A few weeks ago, a young man approached me after a
speech I hadgiven at his college and handed me a
small piece of paper with the name of a book he
thought I should read. Given that the student and I
had previously gotten into a bit of a row over the
issue of racial profiling of Arabs, I didn't have
high expectations about his recommendation.
I suppose it's a good thing I was prepared for what I
got: the name of a book by black conservative Larry
Elder, whose only real claim to fame is that he does
a bad imitation of Judge Wapner on a pedantic little
courtroom reality show called Moral Court.
Oh, and that white folks like the student in question
really like him. Which, as it turns out, is all it
takes to become a bestselling author in this country.
Elder - like Shelby Steele before him, and Walter
Williams before that, and Ken Hamblin before that,
and Thomas Sowell before him, and Clarence Thomas
always - says the kinds of things that most white
folks love to hear: essentially, that blacks are the
source of their own problems in life. Black cultural
pathology and bad behavior, according to these types,
explain everything from black poverty rates to black
incarceration rates.
What about racism?, you may ask. What racism? To the
Larry Elders of the world - and to the whites who
have made them media stars entirely out of proportion
to their scholarly credentials (or decided lack
thereof) - racism is just an excuse black people use
to explain away their own internal shortcomings.
Lately, two of the more popular arguments made by
black conservatives and the white people who love
them are, first, that blacks spend too much money on
luxury items they can't afford, refusing to save
money the way responsible white folks do; and second,
that blacks place too little value on education,
preferring to critique learning as selling out or
"acting white," and thereby sabotaging their own
achievement.
That the evidence for both of these positions is
utterly lacking makes little difference, it seems.
After all, when one is saying what the Man wants to
hear, the Man requires no footnotes or actual
corroboration.
Black Consumption and the Myth of Black Profligacy:
Arguments that support the dominant culture easily
become popularized myths, bordering on legend, after
which point they are almost impossible to assail.
Black profligacy has pretty much attained that
status, what with the regular portrayal of blacks as
obsessed with "bling-bling," within mainstream TV and
other media. While it would have been difficult for
whites, on their own, to get away with presenting
this one-dimensional, supersized cartoon of black
spending, they have had help from folks like Yolanda
Young. Young, like Elder and all the rest, is an
African American who specializes in the kind of self-
flagellating drivel that appeals to the sadistic side
of white America's racism. We get a taste of her
forthcoming book, SPADE: A Critical Look at Black
America, in a recent USA Today article.
In her USA Today piece, Young claims that blacks have
been spending exorbitant amounts of money lately,
despite the tough economic times in which the larger
black community finds itself. In other words, instead
of rational belt tightening, African Americans have
been going on a spending spree: the implication being
either that black folks are irresponsible with their
money, or at least that they are "motivated by a
desire for instant gratification and social
acceptance," caring more about their own selfish
desires than "our future."
To back up her claims, Young turns to a group called
Target Market, a
company that tracks spending by black consumers. But
a careful glance at the
source of her claims makes it apparent that she is
either
incapable of interpreting basic data or that she
deliberately deceives for
political effect. In fact, not only do the figures
from Target Market not
suggest irresponsible spending by blacks in the face
of a bad
economy, they tend to suggest the opposite.
According to Young, blacks spent nearly $23 billion
on clothes in 2002, and
this, one presumes, is supposed to signal a level of
irresponsible
profligacy so obvious as to require no further
context or
clarification. But, in fact, the very tables on which
Young bases her
position indicate that from 2000 to 2002 (the period
of a slowing economy),
black expenditures on clothes fell by 7%, even before
accounting
for inflation. In other words, as the economy got
worse, blacks reined in
their consumption.
It's useful to watch how the pros at this dissing
game make it work. Young
consistently bases her arguments on raw numbers,
counting on her readers to
marvel at their size, while ignoring the comparative
data that makes sense of those numbers. For example,
Young tweaks blacks for
spending $3.2 billion on consumer electronics, but
fails to note that even
before inflation, this is down roughly 16% from 2000,
when blacks spent $3.8 billion on the same. She
chastises her black brothers
and sisters for spending $11.6 billion on furniture
in 2002, but fails to
note that black spending on furniture actually fell
by 10%,
even before inflation, and by 2002 was only a little
higher in current
dollars than it had been in 1996.
In other words, blacks did exactly what would make
sense in a tightening
economy: They spent less on the kinds of presumably
frivolous items that Ms.
Young claims her people just can't resist. Not so
irresponsible after all, it seems.
Next, Young berates blacks for their consumption of
cars and liquor, which
she labels "our favorite purchases." Unfortunately,
the "evidence" she
marshals to support such silliness is embarrassingly
weak. She
notes that although blacks make up only 12% of the
population, they account
for 30% of the nation's scotch consumption. But what
does that prove? It
certainly says nothing about overall use of alcohol
by
blacks, which is actually quite low. Indeed, contrary
to Young's claim,
liquor is not among the favorite purchases of blacks,
ranking instead behind
18 of the 25 categories listed in the tables from
Target
Market that she relied upon for her article.
In fact, in the past year alone black expenditures on
alcoholic beverages
fell by almost one-fourth, scotch consumption or no.
And, of course, blacks
spend far less than whites, per capita, on alcohol,
and
drink far less often and less heavily than whites
according to all the
available data from the Centers for Disease Control,
National Institutes on
Drug Abuse and others.
As for cars, Young's "proof" of black profligacy in
this area is limited to
the fact that Lincoln had P. Diddy design a limited
edition Navigator for
them, with DVD players and plasma screens all around.
And yet,
the amount spent by African Americans (not P. Diddy,
mind you, but the other
35 million or so black folks) on various vehicles
still amounts to less than
that spent, per capita, by whites, whose consumption
of
such items is roughly 27% higher that of blacks.
Race, Wealth and the Myth of Short-Term Orientation
Next, Young insists that blacks fail to save money
the way whites do, the
implication being that this - and not racism and
unequal access to capital -
explains the wealth gap between whites and African
Americans.
Young cites the 2003 Black Investor Survey from Ariel
Mutual Funds and
Charles Schwab to suggest that black households with
comparable
upper-middle-class income to whites save nearly 20%
less than
whites for retirement. Furthermore, she notes, blacks
are far less likely to
invest in the stock market, thereby hindering their
own ability to develop
wealth. Yet a look at the Ariel/Schwab data - which
itself is
limited to 500 individuals with upper-level incomes
from each racial group -
indicates a far different set of conclusions than
those reached by Young.
The report does suggest that whites are more likely
to have an IRA than
blacks. Yet it also reports that overall rates of
retirement investment are
essentially identical for whites and blacks: While
89% of whites
have money in a retirement program, so do 85% of
blacks.
As for the amounts of money being saved among this
upper-income group,
although whites do indeed save more, on average, the
difference is not -
according to the report itself - statistically
significant.
Indeed, whites are a third more likely than blacks to
be saving nothing for
retirement at this time, and roughly two-thirds of
both groups are saving at
least $100 or more monthly for retirement.
As for investments, while there are small differences
between upper-income
blacks and whites, the methodology of the
Ariel/Schwab study makes it clear
that those differences in monthly investments and
savings are, once again, not statistically
significant: amounting, as they
do, to less than $60 per month.
This kind of "behavioral" gap hardly explains the
fact that upper-income
white households, on average, have about three times
the net worth of
upper-income black households. Instead, that is the
residual
effect of generations of racism that restricted the
ability of blacks and
other people of color to accumulate assets, while
whites were allowed,
encouraged and even subsidized to do the same.
While it is true that black investment in the stock
market lags behind that
of whites, the reasons for this can hardly be
decoupled from the history of
racism. After all, even upper-income blacks tend to
have
far less wealth to begin with than whites of similar
income. As a result,
the level of wealth they are willing to put at risk
is going to be less than
for those with more of it to spare.
Especially in the last few years, the volatility of
the stock market has
tended to scare away all but the most experienced
investors, and certainly
those whose assets are limited from the get-go.
Surely, this
describes much of black America, which has never had
the excess wealth
available to whites, that would allow them to roll
the dice on Wall Street
in the same way.
If black savings lag behind white, it is not because
of black profligacy; it
is because of a legacy of racism that left even
well-to-do black families
without the assets and resources of white families.
The Myth of Black Anti-Intellectualism
The second myth black conservatives love to promote
is that blacks have not
gotten ahead in the race of life because they devalue
education. From Shelby
Steele's early '90s bestseller The Content of Our
Character to Berkeley linguist John McWhorter's
near-hysterical rant in
Losing the Race: Self-Sabotage in Black America,
right-wing black
commentators have turned cocktail party chitchat into
social science
research for the sake of peddling the antiblack myth
that blacks devalue
education.
The evidence, of course, for those who still care
about such things, reveals
the duplicity of these hucksters in their crusade to
blame blacks for their
own academic and economic condition.
First, high school graduation rates for blacks and
whites are today roughly
equal to one another. In fact, as sociologist Dalton
Conley demonstrates in
his 1999 book, Being Black, Living in the Red, once
family
economic background is controlled for, blacks are
actually more likely to
finish high school than whites, and equally likely to
complete college. In
other words, whatever differences exist in black and
white
educational attainment are completely the result of
blacks, on average,
coming from lower-income families. Comparing whites
and blacks of truly
similar class status reveals greater or equal
educational
attainment for blacks.
Although it should hardly have been necessary - after
all, the entire
history of black America has been the history of
attempting to access
education even against great odds and laws
prohibiting it - there have
been a number of recent studies, all of which prove
conclusively that blacks
value education every bit as much as their white
counterparts.
For example, a recent study conducted by the Minority
Student Achievement
Network looked at 40,000 students in grades seven
through 11; it found
little if any evidence that blacks placed lesser
value on
education than their white peers. Instead, they found
that black males are
more likely than white, Hispanic or Asian males to
say that it is "very
important" to study hard and get good grades; white
males are
the least likely to make this claim. The researchers
also found that blacks
were just as likely to study and work on homework as
their white
counterparts.
Even in high-poverty schools, disproportionately
attended by inner-city
students of color, attitudes towards schooling are
far more positive than
generally believed. Students in high-poverty schools
are four-
and-a-half times more likely to say they have a "very
positive" attitude
toward academic achievement than to say they have a
"very negative"
attitude, and 94% of all students in such schools
report a generally
positive attitude toward academics.
In their groundbreaking volume The Source of the
River, social scientists
Douglas Massey, Camille Charles, Garvey Lundy and
Mary Fischer examine
longitudinal data for students of different races who
were
enrolled in selective colleges and universities.
Among the issues they
explore is the degree to which differential
performance among black and
white students in college, in terms of grades, could
be attributed
to blacks or their families placing less value on
academic performance than
their white and Asian counterparts. After all, this
claim has been made by
some like McWhorter, Steele and a plethora of white
reactionaries who seek to explain the persistent GPA
gaps between blacks, in
particular, and others in college.
What Massey and his colleagues discovered is that the
black students had
parents who were more likely than white or Asian
parents to have helped them
with homework growing up, more likely than white or
Asian parents to have met with their teachers,
equally likely to have pushed
them to "do their best" in school, more likely than
white parents to enroll
their kids in educational camps, and equally or more
likely
to have participated in the PTA. Black students'
parents were also more
likely than parents of any other race to regularly
check to make sure their
kids had completed their homework and to reward their
kids
for good grades, while Asian parents were the least
likely to do either of
these.
Likewise, the authors of this study found that black
students' peers in high
school are more likely than white peers to think
studying hard and getting
good grades are important, and indeed white peers are
the least likely to endorse these notions. Overall,
the data suggests that
if anything it is white peer culture that is overly
dismissive of academic
achievement, not black peer culture.
While many of these studies have focused on
middle-class-and-above
African-American families, and while it is certainly
possible that
lower-income and poor blacks may occasionally evince
a negativity
toward academics, this can hardly be considered a
racial (as opposed to
economic) response, since low-income whites often
manifest the same
attitudes.
What's more, such a response, though not particularly
functional in the long
term, is also not particularly surprising, seeing as
how young people from
low-income backgrounds can see quite clearly the ways
in which education so often fails to pay off for
persons like themselves.
After all, over the last few decades, black academic
achievement has risen,
and the gap between whites and blacks on tests of
academic "ability" have
closed, often quite dramatically. Yet during the same
time,
the gaps in wages between whites and blacks have
often risen, sending a
rather blatant message to persons of color that no
matter how hard they
work, they will remain further and further behind.
In other words, to the extent that blacks, to any
real degree, occasionally
manifest antieducation attitudes and behaviors, the
question remains: Where
did they pick up the notion that education was not
for
them?
Might they have gotten this impression from a
curriculum that negates the
full history of their people, and gives the
impression that everything
great, everything worth knowing about, came from
white folks?
Might they have gotten this impression from the
tracking and sorting systems
that placed so many of them, irrespective of talent
and promise, in remedial
and lower-level classes, because indeed the teachers
themselves presumed at some level that education-at
least higher-level
education-wasn't for them?
Might they have gotten this impression from the
workings of the low-wage
economy, into which so many of their neighbors and
family members have been
thrown - even those with a formal education?
Or, better yet, maybe they got this impression from
the black conservatives
who regularly bash them: people who demonstrate that
an education doesn't
necessarily make you smart after all.
Busting Up the Black Conservative Hustle
None of this is to say that the black con-artist
conservatives are entirely
irrational. After all, their hustle has paid enormous
dividends. Black
conservatives, by dint of their hard work on behalf
of
institutionalized white domination, have managed to
obtain access to the
halls of power, and even occasionally positions of
power themselves. On the
one hand, this kind of step'n fetchit routine can be
lucrative and professionally rewarding: for those
willing to play the game,
or convince themselves of the beneficence of their
white cocktail party
friends, it can mean foundation grants, endowed
chairs at
right-wing think tanks, radio shows, syndicated
columns and regular
appearances on Fox.
But one thing it will likely never bring is
acceptance from one's own
community, and this self-exiled condition, combined
with an eventual
recognition that one is being used, can lead to
near-complete
personal and professional meltdowns.
Consider Glenn Loury, formerly a shining light in the
black conservative
firmament, who eventually came to the conclusion that
his friends and
supporters really didn't like black folks much. After
all, the same
conservatives at the Bradley Foundation who hawk
vouchers in public school
so as to "save black children" also helped fund the
writing of The Bell
Curve, which says, among other things, that there's
pretty
much nothing that can be done for black folks, due to
their congenital
predisposition to ignorance, sloth and crime. Enough
of those
contradictions, and even the most hardened black
conservative may come
around.
Or maybe not. But luckily there are antidotes to the
hustle emanating
forcefully from the black community, such as the
hard-hitting commentary and
exposes at the Black Commentator, which have skewered
not only the voucher con, but also the individual
players from Powell to
Rice to lesser-known but rising figures on the black
right. What they and
the bulk of black America knows well, and what the
rest of us
must learn, is that the propaganda dispensed by black
conservatives is not
only poisonous in its implications, but it is based
on utterly false
analysis, distorted data and the hope on the part of
its purveyors
that the rest of us will never wise up to their game.
Tags: Saswat, Capitalism, USA, Racism