Words That Replace Thought
By Thomas Sowell
If there is
ever a contest for words that substitute for thought, "diversity"
should be recognized as the undisputed world champion.
You don't need
a speck of evidence, or a single step of logic, when you rhapsodize about the
supposed benefits of diversity. The very idea of testing this wonderful,
magical word against something as ugly as reality seems almost sordid.
To ask whether
institutions that promote diversity 24/7 end up with better or worse relations
between the races than institutions that pay no attention to it is only to get
yourself regarded as a bad person. To cite hard evidence that places obsessed
with diversity have worse race relations is to risk getting yourself labeled an
incorrigible racist. Free thinking is not free.
The Supreme
Court of the United States has ruled that the government has a "compelling
interest" in promoting diversity -- apparently more compelling than the
14th Amendment's requirement of "equal protection" of the law for
everybody.
How does a
racially homogeneous country like Japan manage to have high quality education,
without the essential ingredient of diversity, for which there is supposedly a
"compelling" need?
Conversely, why
does India, one of the most diverse nations on Earth, have a record of
intergroup intolerance and lethal violence today that is worse than that in the
days of our Jim Crow South?
Even to ask
such questions is to provoke charges of unworthy tactics, and motives too low
to be dignified with an answer. Not that the true believers in diversity could
answer anyway.
Among the
candidates for runner-up to "diversity" as the top word for making
thought obsolete is "fair."
Apparently
everyone is entitled to a "fair share" of a society's prosperity,
whether they worked 16-hour days to help create that prosperity or did nothing
more than live off the taxpayers or depend on begging or crime to bring in a
few bucks.
Apparently we
owe them something just for gracing us with their presence, even if we feel
that we could do without them quite well.
At the other
end of the income scale, the rich are supposed to pay their "fair
share" of taxes. But at neither end of the income scale is a "fair
share" defined as a particular number or proportion, or in any other concrete
way. It is just a political synonym for "more," dressed up in
moralistic-sounding rhetoric. What "fair" really means is more
arbitrary power for government.
Another word
that shuts down thought is "access." People who fail to meet the
standards for anything from college admission to a mortgage loan are often said
to have been denied "access" or opportunity.
But equal
access or equal opportunity is not the same as equal probability of success.
Republicans are not denied an equal opportunity to vote in California, even
though the chances of a Republican candidate actually getting elected in
California are far less than the chances of a Democrat getting elected.
By the same
token, if everyone is allowed to apply for college admission, or for a mortgage
loan, and their applications are all judged by the same standards, then they
have equal opportunity, even if the village idiot has a lower probability of
getting into the Ivy League, and someone with a bad credit history is less
likely to be lent money.
"Affordable"
is another popular word that serves as a substitute for thought. To say that
everyone is entitled to "affordable housing" is very different from
saying that everyone should decide what kind of housing he or she can afford.
Government
programs to promote "affordable housing" are programs to allow some
people to decide what housing they want and force other people -- taxpayers,
landlords or whatever -- to absorb a share of the cost of a decision that they
had no voice in making.
More generally,
making various things "affordable" in no way increases the amount of
wealth in a society above what it would be when prices are "prohibitively
expensive." On the contrary, price controls reduce incentives to produce.
None of this is
rocket science. But if you don't stop and think, it doesn't matter whether you
are a genius or a moron. Words that stop people from thinking reduce even smart
people to the same level as morons.
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