WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
Coates uses anecdotes to make emotional arguments. I have attacked his ideas and scholarship. Saying right wing talking points is not a argument.
So you agree you were, in fact, full of shit with your attempted GOTCHA by bringing up that out of context 9/11 nonsense? Good.
Just saying Coates uses anecdotes and is "emotional" are definitely not arguments either. Hughes has used plenty of anecdotes alongside his cherrypicked statistics in his writing, so I fail to see why you're so angry at Coates but not him (well I do actually). Likewise I can find plenty of numbers in "The Case for Reparations" alongside the stories he weaves together.
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1. What exactly structural racism is or how to solve for it? (Obstacles that we can never define is the best you seem to be able to do with this.)
Forgive me if I don't want to play the "educate me with a definition" game with someone who was insisting with hellfire and brimstone that it didn't exist and was all a liberal boogeyman just a few pages ago. You're more than capable of finding scholarly definitions of the term with the help of Google if you actually give a crap about learning what it was. And I posted multiple policies 2 replies ago that went similarly ignored.
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2. Dismissed Obama as not really black or concerned with black problems.
I am more comfortable with my framing of Obama as a neoliberal than your take, which amounted to "Da blacks got Obama so things must really be equal here!"
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3. Failed to say what the factual errors with the Hughes piece.
I've listed out charges multiple times, but will elaborate just for you sweetheart. For some reason, I highly doubt you're capable of constructing a list of similar complaints against Coates.
His view on the Civil War is complete garbage. "But slavery is hardly the root cause of America’s prosperity. If it were, then we would expect American states that practiced slavery to be richer than those that did not." This view is complete ahistorical rubbish to anyone the least bit familiar with Civil War economics, or even the concept of the Civil War in general. Most accounts on pre-Civil War economics emphasize the extent to which Southern states hyper-focused on the creation of raw materials with slave labor, at the expense of any kind of diversified economy, and then would have to buy products made with those raw materials back from the North. Additionally, it's almost like there was some mysterious event between the pre-Civil War and post-Civil War eras that may have done something to upset the capital and wealth in the former slave states. I can't quite put my finger on what such an event may be though. The point of course is just saying "The North is doing better than the South economically!" is an utter non-sequitur, and to use it to downplay the effects of slavery is garbage.
Hughes creates strawmen versions of Coates, Baradaran, and Rothstein. I don't believe a single one of them said anything resembling the idea that the racial gap is entirely caused by slavery and New Deal policies. I have a hunch that Hughes did not even read much of the source material, as
Baradaran herself anticipates and responds to some of the very cultural arguments Hughes is making. And on the specific spending point, the vast majority of empirical analyses on conspicuous consumption suggest that it's more a product of living in poverty than a cause of it. Of course, said literature is scarcely examined by Hughes in his rush to blame culture.
Hughes cherrypicks data. The biggest example of this of course is his citation of this is the Brandeis study, where he cherrypicks numbers to lowball the effects of institutional and systemic forces by simply focusing on 2 of the variables and instead concludes that 68% must be from some other explanation, including culture. In contrast to that, here are the authors of that very same paper he was citing arriving at a nearly opposite proportion than Hughes did:
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The evidence we present to examine the racial wealth gap points to institutional and policy dynamics in important spheres of American life: homeownership, work and increased earnings, employment stability, college education, and family financial support and inheritance. Together, these fundamental factors account for nearly two-thirds (66 percent) of the proportional increase in the wealth gap. In the social sciences, this is a very high level of explanatory power and provides a firm foundation for policy and reform aimed at closing the gap.
Hughes does not understand the concept of survivorship bias and as a result makes sloppy, unfounded comparisons between immigrant groups and black Americans. My absolute favorite example of this is when he starts going on about the success of the Japanese, when anyone with even a cursory knowledge of history would realize that group
actually received reparations for their treatment in World War II.
Finally, Hughes' arguments are not novel. Perhaps the most annoying part of this episode has been the extent to which IDW members have been tripping all of themselves to prop up this regurgitation of typical conservative race politics. One of those hacks even compared him to James effin' Baldwin.
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4. Failed to say what "historians" have backed up the scholarship of Coates.
I don't know of any credible historian who's disputed the actual facts of his larger essays to the extent people have with Hughes. People of course disagree with the conclusions and prescription he draws from his history, but I don't believe the facts on the ground have been misrepresented here. And as I noted previously, Coates' longer form works engage more with multiple historians and social scientists in a way that Hughes simply does not.
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5. Doubled-down on name calling and accusations of racism.
I'm pretty sure I never called you a racist in the course of this discussion, though I understand you'd really like me to in order to continue to play the victim.