Category: Uncategorized

  • On Addiction and Education: A Classical Liberal View

    John Stuart Mill in his classic tract on Utilitarianism sets forth the
    classic liberal perspective on the relationship between social
    institutions and social health.

    A society that fails to build excellent social institutions will always
    be chasing an endless train of social crisis, because a peoples’
    capacity to develop and sustain social health depends very much on the
    provision of an environment that is nurturing and sustaining.

    When viewing the difficulty that Texas has in providing an excellent
    and enriching environment of social institutions (how many special
    sessions for school reform have ended in failure? how many excuses have
    been made for why we cannot tax properly our incomes for this
    purpose?)–is it any wonder that crisis prevention becomes the
    conventional morality of public life?

    How many of our most powerful and influential citizens spend their
    public time on crisis prevention rather than confronting the work of
    coaxing support for provision of broad institutional enrichment in
    education, health care, art, etc.?

    The public drift away from classic liberalism over the past generation
    has one glaring consequence: it serves to keep a safe distance between
    those who already have the means to fund institutions and those who
    don’t.

    Anti-liberalism in this sense trends against the
    democratic spirit. The next round of legislative action in education
    appears poised to bring us more of the same: enhancing the ability of
    the “haves” while paying little attention to the institutional needs of
    the “have nots”.

    Meanwhile, the folks who play this game from the top can continue to
    chalk up morality points by putting their charity resources to use in
    crisis intervention. And this is the lose-win formula of Texas politics
    today. The more the people lose from public policy neglect, the more the public
    moralists win from attending to the crises of the people.

    Here’s how Mill put it:
    It may be objected, that many who are capable of the higher pleasures,
    occasionally, under the influence of temptation, postpone them to the
    lower. But this is quite compatible with a full appreciation of the
    intrinsic superiority of the higher. Men often, from infirmity of
    character, make their election for the nearer good, though they know it
    to be the less valuable; and this no less when the choice is between
    two bodily pleasures, than when it is between bodily and mental. They
    pursue sensual indulgences to the injury of health, though perfectly
    aware that health is the greater good. It may be further objected, that
    many who begin with youthful enthusiasm for everything noble, as they
    advance in years sink into indolence and selfishness. But I do not
    believe that those who undergo this very common change, voluntarily
    choose the lower description of pleasures in preference to the higher.
    I believe that before they devote themselves exclusively to the one,
    they have already become incapable of the other. Capacity for the
    nobler feelings is in most natures a very tender plant, easily killed,
    not only by hostile influences, but by mere want of sustenance; and in
    the majority of young persons it speedily dies away if the occupations
    to which their position in life has devoted them, and the society into
    which it has thrown them, are not favourable to keeping that higher
    capacity in exercise. Men lose their high aspirations as they lose
    their intellectual tastes, because they have not time or opportunity
    for indulging them; and they addict themselves to inferior pleasures,
    not because they deliberately prefer them, but because they are either
    the only ones to which they have access, or the only ones which they
    are any longer capable of enjoying.
    It may be questioned whether any
    one who has remained equally susceptible to both classes of pleasures,
    ever knowingly and calmly preferred the lower; though many, in all
    ages, have broken down in an ineffectual attempt to combine both.

  • Anticipating Justice Thomas

    In

    reply to my long complaint of Jan. 11, one of our nation’s most wonderful philosophers sent me an

    advance copy of his forthcoming article on affirmative action. He argues that Justice Thomas presented

    the better argument in the Supreme Court’s Grutter case, although the argument by Justice O’Connor

    was adopted as the majority opinion. My most delightful colleague, it seems, would favor a reversal of

    the affirmative action trend in constitutional law.

    [Read the rest below or at “Forums”/

    “Philosophy of Affirmative Action”/”racial preferences?”] [Citation: forthcoming: The University

    of Cincinnati Law Review v. 27 no. 3 (2004). 21 November 20003
    Equality and the Mantra of Diversity*

    Laurence Thomas SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY]

    The argument against affirmative action deserves

    serious consideration, if only because the Supreme Court votes have been so divided in the key cases.

    In the case of Grutter, the vote was 5/4, and my esteemed colleague is helpful when he challenges us to

    take a closer look at what Thomas would say.

    Before I continue the philosophical

    argument below, I would like to not forget that the O’Connor opinion is definitive as constitutional

    law of the land. This places the burden of proof on the shoulders of makers of public policy to account

    for any decisions that would seem to run patently counter to what is in fact existing law. Even if you

    agree strongly with Thomas philosophically, the law of the land at this point compels attention to the

    arguments stated by O’Connor.

    Having said that, I find that consideration of anti-

    affirmative action arguments are often quite helpful in uncovering the role that racism may play in the

    promulgation of affirmative action policy. In fact it remains one of the deep flaws of affirmative

    action that it is condemned to be an anti-racist policy that is only required in racist

    environments.

    Hence the logics and languages of affirmative action tend to participate

    in the wider patterns of logic and language that are to be found in a racist environment. This is a

    feature of affirmative action not often reflected upon during polarized policy

    conflicts.

    Affirmative action, like every other crucial liberation in civil rights,

    uncovers our miredness. So we have to take care that our arguments for affirmative action do not rely

    on racist assumptions and attitudes. The “DIversity Mantra” as Laurence Thomas points out, is

    fraught with racist pitfalls.

    The very term “preferences” for instance has become

    sordid for its racist connotations. To oppose “racial preferences” therefore is very likely to oppose

    racist justifications for affirmative action. Or to put it another way, defining one’s objection to

    affirmative action as being opposed to “racial preferences” is already to load the logic of the

    argument in a way that will make a racists out of the opposition.

    So please don’t

    accuse me of favoring “racial preferences.” To me that term implicates a racist defense of

    affirmative action, and I would rather not be your straw man today.

    Why do I refuse to

    define affirmative action as a system of “racial preferences”? Let me begin with the ordinary usage

    of the term preferences. Preferences go very nicely with the subjunctive mood; they are things we would

    rather like to have, and we feel ourselves most free when our preferences present few

    difficulties.

    To have a “racial preference” therefore, is to put oneself in a wishful

    mood about what would be possible to choose. And there are problems when we start out this way in our

    thinking about affirmative action.

    Indeed affirmative action is a preference, but it is

    a “policy preference” and the policy it prefers does not need a sordid concept of “racial

    preference”.

    I sometimes wonder if journalists reflect on the loaded nature of the term

    “racial preferences” when they take it up as their own “objective” term for the issue at stake. Do

    they realize that they are abetting a logic most likely to make racists out of the pro-affirmative

    action camp?

    Affirmative action was born as a civil rights policy, not as a “racial

    preference.” Or if it was a preference, it was a preference for a particular form of

    policy.

    I know this sounds a little loopy right now, but please bear with me. I so hope

    that you sometimes think of my loopy sentences as Hegelian.

    The policy of affirmative

    action as I understand and defend it, is a policy that assesses broad patterns of institutional

    behavior in order to set goals for institutional reform. It is a policy born of a need to enforce civil

    rights. State authorities are trying to enforce civil rights at various institutions. How do they do

    it?

    The policy of affirmative action would have never arisen as we know it had it not

    been born as an organic mechanism for the promulgation and enforcement of civil rights. That is why I

    speak about affirmative action in terms of civil rights, and why I think other forms of defense tend to

    lose sight of the issues at the heart of the policy.

    If one wants to use the language of

    “racial preferences” in defense of affirmative action, one ought to try to formulate how a “racial

    preference” comes to have positive moral value from the point of view of a civil rights struggle. If

    the concept of “preferences” is not thoroughly contextualized within a situation of “struggle” then

    surely a racist model will be forthcoming. While it may be possible to work your way into a morally

    laudable concept of “racil preference” when considered from a civil rights point of view, that would

    be a truly loopy path.

    But what if we only take up the question of affirmative action in

    environments where civil rights struggles are alive and useful?

    A philosopher is always

    entitled to prefer an opening question. In the discussion of affirmative action, then, let this be my

    opening question to you. In your opinion are civil rights struggles today live and useful?

    Which civil rights struggles count for you? And why?

    The case of

    affirmative action in Texas for instance is a case where causality is pretty well documented. Because

    there was civil rights ENFORCEMENT there was affirmative action. Without affirmative action, it is

    difficult to see what form that ENFORCEMENT of civil rights would take.

    So, to be a

    little loopy again, affirmative action is a preference that arises out of needs that are developed in

    the practical realities of civil rights enforcement. How is institutional change to be ENFORCED?

    Answer this last question without pointing to affirmative action, and we will then have

    an alternative policy available to our prefence. But I don’t see how the problem of civil rights

    ENFORCEMENT has produced a better preference than affirmative action.

    And this is why

    the Texas A&M case is so crucial. If Texas A&M refuses to employ the constitutional policy of

    affirmative action, how can civil rights in admissions be ENFORCED.

    Well, I look forward

    to my colleague’s article in print. I recommend reading it, because it does help us understand how it

    is possible to defend affirmative action in racist ways. Nevertheless, I think that any serious call to

    abolish affirmative action has to present some clue as to how the question of civil rights ENFORCEMENT

    is to be handled. This, of course, is rarely done.

    I have a colleague for instance who

    would rather not work in the South today. How do I assure such a colleague that civil rights are

    ENFORCED here?

    Also rare is the pro-affirmative action position that is vigilant to the

    racist vectors that intertwine all our lives and

    languages.

  • Like Quittin Time in 'Gone with the Wind'

    "Keep the focus on taxes and keep it narrow," is how the Quorum Report
    glosses the advice that veteran Texas politico John Sharp is now giving
    to the Republican-led legislature on how to handle their upcoming
    special session on education. I remember someone once told me that
    consultants get paid to tell people what they wanted to hear in the
    first place. In this case, Sharp may be doing it for free. Such
    is the spirit of public service, 2006. Oh, and don’t forget to
    vote in our income tax poll…

  • Standing Against Baiting and Hating in the Hard Year to Come

    In a New Year’s Eve column for the American Prospect, Harold Meyerson
    seconds the motion made at this website last May that the Republicans
    are going to be playing the fear card this year with heavy-handed attention to illegal immigration.

    But even Meyerson underestimates the threat. What’s coming down
    the street is a machine to make a permanent battlefield of the Mexico
    border, the better to have a landing zone for the kind of politics that
    the Republican machine loves best — chaos for profit. Please
    review the five pistons of empire, because they are fixin’ to fire up overtime.

    For all these reasons your editor spent some time over the holidays opening up a new web project called American Worker Info. We see what you put on the table Mr. Meyerson; we call it and raise.–gm