Friday, July 6, 2007

Ellen Goodman's Race Problem

Ellen Goodman, Pulitzer Prize winner and current resident of Brookline, Massachusetts (Estimated 2005 median house / condo value: $1,115,200. Estimated black population: 2.7%), has a race problem. Try as she might to understand Clarence Thomas as a man (and, truth be told, she doesn't try very hard), all she can see is a black man.

Goodman opens her column gladdened "that [the Supreme Court] won't do any more damage until the first week in October" and closes it by dredging up Anita Hill (remember her?) and implying that Thomas is a "rigid ideologue." In between, we find her serving up a few buckets of psycho-babble about how Thomas's Court opinions are really little more than rebellion against the sort of "black stereotypes" one suspects nicely characterize the majority of Goodman's (no doubt numerous) black friends.

It's all about race for Goodman, you see. Thomas can't really be independently conservative; that is, he can't possibly be the Court's "most predictable member of the conservative camp" because he honestly and rationally believes that nonsense. He can't possibly have rationally come to view racial discrimination of any sort as wrong despite having personally benefited from it. Could he? No, of course not. It's all about his resentments, the ingrate!

Poor Ellen, you see, didn't get a black liberal "successor to Thurgood Marshall." In Goodman's ideal world there should be a black liberal on the Court and a Jewish liberal and a female liberal, etc. That's diversity! She is outraged that Justice Thomas might seriously doubt whether forced racial integration has been the unqualified success she believes it to be.

What nonsense. And racist nonsense, at that.

I often don't agree with Thomas's opinions. But I have listened to liberals denigrate his intelligence and competence and -- Gasp! -- his blackness ever since he was appointed and I have yet to find any evidence at all of the first two claims. As to the last, I'm not a black man and do not, therefore, know what his experiences as a black man in America have been. Neither, it should be obvious, does Goodman. Then again, we will never understand Clarence Thomas or anyone else in this world if we can't ever get past the color of his skin.

1 comment:

Ron Bailey said...

Hi David: Very astute column on Goodman today. Also, I really enjoyed your July 4th memories.

BTW, have a hell of a happy birthday today.