Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
First of all, the original knock on the piece by Hughes was that he lacked credentials. Obviously that's something that can't be said about Loury or McWhorter or Sowell. So it isn't really about academic credentials at all. Whether you admit it or not, you're trying to "Uncle Tom" these guys. I think you should own it rather than hint at it.
Hughes does of course still lack credentials, though that wasn't the charge I specifically made in the first place. And of course he demonstrates those lack of credentials by constructing woeful strawmen, demonstrating little unbiased engagement with the relevant literature aside from constructing said strawmen, and spouting off
the same conservative cliches that have been used for literally over a century now to blame black people for their own situation.
You seem rather annoyed that I didn't actually call anyone an Uncle Tom at all here, so you're now going to treat my disagreement with black conservatives as the equivalent of doing so. The only reason I even brought up McWhorter and Loury in conjunction with Hughes in the first place was to make the point that your views on black thinkers appear thoroughly ideological, despite your protestations to the contrary.
Quote:
As far as the idea that Coates hates white people being silly is concerned, I think you're kidding yourself about a guy you like. Which is his entire gimmick. He gets white liberals at cocktail parties to talk about how brilliant he is. I can say good things about Coates, something I haven't seen you do with those to whom you are obviously ideologically opposed in spite of your constant reluctance to commit. The man can really turn a phrase. He really did make a case for reparations. But most of what has come after that is just a screed against the country that has allowed him to make a fortune and the white people who are enabling his "oppression".
Once again, I don't particularly care for Coates much and have said so repeatedly here. I think it's a bit odd how high a bar you've constructed for accusations that thinkers you like are racist, but have little hesitation reaching the conclusion about Coates here, despite the lack of anything substantive indicating that his pessimism about structural racism automatically entails he hates all white people.
I also think it's rather amusing how you don't see how the black thinkers you like are even more susceptible to the audience attack you're launching on Coates here. Do you think Hughes' piece was primarily written for black people to shape up their culture or instead as comfort to readers of Quillette like yourself?