May 29, 2021

"What matters, both conservatives and liberals agree, is not the end result, but the liberal democratic, open-ended means."

"That shift — from specifying a single end to insisting only on playing by the rules — is the key origin of modern freedom. My central problem with critical theory is that it takes precise aim at these very core principles and rejects them. By rejecting them, in the otherwise noble cause of helping the marginalized, it is a very seductive and potent threat to liberal civilization.... The West’s idea of individual freedom — the very foundation of the American experiment — is, in their view, a way merely to ensure the permanent slavery of the non-white.... Our world is just a set of interlocking forms of oppressive structures, and has been since the West’s emergence.... When it began, critical theory was one school of thought among many. But the logic of it — it denies the core liberal premises of all the other schools and renders them all forms of oppression — means that it cannot long tolerate those other schools. It must always attack them. Critical theory is therefore always the cuckoo in the academic nest. Over time, it throws out its competitors — and not in open free debate. It does so by ending that debate, by insisting that the liberal 'reasonable person' standard of debate is, in fact, rigged in favor of the oppressors, that speech is a form of harm, even violent harm, rather than a way to seek the truth.... This debate is not about whether you are a racist or an antiracist. The debate is about whether, in your deepest heart and soul, you are a liberal or an anti-liberal."

From "Removing The Bedrock Of Liberalism/What the 'Critical Race Theory' debate is really about" by Andrew Sullivan (Substack).

1 comment:

Ann Althouse said...

ALP writes:

"It does so by ending that debate, by insisting that the liberal 'reasonable person' standard of debate is, in fact, rigged in favor of the oppressors, that speech is a form of harm, even violent harm, rather than a way to seek the truth..."

I have been trying to recall why this stance seems so familiar. Where have I encountered it before? Now I remember. Back in my high school days I had a handful of acquaintances from families that were deeply religious - Pentecostal Baptist. The kind of people that believe the Bible is the literal word of God. When people like this encounter ideas that are not "Christ-like" they reject them as being 'inspired by the Devil'. The Devil was everywhere - embodied in all things non-Christian. The Devil was constantly trying to trip you up through every one and every thing that was not Holy and Christ-like. Anyone who was not 'saved' was not worth arguing or debating with - they were simply shut down and ignored as "unsaved". After all, they were speaking on behalf of The Devil whether they realize it or not.

Who would have ever guessed the left would use strategies seen in the extreme religious right?