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<title>Color Blind</title>
<link>http://www.reason.com/news/show/29910.html</link>
<description> &lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0895264625/reasonmagazineA/&quot;&gt;The New
Color Line: How Quotas and Privilege Destroy Democracy&lt;/a&gt; &lt;/em&gt;, by Paul Craig Roberts and
Lawrence M. Stratton, Washington, D: Regnery, 247 pages, $24.95

&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;The New Color Line: How Quotas and Privileges Destroy Democracy&lt;/em&gt;  is a
provocative but frustrating book. The heart of the book is a well-researched history of how civil
rights litigation and legislation ultimately led to today's ubiquitous racial quotas and
preferences. No boring academic tome, &lt;em&gt;The New Color Line&lt;/em&gt;
 is well-written and concise. It is likely to be the leading conservative study of
affirmative action for some time. 

&lt;p&gt; But even though the book is
often insightful, it suffers from many of the flaws typical of conservative critiques of
affirmative action. First, the authors fail to acknowledge at appropriate points
America's history of oppression of racial minorities, particularly blacks. Second, the
authors never discuss what would replace affirmative action. Third, the authors exhibit
some confusion as to why they o ppose affirmative action. Is it, as the title of the
book implies, because affirmative action &quot;destroys democracy&quot;? Or is it, as the authors
sometimes suggest, because affirmative action creates special privileges that destroy
the liberal order? Or perhaps , as the authors argue in one chapter, civil rights laws
that apply to private parties violate individual liberty, whether or not they are
accompanied by racial preferences.

&lt;p&gt; Paul Craig Roberts and
Lawrence M. Stratton initially focus on the argument that affirmative action subverts
democracy. According to the authors, the assault on democracy began with the 1944
publication of Swedish economist Gunnar Myrdal's treatise on the state of black America,
&lt;em&gt; An American Dilemma&lt;/em&gt;. Myrdal's book, a true masterpiece bec ause of the
prodigious research effort that produced it, put the neglected issue of the outrages
suffered by black America in the forefront of the liberal agenda. But the book concluded
on a pessimistic note: As a practical matter, segregation was too popu lar to be ended
democratically.

&lt;p&gt; Roberts and Stratton vigorously dispute this
point, and contend that segregation was on its way out through democratic processes by
the late 1940s. That may be true, but the authors fail to recognize that from Myrdal's
1944 perspective, America's recent history with regard to racial and ethnic minorities
gave him no cause to be sanguine. 

&lt;p&gt;In addition to the day-to-day
apartheid faced by blacks in the South, Japanese Americans were imprisoned in military
internment camps; American Indians were, for lack of a better term, still being
oppressed on their reservations; Chinese Americans were forbidden to marry whites in
California, Oregon, Idaho, and other states; and the United States government, refusing
to fill even the pitiful Eastern European quotas allowed under the discriminatory 1924
Immigration Act, was keeping its doors firmly closed to Jewish refugees from the Nazi
genocide.

&lt;p&gt;Roberts and Stratton do, however, present a persuasive
case that &lt;em&gt; An American Dilemma&lt;/em&gt; influenced the Supreme Court's decision to
ban public school segregation in &lt;em&gt;Brown v. Board of Education &lt;/em&gt; in 1954.
The authors argue that &lt;em&gt; Brown&lt;/em&gt;  was a serious mistake for two major
reasons: It retarded the democratic process, which would ultimately have resolved the
segre gation issue; and it was in clear conflict with the intentions of the framers of
the 14th Amendment, who never would have dreamed that the Equal Protection Clause banned
school segregation. Ultimately, according to the authors, &lt;em&gt; Brown &lt;/em&gt;
discredited both democracy and strict adherence to the Constitution among judges and
legal scholars.

&lt;p&gt; But the emphasis on &lt;em&gt; Brown's&lt;/em&gt; 
anti-democratic tendencies begs the question of whether the South, especially the Deep
South, was truly democratic before the Voting Rights Act was passed in 1965 and the
black masses finally were able to exercise the franchise. In fact, Roberts and Stratton
never consider this issue.

&lt;p&gt; Moreover, the United States is not a
democracy but a constitutional republic. The authors give short shrift to legitimate
arguments--admittedly not made by the Supreme Court in &lt;em&gt; Brown&lt;/em&gt; --that
school segregation was a violation of the 14th Amendment's Equal Protection clause. The
concept of equal protection, properly understood, dates back to the Jacksonian era and
beyond. Ac cording to this tradition, &quot;class legislation&quot; favoring one group of citizens
over another is prohibited.

&lt;p&gt;School segregation as
practiced by the Southern states was clearly class legislation favoring white children
over black children. The Supreme Court could not rely on the anti-class
legislation tradition in &lt;em&gt; Brown&lt;/em&gt;, however, because during the Roosevelt
era the Court had rejected it in favor of a policy of judicial restraint. On the other
hand, a heavy dose of Myrdal--along with postwar revulsion at Nazi Germany's racial
policies and the Cold War imperative of improving America's image abroad--persuaded the
justices that state-sponsored segregation had to be ended immediately. The upshot was
&lt;em&gt;Brown&lt;/em&gt;, correct in its result but incoherent from a legal standpoint. The
authors note that &lt;em&gt; Brown&lt;/em&gt; quickly became a liberal icon, giving judges the
authority and confidence to engage in judicial activism regarding racial issues.
Nevertheless, the authors exaggerate the case's significance when they claim that
&lt;em&gt;Brown&lt;/em&gt;led to &quot;rule by judges.&quot;

&lt;p&gt;That dubious
honor belongs to the relatively obscure case of &lt;em&gt; Shelley v. Kraemer&lt;/em&gt;,
decided by the Supreme Court in 1948. In&lt;em&gt; Shelley, &lt;/em&gt; the Supreme Court held
that court enforcement of racially discriminatory restrictive covenants violates the
Equal Protection Clause. This ruling came despite the undisputed fact that any American
citizen, white or black, had the equal right to make and enf orce a racially restrictive
contract. What the Court found objectionable was not discriminatory government action,
but private discriminatory preferences. &lt;em&gt; Shelley&lt;/em&gt; marked the beginning of
the emergence of civil rights as an aggressively statist ideology. By the early 1960s,
the primary goal of liberal judicial activists had shifted from &lt;em&gt; Brown's&lt;/em&gt;
emphasis on obliterating state-sponsored racism to&lt;em&gt; Shelley's&lt;/em&gt;  emphasis
on conquering de facto segregation and private discrimination. 

&lt;p&gt;In 1965, influential United States Court of Appeals Judge Skelly Wright argued in favor
of a judicially imposed merger of urban and subur ban school districts, regardless of
whether there was any evidence of intentional discrimination by school authorities. The
purpose of this proposal was to overcome de facto public school segregation arising out
of residential patterns in the private housi ng market. The scope of Wright's proposal
is breathtaking. Not content with mere integration, Wright argued that each school in
the merged districts must have a &lt;em&gt;proportionate&lt;/em&gt;  distribution of black and
white students. 

&lt;p&gt;Wright's plan makes the judicial abuse s that Roberts and Stratton
cite--limited intra-city busing, federal takeover of the Kansas City school system--seem
quite timid by comparison. Perhaps the real story is not that Americans are ruled by
judges, but that we barely escaped absolute judicial c ontrol. In 1974, four of the nine
justices on the Supreme Court voted to require states to merge their urban and suburban
school districts. Had Hubert Humphrey been elected in 1968, the Supreme Court would have
had three extra liberals and would likely hav e implemented Wright's scheme. 

&lt;p&gt;While judges have exercised only limited control over American life, civil
rights laws have intruded dramatically on civil society, beginning with the 1964 Civil
Rights Act, which prohibits discrimination in the public and private sector. In
discussing the Civil Rights Act, Roberts and Stratton briefly abjure democracy and turn
libertarian. Although they never explicitly oppose the act, the authors condemn its
restrictions on private behavior for violating freedom of conscien ce. They applaud the
prescience of Milton Friedman, Robert Bork (who has since recanted), and Barry
Goldwater, all of whom opposed applying civil rights laws to cover private
discriminatory behavior, but supported restrictions on discriminatory state action.

&lt;p&gt; Roberts and Stratton point out that &quot;Goldwater was an
integrationist, but he appreciated the distinction between public and private that the
preoccupation with quotas had obscured.&quot; Ironically, the authors' own preoccupation with
quotas obscures any fur ther discussion of the public-private distinction in&lt;em&gt;
The New Color Line&lt;/em&gt; , and the libertarian tone of the chapter on the Civil Rights
Act soon vanishes. 

&lt;p&gt;Instead, the authors return to their focus
on democracy. Roberts and Stratton do a truly masterful job of proving that the Civil
Rights Act was intended to prohibit all forms of discrimination, including reverse
discrimination. They then explain how bureaucrats and judges nevertheless managed to
institute a quota regime under the act. As is true throughout the book, the authors
provide a wealth of interesting and often amusing detail to support their analysis. For
example, the authors report that Alfred Blumrosen, the first compliance chief of the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, steered the agency toward enforcing quotas.
Why did Blumrosen have a free hand? Because the first chairman of the EEOC, Franklin D.
Roosevelt Jr., spent most of his time yachting. Staffers sang &quot;Franklin's Away&quot; to the
tune of &quot;Anchor's Aweigh&quot; during his many prolonged absences.

&lt;p&gt;Contrary to the authors' views, however, it seems that bureaucratic and judicial
support for affirmative action did not &quot;destroy&quot; democracy, but simply anticipated it by
a decade or two. In a series of Supreme Court decisions in 1989, the Court returned to
the original intent of the civil rights laws and reined in affirmative action. Two years
later, however, George Bush signed the Civil Rights Act of 1991 into law, and racial
preferences once again became the law of the land.

&lt;p&gt;Roberts and
Stratton clearly oppose the 1991 act, and other affirmative action schemes, but do not
state what alternative they support. Perhaps the authors could not agree, which would
explain why the book's position on the desirability of the 1964 act's prohibitions on
private d iscrimination is muddled. Or perhaps they would both join most conservatives
in supporting a strict, neutral civil rights law, under which whites would have the same
right to sue for discrimination as minorities. Whites would be able to win lawsuits
based on indirect and statistical evidence of discrimination, as protected minorities do
currently.

&lt;p&gt; Under such a regime, employers seeking to avoid
lawsuits would begin to hire workers based purely on objective credentials. Not
coincidentally, blacks and members of other relatively impoverished and less-educated
groups have fewer formal credentials than whites. Hence, neutral civil rights laws steer
employers away from giving applicants with inferior paper credentials a chance. Blacks,
Hispanics, and American Ind ians are therefore probably better off without civil rights
laws than with harsh, neutral laws that do not permit affirmative action.

&lt;p&gt;It would be possible to mitigate this result by allowing people to win
civil rights lawsuits only when there is direct evidence of blatant discrimination. Back
in 1964, many supporters of the Civil Rights Act seemed to have this kind of regime in
mind. Within a few years, however, blatant, open discrimination of the (once common)
&quot;No Dogs or Jews allowed&quot; variety had disappea red almost entirely. Today, even if the
civil rights laws were all repealed, this type of discrimination would be unlikely to
reappear except in very isolated pockets.

 &lt;p&gt;Civil rights
activists are therefore correct when they accuse conservatives who oppose affirmative
action of essentially opposing civil rights laws. The only types of civil rights laws
that apply to private conduct that conservatives can support would eith er actually harm
minorities, or would be almost wholly ineffectual. The debate over affirmative action
would be far more honest if both civil rights activists and conservatives would
acknowledge that truly neutral civil rights laws are simply not a viable option.

&lt;p&gt;The answer, however, is surely not state-imposed racial preferences. Roberts and
Stratton, to their credit, recognize that government-mandated preferences are not simply
a threat to white males, but to the liberal order as a whole. As the authors explain,
the Western world has progressed over the centuries from a feudal order, in which a
person's rights depended on his status, to a liberal one, where each individual is equal
under the law. Racial preferences bring us back to a society based on status. 

&lt;p&gt;The authors are also correct in noting disturbing similarities
between modern left-wing thinking on race and the ideology of perhaps the most illiberal
regime in history, Nazi Germany. (But they undermine their point by drawing hysterical
parallels between the rise of anti-semitism in 1930s Germany and what they call the
&quot;systematic deleg itimization of the white male&quot; in contemporary America.) The modern
American left is obsessed with racial identity and origin. Left-wing academics promote
the idea that one's ethnic origins determine both what a person thinks and how much
value society should attach to those thoughts.  

&lt;p&gt;Even more
troubling, like other totalitarians, left-wing racialists encourage reliance on emotions
and feelings, leaving many affirmative action activists seemingly utterly impervious to
reason. When I was a first-year stude nt at Yale Law School, left-wing students
organized a student &quot;strike&quot; for one day to promote &quot;diversity.&quot; One student speaker
expressed her outrage that a white classmate declined an invitation to attend a &quot;Women
of Color and the Law&quot; meeting. The classmate stated that as a white woman she was not
&quot;of color,&quot; and would therefore not be welcome. Reasonable? Not to the outraged speaker.
She proclaimed that the white student was being racist because she saw whites as being
of neutral pigment, while everyone else was &quot;of color.&quot;

&lt;p&gt; No one
in the large crowd seemed to notice that it was the minority students who had designated
themselves as being &quot;of color&quot; in the first instance. The glassy-eyed crowd's response
to the speaker's inane blather was to applaud wildly. I witnessed the same reaction to
several equally moronic speeches throughout the day. I went home very, very
frightened.

&lt;p&gt; In the long run, the ultimate victims of racialist
thinking are likely to be America's traditional scapegoats, blacks, who continue to be
vulnerable to political demagoguery because of their high degree of social separation
from dominant white America. Roberts and Stratton, however, myopically suggest that
racialist thinking might lead to an outbreak of violence against white males. 

&lt;p&gt;In fact, white males have held, hold, and will continue to hold for
the foreseeable future a dominant position in American society. Affirmative action
itself, in fact, is a creature of elite white males: senators, congressmen, presidents,
Supreme Court justices, cabinet officials, university presidents, corporate CEOs, and
so on. Elite white males could also end it any time they wanted to.

&lt;p&gt;The reasons that they have not done so, it seems to me, is first, that affirmative
action allows elite white males to show their concern for minorities by imposing costs
on other, less powerful white males. Thus, incumbent tenured professors do not resign
their own positions to make room for affirmative action candidates, but instead limit
the job opportunities of young scholars who happen to be white males.

&lt;p&gt; Second, affirmative action is the easy way out, tokenism at its worst. While my
classmates at Yale spent hours and hours of time and energy pressing for more minority
representation on the faculty and in the student body, thousands of poor black New Haven
youths were trapped in horrible social conditions, surrounded by crime, and failed by
the public school system. Few of them graduated high school, much less got a chance at
attending law school. 

&lt;p&gt; The protesters eventually persuaded the faculty to award
tenure to an obscure black professor who had published next to nothing. Would it be
churlish of me to suggest that the law school would have struck a far greater blow for
equality if it had donated the present value of this professor's future salary (which I
would conservatively estimate at $3 million) to tutoring programs for local New Haven
youths who are interested in becoming attorneys?

&lt;p&gt;Affirmative
action, then, should be ended not only because, as Roberts and Stratton argue, it
violates individual rights, conflicts with a healthy civil society, discriminates
against white males, and creates opportunities for government mischief-making, but
because it distracts people of goodwill from confronting the real racial problems facing the United States. Quotas and set-asides may create the illusion of a just, equal
society, but do little to actually implement it.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">29910@http://www.reason.com</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 01 May 1996 00:00:00 EDT</pubDate><author>info@reason.com (David E. Bernstein)</author>
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