August 23, 2019

"When we first spoke, on the phone, Wax explained that she was wary of the media, which she claimed has sometimes misquoted her and has frequently taken her comments out of context."

"Therefore, she was going to record the formal interview. She also said that she planned to occasionally adopt the role of interrogator and ask me questions, such as why some countries were 'shithole countries.' During our conversation, which has been edited for length and clarity, Wax expounded on her beliefs that people of Western origin are more scrupulous, empirical, and orderly than people of non-Western origin, and that women are less intellectual than men. She described these views as the outcome of rigorous and realistic thinking, while offering evidence that ranged from two studies by a eugenicist to personal anecdotes, several of which concerned her conviction that white people litter less than people of color."

Writes Isaac Chotiner, in his introduction to his interview with Amy Wax, "A Penn Law Professor Wants to Make America White Again" (The New Yorker). Yikes. It sounds like she was right to be wary, but she did the interview. I haven't read the transcript yet. I'll update when I have.

UPDATE: The boldface is Chotiner, the rest Wax:
My reading of this was that you are not only embracing cultural-distance nationalism but saying it may, in fact, be necessary to save the country. Is that correct?

Well that’s a little bit of an overheated way of saying it....
Why are successful, peaceful, orderly, prosperous, technologically advanced, democratically sound countries so rare and so few, and why do they clump up in one tiny corner of the globe, namely Europe, the Anglosphere? We also have Japan, which is a wonder, I think, in many ways, a very admirable country. Perhaps Taiwan. And why is the rest of the world essentially consisting of, in various degrees, failed states? Why do we have a post-Enlightenment portion of the world and a pre-Enlightenment portion of the world? And I guess, to be really crude about it, you would use Trump’s succinct phrase: Why are there so many shithole countries? Of course the moment you say that, people just get outraged: Oh, my God, you are a racist for saying that. And that, of course, lets them off the hook; they don’t have to answer the question, which is convenient..... Do the people make the culture? Is it something that drops from the sky, or is it something about how people think, what they do, the habits that they have, the values that they have, the practices that they engage in?...

I would not use the word “innate.” To me, “innate” is a term that looks to heritable, or genetic factors. Now you can broaden it and say innate to a culture, but I would probably not say that, because it is so misleading. So, I’m really not saying anything about biology. Nothing at all....

Can you define racism for me? Is so-and-so a racist? Where are we getting with that? Define racist. I have no idea what you mean. It is a bludgeon that is a promiscuous term. You define what a racist is, and I will spend two seconds addressing that question because it is sterile.

You think that in the U.S. today that’s a sterile question?

Yes, I do, because it prevents us from dealing with real, down-to-earth, concrete problems....

So I would say our country’s culture is best preserved if most of the people in our country are of European origins, because those are the people that created our system, but that certainly doesn’t exclude bringing in other people....

What I find really interesting... is how do big Swiss people produce little Swiss people?... I’m Jewish. Why are Jews so Jewy? How did that happen? Why do French women, at least until recently, look so French? I mean, what is going on? I have a friend who’s Dutch, a Dutch artist, and he’s very well off, and, every morning, he gets up and cleans the front window of his house. It sparkles. I said, “Why are you doing that?” He said, “Because I’m Dutch.” So people do differ, there are these differences, and we just take them for granted....

What about [Trump's] calling into question whether a judge of Mexican heritage could make a fair judicial decision? Do you think that is racist?

Well, first of all, Mexican is not a race. It’s an ethnicity. It’s actually a national identity, isn’t it?

I think if the person had been from El Salvador or Venezuela, the President would have made the same comment. I think we’re getting lost in niceties here. We’re both smart people, Amy, or at least I’m somewhat smart. You know what he was saying. Come on.

O.K., but you’re patronizing me because you’re trying to use the word “racist”—

O.K., bigoted, would bigoted help with this?

—where race is not the operant category. You see, you’re saying, “Oh, you have to expect that, when you say something about a Mexican, it’s something about race.”

So what do you think Trump was trying to say there?

Well, I don’t really know. I guess he was trying to say something like, “I worry that people from particular backgrounds might have divided loyalty.” Just like people who are Jewish are sometimes accused of being too loyal to Israel, to the detriment of the United States. That is not a racist question. That is a question where the answer to that is, No. 1, both normative and positive. Normatively, we, as a country, give the benefit of the doubt to people from different backgrounds that they are loyal to our country, without evidence to the contrary, so that’s a presumption that a President shouldn’t be indulging.

Once again, I think we’re now having a discussion about the content of what he said, and we can’t have that discussion if you just go off on this ridiculous heresy hunt: “Is he a racist? Isn’t he a racist? Is that racist? Is this racist?” That’s really, as far as I can tell, eighty-five per cent of what the discussion now is about on the progressive left. It is so pointless, and it’s so shallow. O.K.?...

I just don’t want to go down the road of defending President Trump. He’s just one person. The real reason President Trump was elected, I think, to the extent I know anything about politics at all—and I know very, very little—is that a lot of people really were relieved to see someone stand up to the thought police of the progressive left wing.
It's a fair interview. A good interview. Chotiner tried very hard to out Wax as a racist and she had a full opportunity to be precise about what she's saying and why it's not racist. Clearly, Chotiner has a broader definition of "racist" than Wax and Wax's effort to get to a tighter definition of racism — to exclude ethnicity and culture — is not going to work on Chotiner (and on many New Yorker readers). You can see that easily from the transcript.

The headline, however, overreaches. It's execrable pandering. Embarrassing clickbait.

AND: There's something so desperate and, simultaneously, arrogant about the "smart people" argument: "We’re both smart people, Amy, or at least I’m somewhat smart. You know what he was saying. Come on." 

221 comments:

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wildswan said...

"Ken B said...
Wildswan
Don’t drive over a bridge. It was built using calculus, which Newton invented, and thus linked to Newton's ideas on witchcraft. Hence, questionable."


Amy Wax and Richard Lynn have the same ideas relative to Lynn's book IQ and the Wealth of Nations. Ordinarily that would mean she understood and supported Richard Lynn's notorious racist views. But she may be unaware of them and though I have looked into her before this latest controversy I have not been able to decide what she knows about Lynn's past or about the Pioneer Society. See The Funding of Scientific Racism: Wickliffe Draper and the Pioneer Fund by William H. Tucker if you want evidence on flat out racism of the Pioneer Fund.

If you wanted to study chemistry in Newton's time, you went to alchemists. I don't think he was into witchcraft.

wildswan said...

"Lewis Wetzel said...
What was the most racist period in the US?
It wasn't pre civil war. It was the 1900s. Anti-miscegination laws in the south date from the early 20th century, not pre Civil War.
Why?
Eugenics was a big deal in the late 19th-early 20th centuries."

I agree. Another book to read is The Strange History of Jim Crow by C Vann Woodward

wildswan said...

"Ralph L said...
This isn't the same as not marrying your close relatives."

There are reasons for not marrying close relatives as Queen Victoria's descendants demonstrate. That isn't the same as trying to establish a social policy whose intent is to wipe out a human social group because you believe that group is outcast from evolution.

wildswan said...

I do not at all support social engineering policies that move people without middle class values into middle-class neighborhoods and I'm sorry to hear that Montgomery Village where relatives of mine live is going downhill. I hope it's temporary. All the same think about the movie Gran Torino. Immigrants are different but not necessarily non middle-class.

iowan2 said...

There's nothing inherent in white people which forms stable democracies. What did that was US military power. See Republic of Korea, too. The US military seems to be a necessary but not sufficient ingredient to 20th century democracy.

Why exactly is the US military so dominate? Other nations have massive investment in men, and equipment. You're stuck in an uncomfortable loop trying to dispel the theory

wildswan said...

In Milwaukee you keep your front yard immaculate and barbecue out back. But I have seen immigrants who live in apartments barbecuing "out front" of their apartment buildings in large lively parties on streets in Shorewood (near the river of course, not the lake.) They picked up after the parties, restoring the immaculate lawn. Yes, I looked.

Ralph L said...

You might feel wiped out if you don't get to marry whom your family says you must. That must have been pretty important to large numbers of people or it wouldn't have occurred so often for millenia.

Has it been proven that the hemophilia mutation was caused by Victoria and Albert's first cousinship?

One of their granddaughters, Victoria Melita, divorced one first cousin to marry another. One of her daughters married a descendant of Qun Victoria's half brother, the other the grandson of the Kaiser.

wildswan said...

"Ralph L said...
Has it been proven that the hemophilia mutation was caused by Victoria and Albert's first cousinship?"

In the case of hemophilia, I believe that it came from Queen Victoria alone. But it is thought that that is not the only genetic mutation in that royal family but that there is another which caused the madness of King George. And that this accumulation comes of first cousin intermarriages among First Families back in Germany.

wildswan said...

Pre-Civil War abolitionists, and those living in New England states where slavery was abolished at the end of the American Revolution and those living in the states formed from former Northwest Territory where slavery was banned from the start and Republicans all agreed that slavery was wrong. And they proved their convictions by enlisting in the army and fighting in the Civil War in great numbers. Post Civil War, after 1882 the Democrats took up the ideas of eugenics and turned them into "progressive" social policy, i.e. racist segregation laws and anti-miscegenation laws. These were basically racist in that members of a group were considered inferior solely on the basis of skin color whereas slavery was a widespread non-racial phenomenon affecting all racial groups before 19C abolitionist movements. For instance, the Barbary pirates in the early 19C routinely enslaved all the sailors in ships they captured including white Americans; and in the late 18C Muslims in West Africa who were black attacked adjacent non-Muslim black kingdoms in order to capture slaves to sell to the trans-Atlantic slave trade; and almost the whole farming population of Russia was made up of enslaved serfs before 1859 when they were set free.

Fernandinande said...

Richard Lynn: "Natural selection has broken down."

Everything else he said was true, but no, natural selection hasn't broken down, it's just "selecting" for human characteristics that other people don't like. More r-selection (more offspring) rather than K-selection (more investment in offspring).

Ralph L said...

A BBC? program on Youtube claimed George III may have been bipolar, not (or not just) porphyriac.

There's also a new claim that Henry VIII's physical and tempermental declines may have been caused by genes inherited from Elizabeth Woodville's mother, not just his jousting injury and its chronic pain.

wildswan said...

"Fernandistein said...
Richard Lynn: "Natural selection has broken down."

It is truth universally acknowledge by eugenicists that Christianity with its social theories based on charity works against natural selection with its virile "stamp on the weak" outlook. So Lynn means that within European society natural selection has broken down.

Roger Sweeny said...

P.J. O'Rourke's Eat The Rich begins, "I had one fundamental question about economics. Why do some places prosper and thrive while others just suck?" It's a funny and surprisingly sophisticated book. Highly recommended for anyone who is interested.

wildswan said...

"Fernandistein said...
...
Everything else he said was true, but no, natural selection hasn't broken down, it's just "selecting" for human characteristics that other people don't like. More r-selection (more offspring) rather than K-selection (more investment in offspring)."

The theory that there is an r/K divide in humanity is the theory of JP Rushton, the second to last President of the Pioneer Fund. It is crux of Rushton's version of scientific racism. It is based on EO Wilson's work but Rushton applied it to human society. (Race, Evolution, and Behavior. 1995) He thought that K people had larger heads, lower sex drive, higher IQ's, and fewer children while r's has smaller heads, larger reproductive organs, lower IQ's and more children. There were more "K's" among Asians than Europeans and more "r's" among Africans than Europeans. So the r/k divide was not based on skin color but it sneaked about the issue by talking about "statistically more" in one group than another and behavioral evolution. This why it was "scientific racism." You have to get into the weeds and discuss the statistics and behavioral evolution but when you do you see it is the same old Klan arguments, now wearing an academic gown, not white sheets. And I am certain that this deception has worked and that many who not support the Klan think that this is an entirely different set of arguments where really it is just slightly different statistically. Not all in a group are "K" or "r" but almost all and Europeans in the middle.

Roger Sweeny said...

wildswan, If I am correctly grasping what Rushton is saying--that there are average differences between Asians, Europeans, and Africans along with a fair amount of overlap--and if that is true, then it IS scientific and it is racist only to the extent that reality is racist. The fact that it sounds like Klan arguments is irrelevant.

And wasn't the Klan argument more an essentialistic one: that there is something bad that all Africans have and no white people have, so it is important to keep Africans from "polluting", from destroying the "purity" of, the white race.

Statistics and essences are very different ways of looking at things.

Jeff said...

There's nothing inherent in white people which forms stable democracies. What did that was US military power. See Republic of Korea, too.
US military power after the Korean War protected South Korea from another invasion from North Korea and/or China, but it did very little to promote democracy. The South Koreans themselves did that. The key event that made it possible was the assassination of President Park Chung Hee in October of 1979 by his own KCIA Chief. The US was not behind it. In December of that year, Chun Doo Hwan led a military coup which the US did little to oppose, and once Chun promised to end South Korea's nuclear weapons program, the Reagan administration invited him for a state visit.
My point is that internal South Korean politics brought about democracy there, not US military power. Everyone understood that the US wanted democracy, but we did not impose it.

Jeff said...

I lived a half mile south of Montgomery Village in 1988-89, in old=town Gaithersburg. Montgomery Village is mostly townhouses. When you own a home, unless it is a condominium, you actually own two things: the house itself, and the land it is sited on. Houses tend to depreciate over time, heating and cooling plants wear out, wiring needs change, design preferences change (e.g., nobody wants to waste space on a formal dining room any more), and so on. Land, on the other hand, tends to appreciate with increasing population as it becomes relatively more scarce.
The result of all this is that, in a typical suburb of a growing metro area like DC, single family houses tend to appreciate relative to town houses and condos. It is very common in the DC area for local residents to refer to new townhouse/condo developments as future slums. Montgomery Village was no exception thirty years ago when I lived near there.

Tina Trent said...

Chuck ought to have the balls to use his real name if he's going to invoke teabagging.

chickelit said...

"Teabagger" is gay term first used by Anderson Cooper -- the same guy with the anal fetish: "If Trump took a dump on your desk.."

This buggers the question of Chuck's true identity.

Lazarus said...

Isaac Chotiner is the guy who interviewed Bret Easton Ellis and got him to say that there was a hysterical overreaction to Donald Trump's election that could easily be resolved by voting him out of office. There was a hysterical overreaction to that, and not from Trump supporters. Chotiner seems to specialize in calling people "racist." Generally, people who throw the word around too loosely are those who don't recognize their own prejudices.

Lloyd W. Robertson said...

Coming to this late but: I believe Trump criticized a specific judge of Mexican ancestry for very specific reasons.

1. Trump was convinced he was in the right about his "university"; even if it bordered on a scam, it was no worse than many thousands of schools and motivational speakers in the U.S., the motherlode of such places. So: Trump thinks judge made a mistake.
2. Trump had recently been quoted saying disparaging things about Mexicans--actually, contrary to the way it was reported, about specific types of Mexicans, not all of them. "They send us their rapists, etc. ..." Obviously there is no "they," unless he meant the cartels. He exaggerated by implying all violent criminals who are Mexican have left Mexico and moved to the U.S. I'm pretty sure there are still some in Mexico. He implied not that all Mexican immigrants to the U.S. are criminals, but they are disproportionately so (in the absence of a points system for immigration, given the role of cartels, etc.)
3. He concluded, reasonably enough, that a judge of Mexican ancestry might have a bias against Trump, based not so much on what Trump actually said, but on coverage of it.
4. There is no reason to think Trump would say anything similar about a judge from El Salvador. How would this even come up?
5. Neither the comment about Mexicans, nor the comment about a judge, were racist comments about all people of colour.

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