Fish, Stanley. Reverse Racism:
Or How the Pot Got to Call
the Kettle Black." Atlantic Monthly November 1993
WHAT I want to say, following Bush's reasoning, is that a similar forgetting
of history has in recent years allowed some people to argue, and argue persuasively,
that affirmative action is reverse racism. The very phrase "reverse
racism" contains the argument in exactly the form to which Bush objected:
In this country whites once set themselves apart from blacks and claimed
privileges for themselves while denying them to others. Now, on the basis
of race, blacks are claiming special status and reserving for themselves
privileges they deny to others. Isn't one as bad as the other? The answer
is no. One can see why by imagining that it is not 1993 but 1955, and that
we are in a town in the South with two more or less distinct communities,
one white and one black. No doubt each community would have a ready store
of dismissive epithets, ridiculing stories, self serving folk myths, and
expressions of plain hatred, all directed at the other community, and all
based in racial hostility. Yet to regard their respective racisms-if that
is the word-as equivalent would be bizarre, for the hostility of one group
stems not from any wrong done to it but from its wish to protect its ability
to deprive citizens of their voting rights, to limit access to educational
institutions, to prevent entry into the economy except at the lowest and
most menial levels, and to force members of the stigmatized group to ride
in the back of the bus. The hostility of the other group is the result of
these actions, and whereas hostility and racial anger are unhappy facts
wherever they are found, a distinction must surely be made between the ideological
hostility of the oppressors and the experience-based hostility of those
who have been oppressed. Not to make that distinction is, adapting George
Bush's words, to twist history and forget the terrible plight of African-Americans
in the more than 200 years of this country's existence. Moreover, to equate
the efforts to remedy that plight with the actions that produced it is to
twist history even further. Those efforts, designed to redress the imbalances
caused by long-standing discrimination, are called affirmative action; to
argue that affirmative action, which gives preferential treatment to disadvantaged
minorities as part of a plan to achieve social equality, is no different
from the policies that created the disadvantages in the first place is a
travesty of reasoning. "Reverse racism" is a cogent description
of affirmative action only if one considers the cancer of racism to be morally
and medically indistinguishable from the therapy we apply to it. A cancer
is an invasion of the body's equilibrium, and so is chemotherapy; but we
do not decline to fight the disease because the medicine we em ploy is also
disruptive of normal functioning. Strong illness, strong remedy: the formula
is as appropriate to the health of the body politic as it is to that of
the body proper.
At this point someone will always say, "But two wrongs don't make a
right; if it was wrong to treat blacks unfairly, it is wrong to give blacks
preference and thereby treat whites unfairly." This objection is just
another version of the forgetting and rewriting of history. The work is
done by the adverb "unfairly," which suggests two more or less
equal parties, one of whom has been unjustly penalized by an incompetent
umpire. But blacks have not simply been treated unfairly; they have been
subjected first to decades of slavery, and then to decades of second-class
citizenship, wide spread legalized discrimination, economic persecution,
educational deprivation, and cultural stigmatization. They have been bought,
sold, killed, beaten, raped, excluded, exploited. shamed, and scorned for
a very long time. The word "unfair" is hardly an adequate description
of their experience, and the belated gift of "fairness" in the
form of a resolution no longer to discriminate against them legally is hardly
an adequate remedy for the deep disadvantages that the prior discrimination
has produced. When the deck is stacked against you in more ways than you
can even count, it is small consolation to hear that you are now free to
enter the game and take your chances.
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- Carl Gutierrez-Jones,
- Department of English
- University of California
- Santa Barbara, CA 93106
- E-mail: carlgj@humanitas.ucsb.edu