Ron Unz Fails To Communicate
By James
Fulford
Ron Unz, the idiosyncratic software/ political
entrepreneur who is
single-handedly
undermining “bilingual” education, got in hot water
recently because of a comment that was denounced
as, guess what, “racist.”
In his weekly newsletter, Unz had slammed Rod Paige,
Bush’s pro-Bilingual Ed
Secretary of Education, as being “the dimmest member
of the Bush Cabinet”:
Paige, a black former football coach, is believed to
have obtained his job largely due to George W. Bush’s
intense support for “Affirmative Access,” and is widely
regarded as the dimmest member of the Bush Cabinet.
Although nominally serving as the top- ranking member of
the Bush Education Team, his apparent lack of ability to
master or comprehend that portfolio meant that he played
virtually no role last year either in shaping or
articulating Bush’s signature education bill, the “No
Child Left Behind Act,” with the responsibilities
actually devolving to Sandy Kress, the longtime liberal
Democratic activist actually running Bush’s educational
policy.
[Bush
Administration Denounces "English"]
The usual suspects were
outraged. In Massachusetts, opponents of
Unz’s latest anti-bilingualism initiative
demanded that local anti-bilingual send back Unz’s
money, as if it were a donation from the
Pioneer Fund (not that there’s anything wrong with
the
Pioneer Fund).
In defending himself, Unz
points out that all the liberal media say the same
thing about Paige that Unz did. But of course, that’s
different. The
New Republic, for example, feels that Paige is a
failure because Bush is bigoted against him. Paige is
probably as bright as the next educrat, of course, even
if he’s wrong about
bilingual Ed.
I’m afraid the problem is that Unz thinks that all
people who disagree with him are either
insane or stupid. He’s forgotten the rule that only
white men can be called
stupid in public. The rule is Republicans are always
considered stupider than Democrats. That’s why they’re
called the
Stupid Party.
Ron Unz has been complaining about hypocrisy in the
Republican Party when they complain about “affirmative
action” but allow “tokenism.” The Republicans could
argue that “tokenism” is just a new form of ethnic
ticket-balancing, a
traditional manifestation of diversity being
weakness in America. But as the Republicans are not
showing any enthusiasm about eliminating affirmative
action in
civil service jobs,
where it has revived the old
spoils system but with a racial twist, Unz must be
granted the point.
And his scathing conclusion about the Beltway Right
is hard to dispute, although we would put quotes round
the word “conservative”:
More peculiar still, much of the harshest reaction,
especially in private, has came from
conservatives, who themselves frequently bemoan
America's supposedly free-speech-chilling emphasis on
racial sensitivity and "political correctness." In
fact, the angriest notes I received came from two of
America's most prominent conservative critics of
affirmative action, individuals who have frequently
raked Democrats over the coals for appointments that
allegedly sacrificed colorblind merit on the altar of
"diversity." What does this mean?
The sad truth is that in recent years many American
conservatives have developed an almost breath-taking
degree of intellectual hypocrisy on racial issues,
particularly matters involving affirmative action and
meritocracy. Often those same exact conservatives who
are sharpest in their public condemnations of
affirmative action policies in the abstract or when
practiced by Democrats, are also the staunchest
defenders of what would seem to be similar or even more
egregious "diversity" policies when pursued by
Republican officials or
conservative organizations. One might almost
suggest that conservative opposition to affirmative
action is today better described as conservative
opposition to affirmative action for non-conservatives.
I would strongly suspect that this blatant hypocrisy
is readily apparent to much of the general public, and
has played a substantial role in diminishing popular
enthusiasm for periodic conservative political crusades
to roll back the tide of "diversity" politics.
Certainly Jimmy Swaggart's moralistic crusades lost much
of their appeal after his own personal behavior came to
light.
Unz a “racist”? As I said the last time the Southern
Poverty Law Center accused immigration reformers of
racism, this is a charge that is now meaningless, since
it can be leveled against literally everybody - Frosty
the Snowman, Mahatma Gandhi, Art Spiegelman,
et cetera.
Unz criticized us for
anti-Arabism
because of
my
humble suggestion that it was odd that Bush had
an Arab bodyguard during a war against the Arabs.
Nevertheless, we’re going to turn the other cheek and
sympathize with him here. He’s just another victim of
the zeitgeist, one aspect of which is the
assumption that
any criticism of blacks is motivated by
hate.
We assure the modern witch-finders of Massachusetts
that Ron Unz is does not look or sound like Strother
Martin, who played the Georgia prison captain in
Cool Hand Luke.
Nor in fact does Unz think like him. But until the
zeitgeist is dispelled, we will continue to have
what Martin famously described, when confronting (again)
the recaptured Luke, as a
“failure to communicate”.
August 01, 2002