Debunking Critical Race Theory
What Is Critical Race Theory?
You’ve heard that Critical Race Theory (CRT) is “just teaching history.” Or that it’s just a theory with no actual practical component. None of that is true. Critical Race Theory is a framework for thinking about the world with a clear component of practice. And that component means that the ideas of Critical Race Theory are to be leveraged into every area of American life – and in particular, education.
Critical Race Theory is an outgrowth from the 1960s argument made by racial radicals that America’s institutions were irrevocably shot through with racism, unfixable and worthy of destruction.
Robert F. Williams, a thought leader whose writings influenced the Black Panther Party wrote:
The Afro-American militant is a ‘militant’ because he defends himself, his family, his home, and his dignity. He does not introduce violence into a racist social system – the violence is already there, and has always been there. It is precisely this unchallenged violence that allows a racist social system to perpetuate itself.
Malcolm X famously echoed this sentiment in his writings:
…At the same time we realized that we were black people in a white society. That we were black people in a racist society. We were black people in a society whose very political system was steeped and nourished upon racism. Whose social system was a racist system.
In the 1960s, such arguments were understandable if wrong: after all, many of our American institutions had been designed with discrimination in mind.
Jim Crow laws, for example, prevented black people from using the same public facilities as white people. From segregated water fountains, to separate schools, to the illegality of interractial marriage, there was in fact a different standard applied to black Americans in the not too distant past. Even voting rights for black Americans were different than for White Americans during this time.
The need for change was real, and the work of men like Martin Luther King Jr. was necessary. Who could possibly disagree with the fundamental civil rights he desired for all Americans?
He wrote, “I have the audacity to believe that people everywhere can have three meals a day for their bodies, education and culture for their minds, and dignity, equality, and freedom for their spirits.”
Now, here is precisely the point where we can see the slight of hand used in Critical Race Theory. Like a skilled magician, the left hand draws all of your attention and focus onto the evils of America’s past, so that the other hand can then begin the dirty work of convincing you that white superiority must therefore be an essential American ideal, when in fact, it is not.
But the key American ideals – ideals laid forth in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution – were not only NOT rooted in racism, they were ringing rejections of it.
The argument against American institutions, however, quickly merged with the argument that any institution resulting in disparate outcome had to itself be racist. This was ridiculous on its face. But it was the central component of what would become Critical Race Theory.
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Critical Race Theorists began to lay forth their main argument. Professors Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic set out the basic principles of CRT in their book, “Critical Race Theory: An Introduction.” The two most basic principles were:
Critical Race Theory pioneer Derek Bell took the arguments of CRT to their logical conclusion. He wrote that “the whole liberal worldview of private rights and public sovereignty mediated by the rule of law needed to be exploded . . . a worldview premised upon the public and private spheres is an attractive mirage that masks the reality of economic and political power.”
According to Bell, even purportedly good outcomes may be evidence of white supremacy implicit within the system — white people are so invested in the system, that if they have to do something purportedly racially tolerant to uphold it, they will. But in the end, it’s all about upholding white power.
No wonder Bell posited that white Americans would sell black Americans to space aliens in order to alleviate the national debt — and suggested in 1992 that black Americans were more oppressed than at any time since the end of slavery. In fact, Bell went so far as to argue that Brown v. Board of Education was an attempt by the white patriarchy to reinforce racism for its own purposes.
In this view, the system is damned if it does and damned if it doesn’t. Every time it does something purportedly anti-racist, it upholds itself, and thus upholds racism; every time it does something that ends in disparate outcome, it demonstrates its own racism. The only solution is to tear everything down.
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