- Joined
- Feb 3, 2013
I just finished up with another book written at the time: Dictatorship of Virtue, from 1994. It was a real eye-opener as to just how far the rot had already set in by the late 80s/early 90s. Much of the book could have been written today.
The "diversity training" industry was already in full flower, for example. "Identity politics" was already a well-known term, as well as canards like "speech is violence", "racism = prejudice + power", and so on. People transgressing the new taboos of identity politics were called Nazis and members of the "New Right" (used similarly to the "alt-right" today). Academics who expressed unapproved views were run out on a rail - even at Bible colleges, which you would expect to be bastions of conservatism.
The biggest differences from today are that transgenderism was barely on the radar at all, and that the old guard was still around and willing to push back a bit. Even mainstream journalism still had people who were willing to stand up and say "This is ridiculous".
There's a chapter about the removal of AP European History from the high school in Brookline, Massachusetts in 1990, which is definitely worth a read as a sort of time capsule. There doesn't seem to be much information about it online because it was a local matter from pre-internet times, but suffice it to say that an immensely popular European history course was removed from the curriculum at this prestigious high school because it was too white. Parents and students organized to have the course reinstated, and the school board fought tooth and nail against it. And again, the playbook used by these proto-SJWs will be very familiar to modern observers.
EDIT: 30 years later, apparently the very existence of this course, and the controversy, has been forgotten even at the school itself.
The book ends on an optimistic note, but I think the real question at this point isn't "How did we fall away from our late-90s progress", but rather "Why were the late '90s and early '00s an aberration from the larger trend since the 80s?"
The "diversity training" industry was already in full flower, for example. "Identity politics" was already a well-known term, as well as canards like "speech is violence", "racism = prejudice + power", and so on. People transgressing the new taboos of identity politics were called Nazis and members of the "New Right" (used similarly to the "alt-right" today). Academics who expressed unapproved views were run out on a rail - even at Bible colleges, which you would expect to be bastions of conservatism.
The biggest differences from today are that transgenderism was barely on the radar at all, and that the old guard was still around and willing to push back a bit. Even mainstream journalism still had people who were willing to stand up and say "This is ridiculous".
There's a chapter about the removal of AP European History from the high school in Brookline, Massachusetts in 1990, which is definitely worth a read as a sort of time capsule. There doesn't seem to be much information about it online because it was a local matter from pre-internet times, but suffice it to say that an immensely popular European history course was removed from the curriculum at this prestigious high school because it was too white. Parents and students organized to have the course reinstated, and the school board fought tooth and nail against it. And again, the playbook used by these proto-SJWs will be very familiar to modern observers.
EDIT: 30 years later, apparently the very existence of this course, and the controversy, has been forgotten even at the school itself.

Students petition for AP European History class
“What do you know about France between the Enlightenment and the first World War?” This question was junior Jack Heuberger’s explanation for why he believes offering an Advanced Placement European History class would benefit the social studies department. He believes that students at the high...
thesagonline.com
The book ends on an optimistic note, but I think the real question at this point isn't "How did we fall away from our late-90s progress", but rather "Why were the late '90s and early '00s an aberration from the larger trend since the 80s?"
"Isn't there some other way I can pay for this?"Surprisingly, she wasn't. We couldn't afford a professional plumber
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