Opinion ‘Antiracism’ Was Never the Right Answer - NYT: "No, really, we always knew Ibrahim Kendi was a grifter!"

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The recent turmoil at Ibram X. Kendi’s Center for Antiracist Research at Boston University, with more than half its staff laid off and half its budget cut amid questions of what it did with the nearly $55 million it raised, led to whoops of schadenfreude from Kendi’s critics and hand wringing from his loyal fans.

Kendi had become a symbol of what was right or wrong with America’s racial reckoning since the police murder of George Floyd. To some, he was a race-baiting grifter; to others, he was a social justice hero speaking harsh truths.

With little administrative experience, Kendi may simply have been ill equipped to deal with a program of that magnitude. He may have been distracted by a nonstop book tour and speaking engagements. Or maybe he just screwed up.

More interesting is that many major universities, corporations, nonprofit groups and influential donors thought buying into Kendi’s strident, simplistic formula — that racism is the cause of all racial disparities and that anyone who disagrees is a racist — could eradicate racial strife and absolve them of any role they may have played in it.

After all, this reductionist line of thinking runs squarely against the enlightened principles on which many of those institutions were founded — free inquiry, freedom of speech, a diversity of perspectives. As one Boston University professor wrote last week in The Wall Street Journal, that academia backs Kendi’s mission amounts to a “violation of scholarly ideals and liberal principles,” ones that betray “the norms necessary for intellectual life and human flourishing.”

Yet Kendi’s ideas gained prominence, often to the exclusion of all other perspectives. Kendi was a relatively unknown academic when his second book, “Stamped From the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America,” was a surprise winner of a National Book Award in 2016. It helped catapult him from assistant professorships at State University of New York campuses, and the University of Florida, to a full professorship at American University, where he founded the Antiracist Research and Policy Center.

In “Stamped From the Beginning,” Kendi asserted that racist ideas are used to obscure the fact that racist policies create racial disparities, and that to find fault with Black people in any way for those disparities is racist. People who “subscribed to assimilationist thinking that has also served up racist beliefs about Black inferiority,” no matter how well-meaning and progressive, were themselves racist. In Kendi’s revisionist history, figures who had been previously hailed for their contribution to civil rights were repainted as racist if they did not attribute Black inequality solely to racism. Kendi accused W.E.B. Du Bois and Barack Obama of racism for entertaining the idea that Black behavior and attitudes could sometimes cause or exacerbate certain disparities, although he notes that Du Bois went on to take a what he considered a more antiracist position.

In 2019, Kendi took the ideas further, pivoting to contemporary policy with “How to Be an Antiracist.” In this book, Kendi made clear that to explore reasons other than racism for racial inequities, whether economic, social or cultural, is to promote anti-black policies.

“The only remedy to racist discrimination is antiracist discrimination,” Kendi wrote, in words that would be softened in a future edition after they became the subject of criticism. “The only remedy to past discrimination is present discrimination. The only remedy to present discrimination is future discrimination.” In other words, two wrongs do make a right. As practiced, that meant curriculums that favor works by Black people over white people is one way to achieve that goal; hiring quotas are another.

Among the book’s central tenets is that everyone must choose between his approach, which he calls “antiracism,” and racism itself. It would no longer be enough for an individual or organization to simply be “not racist,” which Kendi calls a “mask for racism” — they must instead be actively “antiracist,” applying a strict lens of racism to their every thought and action, and in fields wholly unrelated to race, in order to escape deliberate or inadvertent racist thinking and behavior. “What we say about race, what we do about race, in each moment, determines what — not who — we are,” Kendi writes.

Kendi’s antiracism prescription meant that universities, corporations and nonprofits would need to remove all policies that weren’t overtly antiracist. In the Boston University English department’s playwriting M.F.A. program, for example, reading assignments had to come from “50 percent diverse-identifying and marginalized writers” and writers of “white or Eurocentric lineage” be taught through “an actively antiracist lens.” Antiracism also requires a commitment to other positions, including active opposition to sexism, homophobia, colorism, ethnocentrism, nativism, cultural prejudice and any class biases that supposedly harm Black lives. To deviate from any of this is to be racist. You’re either with us or you’re against us.

Yet, as the psychologist and author Jonathan Haidt points out, Kendi’s dichotomy is “incorrect from a social-science perspective because there are obviously many other remedies,” including ones that address social, economic and cultural disparities through a more fair distribution of resources.

When a Minneapolis police officer murdered George Floyd in May 2020, Kendi’s book, with its propitious, here-is-what-you-must-do-now title, became the bible for anyone newly committed to the cause of racial justice. Schools and companies made it required reading. So many campuses made it their “class read” “all-school read” or “community read” that the publisher created a full set of reading and teaching guides to help foster them. (Employees at the publishing house, Penguin Random House, were told to read it as the first “true companywide read” to begin “antiracism training mandatory for all employees.”) Universities used Kendi’s antiracist framework as the basis by which applicants’ required “diversity statements” would be judged.

Kendi’s vision of antiracism had considerable influence in shaping the national conversation around race. As Tyler Austin Harper wrote in The Washington Post last week, “No longer a mere ambassador for academic antiracism, Kendi became a brand.”

Yet the same year “How to Be an Antiracist” was published, Henry Louis Gates’s “Stony the Road: Reconstruction, White Supremacy, and the Rise of Jim Crow,” presented a more nuanced assessment of the relationship between past and present. With its vivid examples of crude prejudice (the photos are not for the fainthearted), Gates’s historical excavation allows the reader to see a clear line between the pervasive bigotry of the past and the kind of ugly but marginal brand of white supremacy on display in 2017 Charlottesville. In contrast to Kendi’s contention that racial progress is consistently accompanied by racist progress, numerous memoirs, firsthand accounts, biographies and histories of the civil rights movement also document clear progress on race.

And while a cartoon version of colorblindness isn’t desirable or even possible, it is possible to recognize skin color but not form judgments on that basis. A person can worry that an emphasis on racial group identity can misleadingly homogenize diverse groups of people, at once underestimating intra-racial differences and overemphasizing interracial ones. The Black left-wing scholar Adolph Reed, for example, decries the emphasis on race-based policies. “An obsession with disparities of race has colonized the thinking of left and liberal types,” Professor Reed said in an interview with The New York Times. “There’s this insistence that race and racism are fundamental determinants of all Black people’s existence.”

In short, a person can oppose racism on firm ethical or philosophical or pragmatic grounds without embracing Kendi’s conception of “antiracism.” No organization can expect all employees or students to adhere to a single view on how to combat racism.

Kendi asserts that whether a policy is racist or antiracist is determined not by intent, but by outcome. But the fruits of any efforts toward addressing racial inequality may take years to materialize and assess.

In the meantime, the best that could come out of this particular reckoning would be a more nuanced and open-minded conversation around racism and a commitment to more diverse visions of how to address it.

The post ‘Antiracism’ Was Never the Right Answer appeared first on New York Times.

Apology NOT accepted, because you're not sorry.
 
$55 Million is quite a grift.

Here are some fun facts about this race-baiting grifter:

He was born Henry Rogers to a middle class family in Queens, where he went to private schools until his family moved to Virginia. As a high school student he had a GPA below 3.00 and a SAT around 1000.

Somehow, this unintelligent-by-any-standard gentleman was able to weasel his way into a Ph. D. program, get brought on as a diversity hire into the SUNY system, proceed to have a mostly undistinguished academic career until he started being Grifty McGrift, at which point he got a grant of $10 Million from Twitter Founder Jack Dorsey for his Center for Antiracist Research founded in 2020 during the summer of "fiery, but mostly peaceful protests."

He got $45 million in further funding, but in September, Kendi announced mass layoffs of the center's staff. Boston University then announced that they had opened an inquiry into "the Center's management culture and the faculty and staff's experience with it" due to "complaints ... about the center's culture and financial management."

A NYT article from less than two weeks ago said, "Others blamed Dr. Kendi, himself, for what they described as an imperious leadership style. And they questioned both the center's stewardship of grants and its productivity. "Commensurate to the amount of cash and donations taken in, the outputs were minuscule,"

In the course of the investigation, other professors at Boston University who worked at the center have attested to the center's issues, with one alleging that the center "was being mismanaged" and another commenting, "I don't know where the money is." Tyler Austin Harper, writing for The Washington Post, characterized Kendi's work at the center as "grift."
 
There is a very simple way to stop this civilization destroying nonsense in its tracks, if only a critical mass could come to this epiphany.

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"Yes I am racist, and?" also works. In situations that require a bit more tact or where one is overwhelmed by the sheer size and mass of the NPC hordes or is in danger of losing his job, "that [shit] not work on me" is also effective.
 
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Oh, someone grifts a large amount of money off people on the premise "show the world how virtuous you are by donating to me" and then the money disappears and no one knows where it was spent.

I am shocked.
Anyway, there is no victim in this scam. No one actually donated because they believed in the cause or wanted to support some outcome. They donated for the same reason influencer spend more time taking pictures of their food than eating it.
 
Kendi had become a symbol of what was right or wrong with America’s racial reckoning since George Floyd died of fentanyl overdose due to his unwillingness to cooperate with the police. To sensible people, he was a race-baiting grifter; to propaganda-poisoned retards, he was a social justice hero speaking harsh truths.
FTFY.

I firmly believe every retard who espouses the "George Floyd was murdered" bullshit never watched the full 9+ minute video of what happened with him, nor followed the trial at all past reading headlines. Anyone who also uses him as some kind of icon of the necessity of police reform and "systemic racism" has nothing to say worth listening to, whatsoever.

It's good to know that people asking "where's the fucking money" actually does have an impact, I guess, though.
 
"Yes I am racist, and?" also works. In situations that require a bit more tact or where one is overwhelmed by the sheer size and mass of the NPC hordes or is in danger of losing his job, "that [shit] not work on me" is also effective.
Stop overthinking it.
Racist is the prejorative slur for Whites. When someone is calling you racist, they're calling you a [White] nigger.
 
I firmly believe every retard who espouses the "George Floyd was murdered" bullshit never watched the full 9+ minute video of what happened with him
Nah, Saint Floyd was legit murdered. I'm not going to say that the fentanyl in his system didn't have anything to do with it, but compression on the airway was a pretty significant factor. And for the record, I have seen the whole video. Cops were (and still are, for all I know) taught that if you can talk, you can breathe. But that's retarded, if you are talking it means that air can get out, but not necessarily back in.
When someone is calling you racist, they're calling you a [White] nigger.
Let's let the venerable Senator Robert C. Byrd say it best:


That man got tarred and feathered for saying "nigger" in the context that he was, but his real legacy is doing more to lift people in West Virginia out of poverty and despair than any other person who has ever lived. I only wish the people these days who represent the part of Appalachia I was raised in were as honest and forthright as he was.
 
They're still accepting the same premises without Kendi's particular flares. "Racism" is bad, blacks need more gibs and Whitey got to pay up. Just that Kendi's particular approach wasn't as good at that as others.
 
In the meantime, the best that could come out of this particular reckoning would be a more nuanced and open-minded conversation around racism and a commitment to more diverse visions of how to address it.

Or you could stop financing and boosting obvious frauds and hate merchants. But they won't, of course.
 
Nah, Saint Floyd was legit murdered. I'm not going to say that the fentanyl in his system didn't have anything to do with it, but compression on the airway was a pretty significant factor. And for the record, I have seen the whole video. Cops were (and still are, for all I know) taught that if you can talk, you can breathe. But that's retarded, if you are talking it means that air can get out, but not necessarily back in.
So what about the coroner's report that the fentanyl is what killed him?

I forget how exactly they managed to get that thrown out but that, and having watched the full recording, to me is solid enough to believe that the fenty is what did him in. I say this as a guy who detests cops. Floyd was killed because of his OD, and might've lived if he had just went with the cops and told them how much he took while he was in the back of the car.
 
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