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Froma Harrop
Froma Harrop
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GOP's Sliding Scale for Self-Discipline

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In his essay "Why the GOP Can't Win With Minorities," conservative scholar Shelby Steele almost nails the half-question in the title. An African-American, Steele contrasts the "moral activism" of liberals with conservative calls for personal discipline.

He notes that blacks and Hispanics often poll conservative on social issues and that many Great Society programs meant to help them were obvious failures or worse. Yet conservatism can't seem to gain much traction with these groups.

Steele's explanation: Blacks especially are "often born into grievance-focused identities," a response to four centuries of racial persecution. School busing and other liberal attempts at social engineering at least acknowledge that mistreatment. The conservative emphasis on self-control does not.

"Even failed moral activism is redemptive — and thus a source of moral authority and power," Steele writes. But "conservatism stands flat-footed with only discipline to offer."

Missing in this fine analysis is recognition of what happens when conservative politics takes over from conservative theory. The call for more individual discipline is compelling to most everyone. But in the political reality, the demands for discipline tend to rise the poorer and darker the individual. And the politicians are not above nurturing grievances among working whites by flogging racial preferences that don't exist.

Many are to blame for the housing disaster. Mortgage brokers pushed expensive and complex mortgages loans onto people with no hope of repaying them. Wall Street grew fat passing the risk onto others. Government programs promoted homeownership to people who could not afford to buy a house. And, yes, there were reckless, greedy, lazy and/or dishonest borrowers.

But to the conservative punditry, the true villain was a 1977 law that stopped banks from discriminating against creditworthy homebuyers who lived in minority neighborhoods.

The crazy subprime activity didn't go into high gear until almost 30 years later, when most of the bad loans were not subject to Community Reinvestment Act rules. Nonetheless, conservative bullhorns framed the meltdown as some racial preference gone wild.

There's a sliding racial scale of standards regarding what constitutes a healthy family unit. Conservatives may rightly tie high poverty rates among minorities to the prevalence of families headed by single mothers — and wring their hands over the troubling, out-of-wedlock birthrates among black and Hispanic teens.

But when the Republican candidate for vice president paraded her pregnant unmarried teen before the party's convention, religious conservatives broke out in applause. They saw a pro-life message.

The less appealing message was that of another unwed teen mother — and in a family that professed to support old-style sexual abstinence. Sarah Palin addressed those concerns by sternly announcing that her daughter and the teen father would marry.

The cynic in me said that the couple would wed right before the election and quietly divorce two years later. But I was not cynical enough.

November came and went. Even the birth of the baby in December did not prompt a marriage. The public was fed bizarre romantic talk of a spring wedding. We learned last week that Palin's daughter and the father had broken up.

It is inconceivable that conservatives would toast the legion of unmarried teen mothers rolling their baby carriages in poor neighborhoods. But if a person is middle-class, white and talks a socially conservative game, inattentive parenting (or, in the case of some leading presidential contenders, trading one's wife in for a younger model) gets a pass.

Shelby Steele is right that the high value conservatism places on self-discipline should appeal to more African-Americans. But beyond "grievance-focused identities" are neon-lit examples of standards that are unevenly applied. Until Republicans pull the racial code out of their politics, minorities will simply not come around.

To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

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Comments

1 Comments | Post Comment
Ms. Harrop, you fall into the same lazy mind trap that pervades, and defines, liberal thought. So, let's go with the idea, for a minute, that conservatives need to be "less judgemental" to attract minorities.
Here is THE question. So, how is the Great Society programs, and the ongoing liberal victimization of poor minorities working?
True conservatives know that conservative standards are based in love and compassion for those born less fortunate. True conservatives do not say that Sarah Palin's daughter's pregnancy was O.K.. It was not. Also, Sen. McCain is not a conservative. You see how running non-conservatives works for the country.
Once again, after all the talk of hypocracy from conservatives, what has liberalism done for poor minorities?
There is an article in today's Nashville TENNESSEAN that states that a local university, The University of the South, will no longer use SAT's, or any other standardized tests, to measure educational acheivement. Don't you just love it? Now being able to write a logical paragraph, or solve an equation is racist.
And on the suffering goes, with minorities trapped in government funded ghettos filled with fatherless, uneducated children, with children for mothers, waiting till they can make money as a drug dealer,prostitute, or pimp.
Once again, Ms, Harrop, how has "Minorities not being fooled by conservative morals" worked for poor minorities?
Please write about how "liberal morals" will save the next generation of uneducated, bitter, poor minorities?
That shopuld be good for a grin. Lord knows, conservatives could use it. After all, given the progressive tax codes that liberals use to punish the effective among us, we are going to pay for it the outcome anyway.
Here are some more ideas for columns.
1) How government programs are behind the success, in the U.S., of peoples like the Irish, Germans, Middle Eastern immigrants, Asians, etc..
2) How being able to point out hypocracy in some of your opponents is more important than helping those in need.
3)How "all cultures are equal," with none of the mores of different cultures being better at furthuring the well being of individuals than others. By the way, it is cultural factores that predict success or failure, not race. Note: Liberals believe that race and culture are the same thing.
4) Lastly, why some people hold, so-called conservative values, as you state; but they vote against their conservative personal values to protest a few hypocrites. WOW! That's really self destructive. But that is the topic of a column that you will not write.
Ms. Harrop, some of us really do not care what our circle of friends think. If they do not agree with our values, we change friends, or even careers. Maybe, you should consider the same, before you do any more harm to poor minorities.
SHOCK! Some young girls even look at the values of young men they let into their lives. Some even look at the young man's ability to be a father and provide a reasonable income. Will wonders never cease.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Steve Duke
Thu Mar 19, 2009 12:04 PM
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