139. Shelby Steele Shame: How Americas Past Sins Have Polarized Our Country & the film What Killed Michael Brown?

Published: Oct. 20, 2020, 7 a.m.

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The\\xa0United\\xa0States today is hopelessly polarized; the political Right and Left have hardened into rigid and deeply antagonistic camps, preventing any sort of progress. Amid the bickering and inertia, the promise of the 1960s\\u2014when we came together as a nation to fight for equality and universal justice\\u2014remains unfulfilled.

As Shelby Steele reveals in Shame, the roots of this impasse can be traced back to that decade of protest, when in the act of uncovering and dismantling our national hypocrisies\\u2014racism, sexism, militarism\\u2014liberals internalized the idea that there was something inauthentic, if not evil, in the America character. Since then, liberalism has been wholly concerned with redeeming modern America from the sins of the past, and has derived its political legitimacy from the premise of a morally bankrupt America. The result has been a half-century of well-intentioned but ineffective social programs, such as Affirmative Action. Steele reveals that not only have these programs failed, but they have in almost every case actively harmed America\\u2019s minorities and poor. Ultimately, Steele argues, post-60s liberalism has utterly failed to achieve its stated aim: true equality. Liberals, intending to atone for our past sins, have ironically perpetuated the exploitation of this country\\u2019s least fortunate citizens. Approaching political polarization from a wholly new perspective, Steele offers a rigorous critique of the failures of liberalism and a cogent argument for the relevance and power of conservatism.

Shermer and Steele discuss:

  • 30th anniversary of his book The Content of Our Character, and what has changed in race relations in America in those 30 years?
  • Steele\\u2019s response to President Johnson\\u2019s famous quote:

    \\u201cFreedom is not enough. You do not take a person who, for years, has been hobbled by chains and liberate him; bring him up to the starting line of a race and then say, \\u2018you are free to compete with all the others,\\u2019 and still justly believe that you have been completely fair.\\u201d
  • why \\u201cThe promised land guarantees nothing. It is only an opportunity, not a deliverance.\\u201d,
  • literal truths vs. poetic truths and power:

    \\u201cWhat actually happened was that liberalism turned to poetic truth when America\\u2019s past sins were no longer literally true enough to support liberal policies and the liberal claim on power. The poetic truth of black victimization seeks to compensate for America\\u2019s moral evolution. It tries to keep alive the justification for liberal power even as that justification has been greatly nullified by America\\u2019s moral development.\\u201d

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  • political correctness is the enforcement arm of poetic truth,
  • black families & fatherless homes,
  • white guilt,
  • race fatigue,
  • reparations,
  • anti-racism,
  • achievement gap,
  • Princeton racism letter,
  • race and IQ,
  • SAT tests,
  • BLM and the nuclear family,
  • training and sensitivity programs.

Shermer and Steele also discuss his new film, produced with his son Eli Steele, titled What Killed Michael Brown?

Steele:

\\u201cWe human beings never use race except as a means to power. Race is never an end. It is always a means, and it has no role in human affairs except as a corruption.\\u201d

\\u201cAmerica\\u2019s original sin is not slavery. It is simply the use of race as a means to power. Whether for good or ill, race is a corruption. Always. And it always turns one group into the convenience of another group.\\u201d

\\u201cLiberalism\\u2019s great sin was to steal responsibility for black problems away from black people, leaving them vulnerable to destructive social forces, such as the drug epidemic of the 70s and 80s. It was the suffering of blacks that justified liberalism\\u2019s demand for power, but this only relegates blacks to permanent victimhood and alienates them from the power to uplift themselves.\\u201d

Shelby Steele is the Robert J. and Marion E. Oster Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution. Winner of the Bradley Prize and a National Humanities Medal and the author of the National Book Critics Circle award-winning The Content of Our Character, Steele lives in the Central Coast of California.

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