Reason. ,
v. 31 no10 (Mar. 2000) p. 26-34
At Wake Forest University last fall, one of the few events designated as
"mandatory" for freshman orientation was attendance at Blue Eyed, a filmed
racism awareness workshop in which whites are abused, ridiculed, made to fail, and taught
helpless passivity so that they can identify with "a person of color for a day."
In Swarthmore College's dormitories, in the fall of 1998, first-year students were asked
to line up by skin color, from lightest to darkest, and to step forward and talk about how
they felt concerning their place in that line. Indeed, at almost all of our campuses, some
form of moral and political re-education has been built into freshman orientation and
residential programming. These exercises have become so commonplace that most students do
not even think of the issues of privacy, rights, and dignity involved.
A central goal of these programs is to uproot "internalized oppression," a
crucial concept in the diversity education planning documents of most universities. Like
the Leninists' notion of "false consciousness," from which it ultimately is
derived, it identifies as a major barrier to progressive change the fact that the victims
of oppression have internalized the very values and ways of thinking by which society
oppresses them. What could workers possibly know, compared to intellectuals, about what
workers truly should want? What could students possibly know, compared to those creating
programs for offices of student life and residence, about what students truly should feel?
Any desire for assimilation or for individualism reflects the imprint of white America's
strategy for racial hegemony.
In 1991 and 1992 both The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal published surveys
of freshman orientations. The Times observed that "orientation has evolved into an
intense ...initiation" that involves "delicate subjects like...date rape and
race relations, and how freshmen, some from small towns and tiny high schools, are
supposed to deal with them." In recent years, public ridicule of "political
correctness" has made academic administrators more circumspect about speaking their
true minds, so one should listen carefully to the claims made for these programs before
colleges began to spin their politically correct agendas.
Tony Tillman, in charge of a mandatory "Social Issues" orientation at
Dartmouth, explained in the Journal that students needed to address "the various
forms of 'isms : sexism, racism, classism," all of which were interrelated. Oberlin
"educated" its freshmen about "differences in race, ethnicity, sexuality,
gender, and culture," with separate orientations for blacks, Hispanics, gays and
lesbians, and Americans of Asian descent. Columbia University sought to give its incoming
students the chance "to reevaluate and learn things," so that they could rid
themselves of "their own social and personal beliefs that foster inequality."
Katherine Balmer, assistant dean for freshmen at Columbia, explained to the Times that
"you can't bring all these people together...without some sort of training.".
Greg Ricks, multicultural educator at Stanford (after similar stints at Dartmouth and
Harvard), was frank about his agenda: "White students need help to understand what it
means to be white in a multicultural community....For the white heterosexual male who
feels disconnected and marginalized by multiculturalism, we've got to do a lot of work
here." Planning for New Student Week at Northwestern University, a member of the
Cultural Diversity Project Committee explained to the Weekly Northwestern Review in 1989
that the committee's goal was "changing the world, or at least the way undergraduates
perceive it." In 1993, Ana Maria Garcia, assistant dean of Haver-ford College,
proudly told the Philadelphia Inquirer of official freshman dormitory programs there,
which divided students into two groups: happy, unselfish Alphas and grim, acquisitive
Betas. For Garcia, the exercise was wonderfully successful: "Students in both groups
said the game made them feel excluded, confused, awkward, and foolish," which, for
Garcia, accomplished the purpose of Haverford's program: "to raise student awareness
of racial and ethnic diversity.".
In the early 1990s, Bryn Mawr College shared its mandatory "Building
Pluralism" program with any school that requested it. Bryn Mawr probed the most
private experiences of every first-year student: difference and discomfort; racial,
ethnic, and class experiences; sexual orientation; religious beliefs. By the end of this
"orientation," students were devising "individual and collective action
plans" for "breaking free" of "the cycle of oppression" and for
achieving "new meaning" as "change agents." Although the public
relations savvy of universities has changed since the early 1990s, these programs
proliferate apace.
The darkest nightmare of the literature on power is George Orwell's 1984, where there
is not even an interior space of privacy and self. Winston Smith faces the ultimate and
consistent logic of the argument that everything is political, and he can only dream of
"a time when there were still privacy, love, and friendship, and when members of a
family stood by one another without needing to know the reason.".
Orwell did not know that as he wrote, Mao's China was subjecting university students to
"thought reform," known also as "re-education," that was not complete
until children had denounced the lives and political morals of their parents and emerged
as "progressive" in a manner satisfactory to their trainers. In the diversity
education film Skin Deep, a favorite in academic "sensitivity training," a white
student in his third day of a "facilitated" retreat on race, with his name on
the screen and his college and hometown identified, confesses his family's intertial
Southern racism and, catching his breath, says to the group (and to the thousands of
students who will see this film on their own campuses), "It's a tough choice,
choosing what's right and choosing your family.".
Political correctness is not the end of human liberty, because political correctness
does not have power commensurate with its aspirations. It is essential, however, to
understand those totalizing ambitions for what they are. O'Brien's re-education of Winston
in 1984 went to the heart of such invasiveness. "We are not content with negative
obedience.... When finally you surrender to us, it must be of your own free will."
The Party wanted not to destroy the heretic but to "capture his inner mind."
Where others were content to command "Thou shalt not" or "Thou shalt,"
O'Brien explains, "Our command is 'Thou art. " To reach that end requires
"learning... understanding and acceptance," and the realization that one has no
control even over one's inner soul. In Blue Eyed, the facilitator, Jane Elliott, says of
those under her authority for the day, "A new reality is going to be created for
these people." She informs everyone of the rules of the event: "You have no
power, absolutely no power." By the end, broken and in tears, they see their own
racist evil, and they love Big Sister.
The people devoted to remolding the inner lives of undergraduates are mostly kind and
often charming individuals. At the Fourth Annual National Conference on People of Color in
Predominantly White Institutions, held at and sponsored by the University of Nebraska last
October, faculty and middle-level administrators of student life from around the country
complained and joked about their low budgets, inadequate influence, and herculean tasks.
Their papers and interviews reveal an ideologically and humanly diverse crowd, but they
share certain assumptions and beliefs, most of which are reasonable subjects for debate,
but none of which should provide campuses with freshman agendas: America is an unjust
society. Drop-out rates for students of color reflect a hostile environment and a lack of
institutional understanding of identity and culture. What happens in the classroom is
inadequate preparation for thinking correctly about justice and oppression.
They also share views that place us directly on the path of thought reform: White
students desperately need formal "training" in racial and cultural awareness.
The moral goal of such training should override white notions of privacy and
individualism. The university must become a therapeutic and political agent of progressive
change.
Handouts at the Nebraska conclave illustrated this agenda. Irma Amirall-Padamsee, the
associate dean of student relations and the director of multicultural affairs at Syracuse
University, distributed the Office of Multicultural Affairs' brochure. Its
"philosophy" presupposes that students live "in a world impacted by various
oppression issues," including "racism." "OMA's role," it
announced, "is to provide the...leadership needed to encourage our students...to grow
into individuals willing to take a proactive stance against oppression in all its
shapes.".
Molly Tovar, who has done this sort of work both at the University of Oklahoma and at
Oklahoma State University, passed out a 22-page guide she co-authored, "How to Build
and Implement a Comprehensive Diversity Plan." The guide explains the three
"kinds of attitudes" that agents of cultural change will face: "The
Believers," who are "cooperative; excited; participative; contributive";
"The Fence Straddlers," who are "suspicious; observers; cautious;
potentially open-minded"; and "The Skeptics," who are "critical;
passive aggressive; isolated; traditional.".
Ronnie Wooten, of Northern Illinois University, distributed a handout, "Inclusive
Classroom Matters." It adapts a variety of common academic sources on
multiculturalism, including a set of "guidelines" on how to "facilitate
learning about those who are different from you." The students in this
"inclusive classroom" would have to abandon what might be their sincere inner
beliefs, replacing them with such professions of faith as "We will assume that people
(both the groups we study and the members of the class) always do the best that they
can." The guidelines make it clear that one may not restrict one's changes to the
intellectual: "We will address the emotional as well as the cognitive content of the
course material. We will work to break down the fears that prohibit communication.".
Sharon Ulmar, assistant to the chancellor for diversity and equal opportunity at the
University of Nebraska at Omaha, handed out a flyer titled "Can A Diversity Program
Create Behavior Changes?" Her program's mode of self-evaluation was to measure
"the number of participants that took action based upon the awareness they learned
from the program." Among the units of "awareness" successfully acquired
were the following (some of which surely might strike one as more problematic than
others): "gays and lesbians no different than sic others"; "handicap
accessibility is for those who are handicaped sic "; "difficult to make a
decision about own beliefs when others are watching"; "module allowed
participant to witness subtle behaviors instead of hearing about it"; and the
ineffably tautological "under-standing commonalities of each individual may be
similar to yours.".
Denise Bynes, program coordinator for Adelphi University's Center for African-American
Studies Programs, distributed a "Conflict Resolution Styles Questionnaire" for
students, all of whom are to be categorized at the end as one of the following:
"competing, avoiding, accommodating, compromising, and collaborating." The
handout also presents the "basic values" of each American ethnic group. For
white Americans, these are "Freedom/liberty/privacy; equality/fairness;
achievement/success; individualism/self-interest; economical use of time; comfort."
For African-Americans, "Ethnic pride, heritage, history; kinship
bonds/family/motherhood; equality/fairness; achievement; respect;
religion/spirituality." For Asian-Americans, "Reciprocal social duties;
self-control/courtesy/dignity; devotion to parents; tradition (family, culture, the past);
duty/hard work/diligence." Each group also has its own particular
"overview" of nature, logic, time, society, and interpersonal relationships.
Whites wish to "control" nature, for example; Hispanics, to live in
"harmony" with it; blacks, to "overcome" it; and Asians, to "be
adjusted to" and "accept" it. Whites are "rational, logical,
analytical"; Hispanics, "rational, ethical"; blacks, "allegorical and
synthetical"; and Asians, "intuitive, holistic, tolerate inconsistencies.".
According to a formal presentation by Bynes and her colleague at Adelphi, Hinda Adele
Barlaz, all of these materials were acquired during "training" by the U.S.
Department of Justice Community Relations Service, a program so effective that "it
was very hard to get any of the other white members of the committee Barlaz was white to
go for the training that the Department of Justice provided free of charge. The white
members of the Adelphi Prejudice Reduction Committee had been so alienated by the training
that they didn't want to go back.".
What do these presenters in Nebraska, typical of those now governing offices of student
life and residence, believe about the re-education of our college students? The keynote
speaker at the conference was Carlos Munoz, professor of ethnic studies at the University
of California at Berkeley. He explains in an interview that to create an appropriate
environment on campus, one has "to do as much outreach as possible away from the
classroom, into the dorms, into the places where students live." Such work should
begin during freshman orientation, continue throughout a college experience, and be
mandatory.
Amirall-Padamsee from Syracuse argues that "students of color need to be nurtured
as insightful leaders of our community" and that "they must be formally trained
in anti-oppression theory and related skill building." "White students," in
turn, "have to be trained as allies in change." (Ally is a code word in
sensitivity training circles. As the "diversity facilitator" Hugh Vasquez of the
Todos Institute explains in a widely used manual, an "ally" is someone from
"the dominant group" who is aware of and articulates his unmerited privilege and
who intervenes on behalf of mistreated groups.).
The goal of such training, according to Amirall-Padamsee, is "to produce graduates
who are individuals committed to educational and social justice, and not just a tolerance
of, but a validating of difference." To accomplish that she says, "we need to
define and implement ways to translate education to behavioral change." In addition,
she boasts, she has access to federal work-study funds, and she uses that position--and
her capacity to dismiss people--"to try to make a positive change in the way that the
student is thinking.".
Tovar, formerly of Oklahoma State University and now at the University of Oklahoma,
declares in an interview at the conference that "at OSU we have all kinds of
sensitivity training." She describes an incident involving fraternity brothers who
had been disrespectful of Native American culture: They ended up "incredibly
emotional....These fraternity kids broke down." OSU also has mandatory multicultural
freshman orientation sessions.
Bynes, also the co-chairman of the Prejudice Reduction Committee at Adelphi University,
says the committee's emphasis is on training individuals how to interact "with a
diverse student body," with "separate training for students... and special
sessions on student leadership training." This "cultural and racial awareness
training would benefit all members of the Adelphi community, both in their university and
personal lives." The committee would get people to talk about "'what I like
about being so-and-so, 'what I dislike about being so-and-so, and 'the first time I
encountered prejudice, " all exercises that the facilitators had been shown and had
experienced in their own "training" by the Justice Department.
Bynes is a kind, accomplished, candid, and well-meaning woman. As she explains,
"White people must have... sensitivity training...so that they can become aware of
white privilege." Mandatory sensitivity training ideally should include both students
and faculty, but "there are things that we can't dictate to the faculty because of
the fact that they have a union.".
There are painful ironies in these attempts at thought reform. Individual identity lies
at the heart of both dignity and the flourishing of an ethnically heterogeneous society.
Black students on American campuses rightly decry any tendency of university police to
stop students based on race. Their objections are not statistical but moral: One is an
individual, not an instance of blood or appearance. The assault on individual identity was
essential to the horror and inhumanity of Jim Crow laws, of apartheid, and of the
Nuremberg Race Laws. It is no less inhuman when undertaken by "diversity
educators.".
From the Inquisition to the political use of Soviet psychiatry, history has taught us
to recoil morally from the violation of the ultimate refuges of self-consciousness,
conscience, and private beliefs. The song of the "peat bog soldiers," sent by
the Nazis to work until they died, was "Die Gedanken sind frei," "Thoughts
Are Free," for that truly is the final atom of human liberty. No decent society or
person should pursue another human being there. Our colleges and universities do so
routinely.
The desire to "train" individuals on issues of race and diversity has spawned
a new industry of moral re-education. Colleges and universities have been hiring diversity
"trainers" or "facilitators" for 15 years, and the most famous of them
can command $35,000 for "cultural audits," $5,000 for sensitivity workshop
training, and a sliding scale of honoraria, some for not less than $3,000 per hour, for
lectures.
This growing industry has its mountebanks, its careerists, its well-meaning zealots,
and its sadists. The categories often blur. Three of the most celebrated facilitators at
the moment are Edwin J. Nichols, of Nichols and Associates in Washington, D.C.; Hugh
Vasquez, of the Todos Institute in Oakland, California; and Jane Elliott, the Torquemada
of thought reform. To examine their work is to see into the heart of American
re-education.
Nichols first came to the attention of critics of intrusive political correctness in
1990, when he led an infamous "racial sensitivity" session at the University
College of the University of Cincinnati. According to witnesses, his exercise culminated
in the humiliation of a blond, blue-eyed, young female professor, whom he ridiculed as a
"perfect" member of "the privileged white elite" who not only would
win "a beauty contest" but even "wore her string of pearls." The
woman, according to these accounts, sat and sobbed. These contemporaneous revelations did
not harm Nichols' career.
According to the curriculum vitae sent by his firm, Nichols studied at Eberhardt-Karls
Universitat in Tubingen, Germany, and at Leopold-Franzens Universitat in Innsbruck,
Austria, "where he received his Doctor of Philosophy in Psychology and Psychiatry,
cum laude" (a rare degree). In some publicity material, he states that he founded a
school of child psychology in Africa; at other times, he modestly withholds that
accomplishment.
Nichols' schedule of fees is almost as impressive as his schedule of thought reform. He
charges $3,500 for a three-hour "Basic Cultural Awareness Seminar," plus travel
and per diem. For a plain old "Workshop," he gets $4,000-$5,000 plus expenses.
This makes his staple offering--a "Full Day Session (Awareness Seminar and
Workshop)"--a bargain at $5,000 plus expenses. For a "Cultural Audit," he
gets $20,000-$35,000 (he recently did one of these for the University of Michigan School
of Medicine). The Bureau of Labor Statistics at the Department of Labor paid him $15,000
for diversity training; the Environmental Protection Agency got him cheaply at $12,000.
Business is booming. Nichols has brought awareness to the employees of six cabinet
departments, three branches of the armed services, the Federal Reserve Bank, the Federal
Aviation Administration, the Internal Revenue Service, and the FBI; the Goddard Space
Center, the Naval Air Warfare Center, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and NASA; the Office
of Personnel Management, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and the Social Security
Administration. He has enlightened city and county governments, whole school systems,
various state government departments, labor unions, several prestigious law firms, and the
Archdiocese of Baltimore. His clients include "Fortune 500 Corporations, foreign
governments, parastatals, associations, health and mental health systems," and he has
been a consultant to offices of "The British Commonwealth of Nations" and
"organizations in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Japan, Latin America...Singapore,
Malaysia, and China." He has a very long list of academic clients, and he was a
centerpiece of Johns Hopkins' 1999 freshman orientation.
What does Nichols believe? He believes that culture is genetically determined, and that
blacks, Hispanics, and descendants of non-Jewish Middle-Eastern tribes place their
"highest value" on "interpersonal relationships." In Africa, women are
the equal of men. Whites were altered permanently by the Ice Age. They value objects
highly, not people. That is why white men commit suicide so frequently when they are
downsized.
Nichols calls his science of value systems "axiology," and he believes that
if managers and administrators understand these cultural differences, they can manage more
effectively, understanding why, according to him, blacks attach no importance to being on
time, while whites are compulsive about it. Whites are logical; blacks are intuitive and
empathetic. Whites are frigid; blacks are warm and spontaneous. Whites are relentlessly
acquisitive; nonwhites are in harmony with nature. White engineers, for example, care
about their part of something; Asian engineers, managers should know, care about the
whole. Whites are linear; nonwhites have a spiral conception of time. Nichols has a
handout that he frequently uses. Whites, it explains, "know through counting and
measuring"; Native Americans learn through "oneness"; Hispanics and Arabs
"know through symbolic and imagery sic "; Asians "know through striving
toward the transcendence sic ." Asking nonwhites to act white in the workplace is
fatal to organizational harmony. Understanding cultural axiology is essential to
management for the 21st century. Now, reread his list of clients.
Two diversity training films widely used at major universities reveal the techniques
and the characters of two other leading thought reformers. Skin Deep, the 1996 film funded
by the Ford Foundation, records an encounter at a retreat between college students from
around the country. The facilitators are not active in the film, but the published guide
tells you what they do and identifies their leader as Hugh Vasquez.
Skin Deep begins with ominous news clips from the major networks about "racial
violence," "racism," "slurs," and "racist jokes" on
campus. It announces that "at these training grounds for our future leaders,
intolerance has once again become a way of life." We meet white, Hispanic, black, and
Asian-American students from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, the University of
California at Berkeley, and Texas A&M. The whites have terrible stories to tell: They
have grown up in white neighborhoods; their families have prejudices; and they feel
rejected by people of color. The people of color have terrible stories to tell: They
suffer frequent abuse in white America, and they are sick of it.
Neither group is typical of a college population. The whites, we gradually learn, have
been members of organizations working for racial understanding. The students of color all
use terms like "allies," suggesting that they've been through sessions like this
before. There is a Jewish woman who objects to being thrown into the nightly "white
caucus," where she doesn't really belong. She also anguishes over whether all of the
things she has been told at the encounter about the Jewish role in the suffering of people
of color are true. (Vasquez responds candidly to an inquiry on this, revealing that some
of those allegations were outright anti-Semitic, and that the Jewish girl was looking for
"allies" who would not "scapegoat" Jews.) In short, the white students
talk about the stereotypes they have learned, and the students of color reflect deeply on
the cruelty of race in America.
When white students initially suggest that they personally did not do terrible things,
the students of color fire back with both barrels. A first reply goes immediately to the
heart of the matter: "One thing that you must definitely understand is that we're
discussing how this country was founded, and because you are a white male, people are
going to hate you." A black student explains, more patiently: "Things are going
on presently: the IMF, presently; the World Bank, presently; NAFTA, presently; Time
Warner, presently; the diamond factories, presently; reservations, presently; ghettos,
presently; barrios, presently. Slavery still exists." (Diamond factories?) The
Chicana, Judy, lets them know that "I will not stop being angry, and I will not be
less angry or frustrated to accommodate anybody. You whites have to understand because we
have been oppressed for 2,000 years. And if you take offense, so?" (Two thousand
years?) And from Khanh, a bitter Vietnamese student: "White people need to hear that
white people are very affected by internalized racism....As a person of color growing up
in this society, I was taught to hate myself and I did hate myself. If you're a white
person, you were taught to love yourself....If you don't know that you have shit in your
head, you'll never deal with racism.".
By the end, the students of color have had the grace to state that if the white
students become real "allies," their victims can let go of their anger a bit.
White students have come to realize that the pieties their parents taught them, such as an
honest day's pay for an honest day's work, apply only to whites in America.
In short, what moves the film (and American thought reform) is a denial of individual
identity and responsibility, an insistence on group victimization and rights, and the
belief that America is n almost uniquely iniquitous place in the world, without
opportunity, legal equality, or justice. "I want you to know," an Hispanic male
explains, "that because of the system, my cousin was shot...and then another cousin
was shot." The tribalism of the exploited Third World expresses a core truth: You are
your blood and history. Let the children of the guilty denounce their parents. Let the
victims stake their claims. Let the cultural revolution begin.
Vasquez is a frank and warm man by e-mail. He explains that the filmmaker never showed
the facilitators because she wanted to focus solely on the students, but that "it
took a great deal of planning and structure and facilitation to make what happened
happen." In his own mind, he was devoted to eliminating "blame, ridicule,
judgments, guilt, and shame" among all of the students in the group, and he sounds
sincere when he writes that his goal is to eliminate "individual and institutional
mistreatment of any group or culture." But his effect, whatever his intention, is
frightening, atavistic, and irrational, and his means are deeply intrusive.
Americans surely need to study, discuss, and debate, frankly, matters of race and
ethnicity. Reasonable people disagree on profound questions. Some of the issues are
empirical: Is aversion to difference acquired above all from culture or evolution? Should
we be more startled by America's success in creating a nation of diverse backgrounds or by
the difficulties it has in doing so?
Some of the issues are moral and political: Should we favor legal equality with
differential outcomes or equality of outcomes even at the price of legal inequality? Are
today's whites responsible for the crimes of 19th-century Southern slave owners? What are
the benefits and costs of a society based on individual responsibility? These are not
issues for indoctrination. Indeed, they do not even reflect everyone's chosen intellectual
or moral agenda, and free individuals choose such agendas for themselves.
Vasquez's "Study Guide" for Skin Deep explains that the final goal of using
the film in "colleges, high schools, corporations, and the workplace" is to
produce "action strategies and... networks for working against racism," for
which there is a page of strategy. The guide further explains the necessity of affirmative
action, the "myths" of reverse discrimination and balkanization, and the reality
of white privilege. It teaches the need for the privileged to become "allies" of
the oppressed, and it focuses on the nightmare of "internalized oppression." The
internalization of oppression manifests itself in "self-doubt...fear of one's own
power; an urgent pull to assimilate; isolation from one's own group; self-blame for lack
of success; and fighting over the smallest slice of the economic pie.".
The guide also has a rare explicit endorsement of "political correctness,"
reminding facilitators that "language was a prime factor" in the murder of 6
million Jews, that language perpetuates racism, and that it is wrong to believe that
"anything people say should be left alone simply because we all have the right to
free speech....The challenges to political correctness tend to come from those who want to
be able to say anything without repercussions." (He did not have Khanh in mind.).
Skin Deep is a kid's cartoon, however, compared to Jane Elliott's Blue Eyed. Elliott
has been lionized by the American media, including Oprah Winfrey, and she is widely
employed by a growing number of universities. Disney plans to make a movie of her life.
Blue Eyed arose from Elliott's elementary school class in Riceville, Iowa, where,
starting in 1968, she inflicted upon her dyslexic students an experience in which they
were loathed or praised based upon their eye color. According to Elliott, she was
ostracized for this experiment, her own children were beaten and abused, and her parents
(who were racists, she informed a Dutch interviewer) were driven into isolation,
bankruptcy, and despair because they had raised "a nigger lover" (one of her
favorite terms).
In her modest explanation, once news of her exercise with the children made it onto
national television, the people of Riceville feared that blacks across America would
assume that everyone there was like Elliott and would move to their town. To punish her
for that, they stopped buying from her father. Elliott also revealed to her Dutch
interviewer that she abandoned teaching school in 1984 to devote herself full time to
diversity education, for which she receives $6,000 per day from "companies and
governmental institutions.".
In Blue Eyed, masochistic adults accept Elliott's two-and-a-half-hour exercise in
sadism (reduced to 90 minutes of film), designed to make white people understand what it
is to be "a person of color" in America. To achieve this, she divides her group
into stupid, lazy, shiftless, incompetent, and psychologically brutalized "blue
eyes," on the one hand, and clever and empowered "brown eyes," on the
other. Some of the sadism is central to the "game," but much is gratuitous, and
it continues after the exercise has ended.
Elliott is unbearably tendentious and ignorant. To teach what an IQ test truly is, she
gives the brown eyes half of the answers to an impossible test before the blue eyes enter
the room, explaining that, for people of color, the IQ exam is "a test about which
you know absolutely nothing." IQ tests only measure "white culture." They
are a means of "reinforcing our position of power," and "we do this all the
time in public, private, and parochial schools," using "culturally biased tests,
textbooks, and pictures on the wall...for white people." (Fortunately for Elliott, it
appears there were no Asian-Americans or psychometricians in her group.).
Elliott often describes the 1990s as if they were the 1920s; indeed, in her view,
nothing has changed in America since the collapse of Reconstruction. Every day in the
United States, she explains, white power keeps black males in their place by calling them
"boy" (two syllables, hissed), "and we do it to accomplished black males
over 70, and we get away with it." We tell blacks to assimilate, which means merely
to "act white," but when they try that, we put them in their place and change
the rules. For example (this in 1995), whites now are building up Colin Powell, but as
soon as they build "this boy" up, they will kick him down. For Elliott, the
Powell boom was a conscious conspiracy to humiliate and disorient blacks.
She teaches her "blueys" with relish that protest accomplishes nothing,
because if blacks protest, "we kill them." It is not smart to speak up or act
clever, which is why blacks appear passive and stupid. The lesson: "You have no
power, absolutely no power. ...Quit trying." Blacks might try to "win" on
the inside, but it is almost impossible to validate oneself when white society puts you
down "all day, every day.".
Even if a "bluey" understands the implications of the workshop, or even if a
white woman understands male prejudice, it bears no real relationship to the daily
suffering of every black: "You do not live in the same country as that black woman.
You live in the USA, but you do not live in the same country as she does." Blacks
such as Shelby Steele (singled out by name), who speak of transcending race, delude
themselves, because one might transcend one's skin color but never society's behavior:
"All you can do is sit there and take it." People call the exercise cruel,
Elliott explains, but "I'm only doing this for one day to little white children.
Society does this to children of color every day." She stands over briefly assertive
"blueys" and humiliates them, explaining that if this makes you sick to your
stomach for a few hours, now you understand why blacks die younger.
In short, this is America, and there truly is no hope. Nothing ever changes. No one can
succeed by effort. Culture, society, and politics all are static. "White
privilege" controls all agencies of power, influence, and image, and uses all the
means that arise from these to render "people of color" psychologically
impotent, confused, passive, and helpless. So either vent your hatred or assume your
guilt.
There is no redemption except guilt, but there is a political moral. After
"teaching" a "bluey" to submit totally to her authority, she asks if
that was a good lesson. The workshop thinks it was. No, she says with venom, submission to
tyranny is a terrible lesson, but "what I just did to him today Newt Gingrich is
doing to you every day...and you are submitting to that, submitting to oppression.".
The facilitators' guide and publicity for Blue Eyed states things honestly: Elliott
"does not intellectualize highly emotionally charged or challenging topics...she uses
participants' own emotions to make them feel discomfort, guilt, shame, embarrassment, and
humiliation." Facilitators are urged to use the raw emotions of Blue Eyed (blueys do
cry a lot) to tap the reactions of the viewers. They should not expect black participants
to "bleed on the floor for whites," but they should get whites to
"stretch" and "take risks." The facilitators should be prepared for
very strong and painful emotions and memories from the participants. The ultimate goal of
the film: "It is not enough for white people to stop abusing people of color. All
U.S. people need a personal vision for ending racism and other oppressive ideologies
within themselves.".
Elliott does mean everyone. In 1996, she told her audience at Kansas State University
that all whites are racists, whatever they believe about themselves: "If you want to
see another racist, turn to the person on your right. Now look at the person on your
left." She also believes that blacks were in America 600 years before whites. She
told the students at Kansas State that if they were angry at her, they should write
letters, but that they must do so without paper, alphabet, or numbers, all of which were
invented by people of color. Whites, in Elliott's view, did have a certain creativity.
Betraying a breathtaking ignorance of world history, she told the Australian Internet
magazine Webfronds in 1998 that "white people invented racism." Other than that,
however, whites were quite parasitic.
"You're all sitting here writing in a language English that white people didn't
come up with," she told the magazine. "You're all sitting here writing on paper
that white people didn't invent. Most of you are wearing clothes made out of cloth that
white people didn't come up with. We stole those ideas from other people. If you're a
Christian, you're believing in a philosophy that came to us from people of color.".
Jane Elliott has lived through revolutionary cultural changes without taking note of
any. She teaches only helplessness and despair to blacks and only blood-guilt and
self-contempt to whites. She addresses no issue with intellectual seriousness or purpose.
She also is the reigning star in thought reform these days. On May 7, 1999, CBS News ran a
feature on her that declared: "For over 30 years, Jane Elliott has waged a one-woman
campaign against racism in America." CBS might want to rethink the notion of
"racism.".
Even traditionalist campuses now permit the ideologues in their offices of student life
to pursue individuals into the last inner refuge of free men and women and to turn
students over to trainers who want them to change "within themselves." This is a
return of in loco parentis, with a power unimagined in prior ages by the poor souls who
only tried to keep men and women from sleeping with each other overnight. It is the
university standing not simply in the place of parents but in the place of private
conscience, identity, and belief.
From the evidence, most students tune it out, just as most students at most times
generally have tuned out abuses of power and diminutions of liberty. One should not take
heart from that. Where students react, it is generally with an anger that, ironically and
sadly, exacerbates the balkanization of our universities. The more social work we bring to
our colleges and universities, the more segregated they become, and in the classifieds of
The Chronicle of Higher Education during the last few years, colleges and universities by
the hundreds have advertised for individuals to oversee "diversity education,"
"diversity training," and "sensitivity training.".
Orwell may have been profoundly wrong about the totalitarian effects of high
technology, but he understood full well how the authoritarians of this century had moved
from the desire for outer control to the desire for inner control. He understood that the
new age sought to overcome what, in Julia's terms, was the ultimate source of freedom for
human beings: "They can't get inside you." Our colleges and universities hire
trainers to "get inside" American students.
Thought reform is making its way inexorably to an office near you. If we let it occur
at our universities and accept it passively in our own domains, then a people who defeated
totalitarians abroad will surrender their dignity, privacy, and conscience to the
totalitarians within.
Alan Charles Kors (akors@sas.upenn.edu) is a professor of history at the University of
Pennsylvania, co-author of The Shadow University: The Betrayal of Liberty on America's
Campuses (Harper-Collins), and president of FIRE, the Foundation for Individual
Rights in Education (www.thefire.org). He is indebted to Thor Halvorssen, executive
director of FIRE, for the materials and interviews from the Nebraska conference.