The minds of American college students are like jello. So
said Camille Paglia, via yesterday's post. If this is true—and I have every reason to believe that it
is—we should be very skeptical of an idea that has recently occupied said
minds. That would be the idea of “white privilege.” Or, if you prefer:
privilege.
Somehow, Joy Pullmann argues, conservatives and those who oppose
the idea have been notably silent.
Why are the jello-like minds of American students enthralled
by the idea of privilege? Perhaps they have taken the idea of equality too
literally.
By indulging in an idolatrous worship of the god of equality
they can rail against the fact that members of one family have more skill at
mathematics while members of another are more talented at spatial reasoning.
If they come from a privileged background themselves—many of
them do—they can feel a typically adolescent contempt for their parents. This
contempt merges ingratitude with self-loathing.
What better description of the soul of the American college
student.
Privilege theory does not merely ignore whatever our genetic inheritance but it takes special offense at the fact that parents might wish to
earn a living in order to provide their children with a better upbringing. They might be more motivated to work for the benefit of their children than they would be to work for their own personal benefit or for the benefit of your children
In one sense, privilege theory is an assault on parental
benevolence. It’s a perfectly narcissistic assault on the notion of caring for
others and of doing good things for other people.
The theory implies that parents should either spend it all
of themselves, or deprive their children of benefits that they earned in order
to give it all to the federal government.
As Pullmann points out, those who rail against privilege are
promoting a redistribution scheme that would allow the government to decide who
gets what.
Where have we heard that before?
Of course, privileges can be earned or unearned. If you
believe that human beings are blank slates, born equal in all senses of the
term, it is not fair that some have better upbringings that others. But, in the
real world no two individuals are really ever equal, because no two individuals
are ever really the same.
Human beings are born with genetic predispositions. They are
born with different personalities and with different body types. They are born
with different talents and different abilities. They are born with parents who
spend more or less time with them and who provide them with a better or a worse
education. They are born in the right or the wrong place at the right or the wrong time.
Think of what would happen in New York City if all the
parents who send their children to private schools—a privilege if ever there
was one—were suddenly forbidden to do so.
Would privilege theorists want to ban Lebron James’s son
from playing basketball? Would they prefer giving him a handicap when he does
play?
Pullmann explains:
How is
it fair for me to have been born to parents who remained married, and thus
benefited me immeasurably, while many children are born half or whole orphans,
and also immeasurably harmed, again through no fault of their own? Privilege
theory at its best, when it is not a cynical masquerade for socialism or worse,
is one of many attempts to right these apparent wrongs in the universe.
She continues:
It’s
pretty hard to dispute the basic proposition of privilege theory, that some people
are born into advantages they, themselves, have not earned. That fact has been
evident just about as long as society has existed. The truth of its converse is
also obvious: Some people are born into adverse circumstances that are in no
way their fault.
But, even if you did not earn your privileges, someone else
most likely did.
Pullmann explains:
The
first thing to consider is that, while certain individuals may have advantages
or disadvantages they did not earn, very often someone else did earn them. We know, for example, that children
born into stable families have better odds at a happier life than do children
born to fractured, dysfunctional families. It is hard work to fight
relationship entropy. Therefore, it is certainly just for couples to enjoy the
fruits of this labor, which include higher lifetime earnings and lower risk for
many health problems, and it is just for them to pass the fruits of their labor
on to their children. They have, indeed, earned this privilege.
Human beings are not monads. They cannot exist as singular
individuals. All human beings are born into groups. All human beings live in
groups. Maintaining group cohesion is manifestly in the interest of all human
beings. Promoting group success is essential to survival and well-being.
Sorry to have to say it,
but creating and maintaining a good family and group reputation is also
important. In many cases what is considered to be privilege derives from a
reputation earned by other members of one’s family, one’s group, even one’s
tribe. In some cases the reputation of one's group is damaged by the behavior of certain members of the group.
In a competitive world, some people do better than others. This
might not seem right, but it is still true. And it is still advantageous. Without
the possibility of success or failure, people would cease to try to improve
themselves.
And yet, the spoils of success are not merely personal and
unique to the individual. They are shared. Pullman notes wisely that people
would be less motivated to work hard and to succeed if they were not allowed to
bestow benefits on significant others.
And also, the people who earn privilege will also want to
have a free choice in bestowing them. If all their wealth is confiscated by the
government, they will lose that freedom to choose.
One might consider it unfair that those individuals who
inhabit the Anglosphere are granted certain privileges. And yet, Great Britain
and America have produced an extraordinary civilizational success.
If you ignore it or if you decide that those who profit from
the successes of their ancestors should be punished for them you have created a
fundamentally different social organization.
In Pullmann’s words:
Most
people think it is fair for families to be able to pass on to their children
what those families have earned through hard work. The ability to do so is a
huge positive motivator for many parents, and sacrificing oneself to better
one’s children is noble. The same people who would insist on snatching away
these kids’ advantages are often the ones who cheer on illegal immigrants who
are functionally pursuing (and often achieving) the same thing. Who would be so
cold-hearted and selfish as to argue for taking away good things for some
children simply because every child can’t have them? We should instead urge
everyone to do what privileges their children, too, and show them how.
As it happens, when parents care for their children, their
children grow up to be more responsible citizens, more likely to contribute to
society.
Indeed,
the compounded effects of many generations of most families within a certain
culture making the hard choices and sacrifices to better their children creates
a certain inheritance that ultimately lifts that entire society above
others. Notice that I am granting cultural and even ethnic privilege to
some extent. But my argument again indicates that it is often deserved privilege, not at all
random and unfair. What is actually unfair is taking from a society the
intellectual and financial riches it has, over time, accumulated and passed
down to its children.
If you take privilege theory to its reductio ad absurdum you arrive at the notion that children,
especially the children of the wealthy, should be taken from their parents to
be brought up in communes. If you really want to erase privilege, then you will be obliged at some point to offer all children the same upbringing.
Pullmann explains:
This
theory of equality may sound attractive and sensible, but it leads to mayhem
and cruelty. For one, it would require either redistributing children randomly
to ensure none get a better chance at better parents by being born into a
stronger cultural tradition, or holding back the children and parents who
exhibit higher natural gifts than anyone else. Or, I suppose, one could give
children no parents at all and whisk them away from their mothers at birth to
grow in communal daycare centers until maturity—but even then some children will
simply have better genes than others, and some will be born with defects.
As you know, privilege can be used or abused. The picture of
the scion of a great family squandering the family fortune on dissolute living
and decadent pursuits is, alas!, well known.
There’s a reason why certain cultures do not believe in the conspicuous display of wealth. And do not believe in wasting money. It's one thing to have a great fortune. It's quite another to flaunt it and to wave it in the face of those who do not.
As Paglia also noted, we Americans could use with a little
less decadence.
6 comments:
I've had heated discussions with my pastor, and failed to make any dent in his "social justice" and beliefs like "white privilege." If you focus on inequality is would seem obvious and if you focus on reactions and solutions, it becomes intractible. There's just some nebulous ideal that if we all realized our privilege, we'd be more generous or something.
By government intervention, the ideal can be "equal opportunity", and in part that means anti-discrimination, so if you own a business you're not allowed to decide who to hire or who to serve based on race, gender, age, religion, and sexual-orientation, etc.
But even if you agree on all that on principle, you can generate a lot of resentment in individuals who want the freedom to have personal preference and express them, even if it comes out as discriminatory. I've seen Ron Paul and his supporter speak against the loss of freedom of association, and I don't have a simple answer except to see two valid sides that deserve a voice.
Privilege is a funny word, implying special status, but the ultimate reductive status symbol is money itself, so if you have money, you can feel a privilege both towards personal entitlement to get whatever you want for yourself, but also to direct that money into politics to slant debate. You can fund think tanks that publish research extracted from predetermined conclusions of what they want to find.
re: In a competitive world, some people do better than others. This might not seem right, but it is still true. And it is still advantageous. Without the possibility of success or failure, people would cease to try to improve themselves.
I 100% agree with statements like this, but the missing idea for me is the problem also is that society has certain "needs" that will never be given high economic status or value. And worse some "high income" jobs are those that can externalize costs, like gambling casinos for instance.
Or apparently being a military contractor is a good field for jobs and investment, and you have a vested interest in more conflict and strife in the world, and then you get crazy things like militarized police forces when there's a surplus of equipment because wars unexpectedly didn't happen.
And the privilege of a 15% tax on capital gains and dividends, lower than ordinary income is funny too. Apparently we need a wealth class who will only invest their money if they can keep most of the capital gains, but for those of us with guaranteed wage income, we need to subsidize those risk takers on top. And of course now we'll bail out bad investors, so all you have to do is bow to the will of the federal reserve's direction, and you'll get nearly risk free returns and low taxes to boot.
I have to believe something in that social agreement towards the "investment class" is going to crack, but I don't yet see how or when it'll happen.
Its hard to imagine we'll ever get back to a 90% top marginal tax rate, but you never know what can happen in a crash. It seems impossible to believe we can survive another 2008 with the same tricks, but maybe the Petrodollar is the only currency that can keep transfering money to the top while the rest of the world burns?
If war wasn't likely, I'd imagine things would work out. But with the option of war, the winner is merely the country who can make sure all the violence happens outside of its borders, and again America has an unfair advantage, and we don't have to care, like if Israel or Tehran burns into decade long wars of attrition.
It's the age-old dichotomy of spirituality/morality vs materiality/pleasure.
Jews railed against Mammon but accumulated lots of money.
Christians railed against power and wealth but grew rich and powerful.
Confucians preached ethics and virtue but were mad about status and privilege.
Muslims invoke Allah and virtue but look how the Saudi royal family lives. The Iranian mullahs are very rich too.
We like money but we also love moral grandstanding about 'higher values'.
Most people are not honest like this guy:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUxOX7EGpcM
This is the right video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sZHCVyllnck
"By indulging in an idolatrous worship of the god of equality they can rail against the fact that members of one family have more skill at mathematics while members of another are more talented at spatial reasoning." This is not "privilege", this is genetics/having the right parents.
The "God of equality" is an interesting phrase but it got me wondering.
Tonight I listened to an interview with René Girard, and he had an interesting suggestion of the 'purpose' of religion, in the sense of discounting the enlightenment's view that it was mere superstition.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8Y8dVVV4To
@43:35-43:55 "The purpose of religion is to control violence. Religion organizes sacrifice and sacrifice innoculates society against the real threat of much worse violence."
So at least that idea strikes center on the "God of equality" judgment, although whether its idolatrous worship, or just trying to regain something that we've lost in a diverse culture that fails to unify under a single religion.
Girard's theories look into the nature of scapegoating as well, or that is scapegoating is itself the source of the "worse violence", so if society makes billionaires cry at the threat of 39.6% marginal tax rate rather than 35%, perhaps that small sacrifice is a bargain compared to the alternatives?
But still we go back to "sacrifice", and nearly all modern ideals want "voluntary action", without compulsion, but we have to go deeper to ask what sacrifice means at all, or should mean.
All that we really know is there is no such thing as fairness, and "equality" doubly imaginary, so all rules must be accepted or rejected not on personal self-interest, but some higher value that the majority can recognize.
And if such agreement can't be made, where no one wants to sacrifice anything, Girard says we fall back into the ancient scapegoat mechanism where the majority finds a common enemy who can be punished and banished and temporarily restoring social cohesion on a common cause, his "Mimetic desire" theory.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rene_Girard
If one is spending all their time being jealous of others then they are not spending valuable time improving themselves. I, personally have never understood the idea of being envious of others.
Each of us has skills, talents and abilities that will serve us well if we will only spend the time developing them. People who have more than I only serve as an inducement to be the best I can be and I am very privileged to live in a country that allows me to become successfully if I am willing to work hard. One even has the ability to define success which may be different than what others may consider success.
We are truly the masters of our own destiny in this country at present. All one really has to do is look at the quintile data on who is wealthy and note that large numbers of people move up and down those quintiles. If one thinks about it it is easy to see why.
There is an interesting graphic in the Forbes 2015 issue on Billionaires on how they grew up; 23 percent grew up poor, 17 percent grew up in the working class, 30 percent grew up in the middle class, 21 percent grew up in the upper middle class and only 9 percent grew up wealthy. Fully 70 percent of them came from the middle class, not counting upper middle class, or lower. It should surprise no one that many of these are women and minorities.
I suspect that many want to believe that there is a privileged class that makes all the money, but the statistics do not back up those assertions. It is an easy way to explain their own lack or desire to work hard and get ahead.
It is human nature to blame our failings on others because we don't want to accept our own contribution to our own success or lack thereof.
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