May 23, 2022

"The idea of elite capture has been around for decades and typically describes how the most advantaged people in a group take control of benefits that are meant for everybody..."

"Táíwò’s innovation is applying this idea to identity politics, the concept devised in 1977 by the Black radical feminists of the Combahee River Collective. He argues that their project has been hijacked. 'We believe that the most profound and potentially most radical politics come directly out of our own identity,' they wrote, because organizing around what was good for people at the bottom of social hierarchies would be good for all oppressed people. But rather than using personal identity as an entry point to building radical coalitions, as these innovators intended, elites are using it as a tool to advance their own narrow interests. He gives recent examples: when Washington, D.C., mayor Muriel Bowser had the words BLACK LIVES MATTER painted on a street days after her police force was brutalizing protesters in 2020, and the 'Humans of CIA' video series, in which the agency tried to attract new recruits by appealing, for instance, to their queer identities. Both were efforts to pacify dissent or to rebrand violent institutions using the symbols of identity politics.... Táíwò proposes a 'constructive politics' — a shift in focus to specific results. To him, this means redistributing resources and power downward to the people most negatively affected by the status quo. That may seem frustratingly general, and Táíwò is up front about not offering a how-to guide for equality....."

From "What’s Wrong With Identity Politics?/Philosopher Olúfemi O. Táíwò’s new book reclaims the concept from elite power brokers" by Zak Cheney-Rice (NY Magazine).

The headline got my attention, but the article itself left me with nothing useful, but Táíwò is "up front about not offering" anything useful... other than that he seems to be advising progressives to think about doing what is actually useful.

17 comments:

Achilles said...

They are just trying to defuse the story.

Everyone now knows that BLM was a complete scam, made some scammers rich, and ended up killing thousands of Black people while giving a bunch of white people more power.

Buy Large Mansions is now a meme that is often repeated just as much as Burn Loot Murder.

Even the dumbest Biden Supporters now know they are being laughed at because they are gullible tools.

They have to slow this down somehow, but they wont be able to.

The preference cascade is here. Hispanics are Republican now for a generation.

tim maguire said...

Everyone knows popular movements focus most of their benefits on the movement’s leaders and everyone believes (because it’s largely true), that the rich will find a way to come out on top no matter what. So unless he has what he admits he doesn’t have—an alternative—there’s no story here.

typingtalker said...

Nothing new here ...To him, this means redistributing resources and power downward to the people most negatively affected by the status quo.

Actions speak louder than words.

Enigma said...

And so social commentators rediscover once again that hate and discrimination are not the primary driving forces they are portrayed to be. These are social emotions and motives where one fixates a stronger competitor, or they reveal the frustrated obsessions of a loser after another has won.

Universal core survival emotions focus on the self. These include predation (feeding), resource control (greed, assets, wealth), and self defense (strength, tribes, walls against animals and invaders, weapons to protect self).

Social emotions follow after "I got mine, so I can choose my own destiny." People then layer on social control, team defense (discrimination), and team hegemony (i.e., the thesis of elite capture presented in this story). See evolutionary evidence for competitive niches. To the extent that resources are limited, there can be only one winning species, tribe, or individual.

Ignore Darwin at your peril.

Rory said...

One example: insist that any discussion of reparations be limited to cash payments to individuals, instead of to foundations that will decide how to spend the money in the "community" that doesn't really exist.

Fûz said...

"popular movements focus most of their benefits on the movement’s leaders"

No hierarchy can long withstand being penetrated by corruption and turned to favor self-preservation over its original mission.

Nicholas said...

"Zak Cheney-Rice" sounds like a satirist's name for an Oberlin student.

Fûz said...

"One example: insist that any discussion of reparations be limited to cash payments"

Another example: insist that any reparations be limited to the individual who was oppressed, and the individual who did the oppressing, and those individuals' lifetimes. Bills of attainder and prohibited.

Christopher B said...

Elite capture, Church of England edition

Link to PowerLine. Be sure to read all the way to the end.

Wince said...

The headline got my attention, but the article itself left me with nothing useful, but Táíwò is "up front about not offering" anything useful... other than that he seems to be advising progressives to think about doing what is actually useful.

"What I'm suggesting is give me the blanket thing... where I'm not necessarily wrong, I'm not necessarily right..."

Howard said...

Trump did exactly that embracing and co-opting the right wing Awake movement painting himself as the morality man Marlboro man macho man racist homophobic antiglobalist tobacco spittin good ol boy.

Tina Trent said...

The police were not brutalizing BLM protesters. The opposite is true. Bill de Blasio's then-lesbian wife was among the then-lesbians who actually took over the Cohambee River Collective, then whined for decades that they were the ones who were co-opted. Ditto the "Lesbian Menace" cohort who claimed they were purged from the feminist movement when they were the ones doing the purging -- of heterosexual women.

In leftism, the fake victims always gain the spoils. And are usually the real elites to begin with.

Beasts of England said...

'To him, this means redistributing resources and power downward to the people most negatively affected by the status quo.'

Theft is illegal and amoral. And it's a great way to get shot.

Temujin said...

Book selling. Nothing more.

Rollo said...

Táíwò is some kind of a big deal. It's been coming up as a hint on my browser and search engine. I didn't know if it was a martial art, a style of meditation, or something you eat.

Lurker21 said...

That is the old 60s idea of "co-optation." If you are a trans activist though, you aren't going to be able to stage a successful revolution of trans people. There aren't enough of you. You will have to piggyback on some other movement.

The socialist idea is that true socialism will set everything right. It's the intersectionalist idea that all oppressed groups will rise up and establish a society of perfect equity and justice.

Everything we know suggests that once the overlords are overthrown the formerly oppressed groups will struggle with each other and one group will oppress the others. Given that socialism isn't the solution to everything, cooptation doesn't seem like the wrong strategy for tiny minorities to pursue.

Rollo said...

Zak's bio:

About Me
Zak is not only an amazing writer. He’s an amazing human being with an amazing wife and an amazing kid.