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July
24, 2007
The Surfeit
of Unworkable Virtue
A
Libertarian Approach to
Schooling
by Fred Reed
I wonder whether the time for compulsory racial
integration of the schools hasn't passed. It
doesn't seem to accomplish anything that anyone
wants.
The lunge toward integration of course began
after 1953, and made a certain moral and
intellectual sense at the time. Regardless of
denials and justifications, blacks were indeed
oppressed until then, and did indeed have schools
hopelessly underfunded in comparison to those of
white children. (I was a kid in small-town Alabama
in 1956-57. Don't even try to tell me that it
wasn't so.)
Things being very bad, some form of remediation
was morally desirable, and the various solutions
proposed were both well-intentioned and at least
superficially plausible. If whites persisted in
giving blacks wretched schools and ignorant
teachers, which they did, then, it was thought,
putting all children in the same school would
settle that. Blacks had never amounted to
much scholastically, but then they had always been
slaves or serfs; it was not implausible to hope
that with better schools they might rise. Certainly
it was worth a try.
Southerners said it wouldn't work, and it
didn't. This failure was probably the greatest
misfortune ever to afflict the US. A half-century
later, a yawning gap persists between the
scholastic performance of blacks and whites. The
gap has proved intractable under every nostrum,
program, fad, or form of social shuffling. Nobody
in his right mind can argue that the country hasn't
tried. The gap doesn't close.
What now?
Distinctions exist between segregation,
desegregation, and integration. Segregation is
compulsory separation. Integration is compulsory
togetherness. Desegregation is freedom of choice.
That is, parents send their children to schools of
their choosing. This, I submit, should be the law
of the land. The result would be voluntary
segregation since the races don't much want to be
together, but why isn't it their business?
It seems to me that we should ask: What is
better for the children? Has integration benefited
the kids? If so, which kids? How? Or has it harmed
them?
Integration does not appear to have helped black
kids, who almost always end up at the bottom
scholastically. The reasons can perhaps be debated,
but it is what happens, and it shows no signs of
changing. Further, being with white kids is not
necessary to the advancement of blacks. The best
schools I have encountered for blacks in terms of
academics are the Catholic schools of downtown
Washington, DC, almost entirely black.
However, compulsory integration does hurt white
children. Whatever the reasons, whites have a
greater interest in studying. White parents tend to
want their progeny to learn mathematics, history,
the sciences, occasionally the English language,
literature, and the arts. White parents, or many
white parents at any rate, want rigor in these
courses. The enstupidation of America has reached
the point that much of the population ruts and
gobbles at the moo-cow level, yes. Still, the
aspirations of whites remain much higher than those
of blacks.
Blacks do not seem interested in European
history, or literature, or languages, or the
sciences, or mathematics. Neither in integrated
schools nor in de facto black schools does one hear
them demanding thicker books with bigger words and
smaller pictures. I would happily provide these
things, but they don't ask. Perhaps the current
policy of trying to impose on them a European
culture that isn't theirs, and that they show no
signs of wanting, should end.
Since it has not proved possible to raise black
children to the levels preferred by whites, the
schools have sought to disguise the failure by
diminishing academic rigor for all. This harms
whites.
Why not let black parents decide what should be
taught to their children? It is their business. I
am perfectly content that black kids study physical
chemistry and classical Greek, or Swahili and
Ebonics, or anything they choose, or nothing at
all. It is neither my business nor my problem.
Should blacks ask me, I would suggest that in my
view being able to read well should be an aim. I
would recommend for them the course of study that I
want for my own children. But if they did not want
these things, as they seem not to, I would suggest
that they manage their own schools as they saw
fit.
Would it not be better to offer the races a
choice and let things settle out as people chose?
You could call this policy something like, say,
"democracy," or even "freedom." Note please that I
am specifically not suggesting reinstitution of
compulsory segregation anywhere, and particularly
not in the schools. A black child who wanted to go
to an academically rigorous, predominantly white
school should be permitted to do so.
My interest here is partly selfish -- to avoid
condemning white children to schools dumbed down
and unable to insist on standards of schooling and
behavior that, as a white, I regard as important.
To avoid charges of consigning black children to
poor schools, I would happily agree to provide
black schools with twice the money per student of
the white schools. They could set standards as they
chose, choose such courses as they chose, and hire
such teachers as they chose. I do not see how this
could be called mistreatment.
It could, however, be called
"multiculturalism."
One hears much chatter about "diversity" and its
never-explained virtues. But I note that those who
most promote it least practice it. How many
professors at Harvard bus their own progeny to deep
black schools in downtown Boston? Do congressmen in
Washington send their budding gifts to eternity to
schools in, say, Anacostia? Any city has large
regions of almost pure diversity to which these
rich white kids might be consigned, and I promise
that they would learn a great deal from it. Almost
instantly. Oh yes. Do we have any takers?
Let me have my culture, and I will let you have
yours. I do not question your right to teach your
children as you think best. Do not question my
equal right. In fact, whatever your culture, if you
want to attend the schools of my children, I will
require no more than minimal criminality, civilized
comportment, and academic compatibility. Welcome,
whatever your color. If you are, say, Chinese, and
want to maintain your Chineseness at home, or want
egg rolls served in the school cafeteria, or want
Chinese taught along with French and Spanish, I
say, "Great." We can do this. When diversity means
learning something instead of screwing up the
schools, sign me on. But it usually doesn't.
One thing seems certain: You cannot have in the
schools two readily distinguishable groups, one of
them being politically sensitive, the two differing
utterly in academic intentions and achievement, in
behavior and language, without shortchanging one
and probably both. Differences in outcome are
invidious and invariably engender lower standards.
Experience shows that when the races can separate,
they do. The benefits desired from forced
integration have not materialized. Perhaps it is
time to try something else.
Reed
Archive
Copyright 2007 by Fred Reed and reproduced here by
permission of the author.
About
the Author (by the author):
Fred Reed is a Marine combat veteran, police
reporter, amateur biochemist, former long-haul
hitchhiker, and part-time sociopath living in
Mexico. Fred, a keyboard mercenary with a
disorganized past, has worked on staff for Army
Times, The Washingtonian, Soldier of Fortune,
Federal Computer Week, and The Washington
Times. He has been published in Playboy,
Soldier of Fortune, The Wall Street Journal, The
Washington Post, Harper's, National Review, Signal,
Air&Space, and suchlike. He has worked as a
police writer, technology editor, military
specialist, and authority on mercenary soldiers. He
is by all accounts as looney as a tune.
Visit the "Fred
on Everything" website to read his previous
columns and sign up for his regular e-mail
feature.
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The essays in A Brass Pole in
Bangkok, are sometimes wildly funny,
sometimes deadly serious, always merciless
in their unmasking of the pretenses and
charlatans of society. Fred, a former
Marine, subscribes to no ideology ("an
ideology is just a systematic way of
misunderstanding the world") but
exuberantly wreaks havoc on practically
everything, and delights in everything
else: the psychotherapy swindle, squalling
feminists, race racketeers, damn fool
wars, red-light districts in Asia, and
tequila fests in Mexico, where he
lives.
A
Brass Pole in Bangkok: A Thing I Aspire To
Be, by Fred Reed
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Buy Fred's new reprehensible book,
Nekkid In Austin! Another
collection of Fred's collected outrages,
irresponsible ravings, and curmudgeonry
from "Fred On Everything" and some
innocent magazines that, he says,
foolishly published him. Wildly funny,
sometimes wacky, always provocative essays
on the collapse of America.
Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a
Well, by Fred Reed
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