
daily lives. To drive home the point, I sometimes
tell audiences that I have just completed an
extensive longitudinal study on the subject and
found that the percentage of women in the United
States who have experienced some form of sexual
intrusion is exactly 100%. Women understand the dark
humor — no study is necessary to confirm something
so routine.
If we describe
rape as
“sexually invasive dehumanization” to capture
the distinctive nature of the crime, then let’s ask
this painful question: How much of everyday life do
women experience as sexually invasive dehumanization
on some level? Even more challenging, why does this
situation continue even when the feminist movement
has made progress on other fronts?
The answer
requires us to confront patriarchy, the system of
institutionalized male dominance, in which men
continue to use sex and violence to control women, a
strategy not only widespread in everyday life but
celebrated in the routine sexual objectification and
exploitation of women in mass media and the
sex industries of prostitution, pornography, and
stripping. How does a society come to terms with
inequality woven so deeply into the fabric of
everyday life? We can’t expect to advance a
challenge to patriarchy by coddling the patriarchal
mind.
CONCLUSION
I have spent
my entire adult life working as either a journalist
or a professor; I have both principled and practical
reasons for caring about freedom of expression and
academic freedom. I also have been on the receiving
end of attempts to limit the scope of debate because
of arguments I’ve made that have challenged the
conventional wisdom of both conservatives and
liberals. My
antiwar writing after 9/11 led to a phone/letter
campaign to get me fired, and more recently my
critiques of the ideology underlying the transgender
movement have led to protests of public lectures
I’ve given.
In my career,
I have observed the routine way that serious
challenges to concentrated wealth and power are
marginalized in academic life. I also have witnessed
exchanges in which accusations about
class/race/gender oppression are hurled without
supporting evidence and moments when potentially
productive exchanges are cut off by people who think
that invoking jargon ends an argument. A phrase such
as
“check your privilege” can be an important
reminder that people from dominant groups should
think about how unearned status can limit our
understanding of power dynamics, but it also can
turn into a cliché that shuts down conversation.
So, my remarks
today are not intended to ignore the difficult
struggles on campuses over questions of intellectual
openness and honesty. When does merely offensive
speech becomes oppressive? When should one person’s
freedom of expression, no matter how offensive, be
defended and when does a pattern of abusive
expression clearly undermine the ability of others
to participate fully in a classroom discussion? How
do we encourage challenges to widely accepted
theories and doctrines? How do we model civil,
respectful intellectual debate when those debates
are not merely academic but have serious effects on
participants in the debate? When should we offer
students some kind of shield from the corrosive
aspects of contemporary culture and when is it
important for all of us to face the worst of the
culture?
My remarks are
intended to suggest that any discussion of how to
approach these issues should first contend with the
systems and structures of power that create the
hierarchy, inequality, and violence at the heart of
these struggles. After nearly three decades in
academic life, I am more aware than ever of how
difficult it is to resolve these questions and how
easy it is for all of us to feel overly confident
about our own conclusions. Still, I am confident in
asserting that crafting intellectually defensible
policies requires us to never stray too far from the
reality of those systems and structures of power.
Robert Jensen is a professor in the School of
Journalism at the University of Texas at Austin and
board member of the Third Coast Activist Resource
Center in Austin. He is the author of
Plain Radical:
Living, Loving, and Learning to Leave the Planet
Gracefully
(Counterpoint/Soft Skull, 2015). Jensen can be
reached at
rjensen@austin.utexas.edu and his articles can
be found online at
http://robertwjensen.org/. To join an email list
to receive articles by Jensen, go to
http://www.thirdcoastactivist.org/jensenupdates-info.html.
Twitter: @jensenrobertw. |