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God's Politics

On Racism

by Brian McLaren 05-29-2009

Many in the Republican Party and some noteworthy Christian leaders have come together to call Judge Sotomayor a racist. This rhetoric compounds with other recent statements — support for torture, opposition to hate speech legislation (note: not opposition to hate speech, but to legislation restricting hate speech), ongoing denial of environmental crisis and climate change, and so on.

As Dave Kinnaman and Gabe Lyons made clear in their important book UnChristian, this kind of talk — and the viewpoints and theology from which it springs — have created an extremely negative stereotype of the Christian faith over recent decades, especially among young people, who are leaving the church in record numbers. You would think this information would have gotten out to many of these religious leaders — and that, if for no other reason than not wanting to drive the young away from their religious communities, they would at least be more careful and sensitive. But no, they are continuing on the same course … adding more fuel to the stereotypical fire that Christians are judgmental, insensitive, reactive, more ideological than theological, and so on.

Yes, their rhetoric (which you can read about and find links to here) reflects badly on these Christians themselves. But sadly, it also reflects badly on the rest of us Christians and on the Christian faith in general. If the rest of us are silent, and unless more of us speak up to distinguish our position from theirs, nobody can blame others for assuming our silence means tacit agreement.

That’s one reason why I continue to be outspoken about these matters. I take no pleasure in criticizing anyone, including my fellow Christians. But I must simply say that these voices don’t speak for me, nor do they speak for thousands of people I meet in my travels. Their words and attitudes grieve me, and I would be ashamed of myself if I did not speak up and publicly and respectfully differ. I hope others will do the same.

Regarding the outrage expressed by white Christian leaders and politicians about Judge Sotomayor, and their allegations that she is a racist … I decided to read the speech from which the supposedly offensive lines were taken. Since I have had spokespeople like these take my words out of context, I suspected they may have done the same to the judge. You can read the whole speech here (I recommend it strongly), but here are three key paragraphs:

Whether born from experience or inherent physiological or cultural differences, a possibility I abhor less or discount less than my colleague Judge Cedarbaum, our gender and national origins may and will make a difference in our judging. Justice O’Connor has often been cited as saying that a wise old man and wise old woman will reach the same conclusion in deciding cases. I am not so sure Justice O’Connor is the author of that line since Professor Resnik attributes that line to Supreme Court Justice Coyle. I am also not so sure that I agree with the statement. First, as Professor Martha Minnow has noted, there can never be a universal definition of wise. Second, I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn’t lived that life.

Let us not forget that wise men like Oliver Wendell Holmes and Justice Cardozo voted on cases which upheld both sex and race discrimination in our society. Until 1972, no Supreme Court case ever upheld the claim of a woman in a gender discrimination case. I, like Professor Carter, believe that we should not be so myopic as to believe that others of different experiences or backgrounds are incapable of understanding the values and needs of people from a different group. Many are so capable. As Judge Cedarbaum pointed out to me, nine white men on the Supreme Court in the past have done so on many occasions and on many issues including Brown.

However, to understand takes time and effort, something that not all people are willing to give. For others, their experiences limit their ability to understand the experiences of others. Others simply do not care. Hence, one must accept the proposition that a difference there will be by the presence of women and people of color on the bench. Personal experiences affect the facts that judges choose to see. My hope is that I will take the good from my experiences and extrapolate them further into areas with which I am unfamiliar. I simply do not know exactly what that difference will be in my judging. But I accept there will be some based on my gender and my Latina heritage.

By wrenching one sentence out of context (the last sentence of the first quoted paragraph), these spokespeople are making it sound like the judge believes white males always make inferior decisions. (Conservative blogger Rod Dreher drew this conclusion based on that one sentence, but changed his opinion when he read the whole speech. His retraction is a great example of the kind of character and wisdom people wish they could see more of in public discourse.)

But it’s clear, after reading her speech in its entirety, that her critics are distorting her meaning — whether through ignorance, carelessness, or maliciousness, I can’t say. She’s suggesting that a court of nine white males alone, regardless of their education and training, nevertheless lack the experience of seeing life from the perspective of a non-male or non-white. If those white males don’t (as she says later) “take the time and effort” to “understand the experiences of others,” or if they “simply do not care,” or if they fail to “extrapolate” from their experience to experiences with which they are unfamiliar, their decisions will carry the limited bias of their white male background. In that way, those decisions will be less wise.

In other words, she’s saying that a monochrome and mono-gender group brings its own experiences, unconscious biases, and limitations to the table, and without alternative perspectives (each of which has its own biases and experiences), its homogeneity is inferior to the greater wisdom that arises from diversity. The outraged response of many white male Christian and political leaders to her statement seems to demonstrate her very point.

My fellow white people, and white males especially, would do well to do some research about white privilege. If you want to start with a strongly-worded, “gloves-off” blog post from a non-white non-male, written during the election season last year, this is a good place to begin. If the blog post makes you angry, may I suggest you re-read these words from Judge Sotomayor:

However, to understand takes time and effort, something that not all people are willing to give. For others, their experiences limit their ability to understand the experiences of others. Others simply do not care.

Brian McLarenBrian McLaren (brianmclaren.net) is a speaker and author who is always behind in answering emails. His next book (March 2010) will be called “A New Kind of Christianity: Ten Questions That are Transforming the Faith.”  He is also the author of Everything Must Change and Finding Our Way Again.

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  • scat
    Those who's assumed superiority is being threatened will turn themselves and logic inside-out to find a way to pin the "racist" label on a progressive or moderate while ignoring the blatant and unapologetic racist and sexist remarks by their own spokesmen. It just demonstrates desperation as they cling to the sinking ship of bigotry. Let's hope that most people see through this nonsensical rhetoric.
    Not only is the right trying to paint Judge Sotomayor as a racist, they are calling her "dangerous" because she has the quality of empathy. Empathy now is a vice rather than a virtue. Save us all from those scary empathizers! They seem to think that empathy invades the brain and soul making rational judgment impossible. I guess that explains a lot about the right-wing ideology. No empathy allowed there.
  • mscynthia
    Exactly
    I knew it was all about fairness all along.

    If things were truly fair in this world we would appoint only women judges for the next 200 years.
    But I will compromise in the sense of cooperative and forgiving play and settle for half of the supreme court populated by women in the future.
    The way things should have been all along.
  • Eric77
    Your concept of fairness when it comes to the Supreme Court is flawed. The court system is not a representative body. It's not inherently unfair that the highest court doesn't "look like America". Fairness is about treating people who come before the court equally; it can be accomplished by nine white guys, nine black women, nine Indian Americans or nine space aliens.
  • 1Grace
    Fairness is about treating people who come before the court equally;

    I think the problem with the empathy tag that has followed her is that their is concern for rulings based on social justice and trying to make things even by looking at the whole picture from a certain perspective . I think that is the issue to most us here anyway . The example of Dred Scott is a decision I bring up because to us is pathetic . But according to law and Constitutional Law it was correct . The Civil War and Constitutional Amendments changed Constitutional law .
    Our Constitution was designed so we the people would handle changing such laws . And we have been drastically slow in many areas . Hence the tempatation to politicize Judges . Too bad .

    The lady is a American Success story in her personal life , she is a liberal replacing a liberal . Republicans must have nothing better to do these days , but I can think of trillions of things they should be paying attention to .
  • JaneinWNY
    1Grace:
    "she is a liberal replacing a liberal ."

    I am not so sure that this is true. As a "raving liberal" (my description of myself on Facebook), to me she seems quite conservative. I haven't done a huge amount of research, but it seems to me that her decisions come down squarely on the side of the status quo and the law as it is stated. I think she also served in corporate law., It seems to me that she can't be put in either a liberal or conservative box. I don't think we can label her.

    Jane
  • LisaLove
    Are we talking about "fairness" or are we talking about "treating people..equally" MsCynthia's concept is at least a mathematically acceptable definition of fairness. Your concept is more flawed because it assumes that human beings do not bring their own personal experience into their treatment of others. There are some forms of unfairness that are subtle or social norms. If the entire body of the court, whether it is nine white guys, nine black women, or nine American Indians lacks the perspective necessary to recognize an unfairness then they can not protect against it because they can not see it.
  • jeffp
    Newt Ginggrinch is the first to make the point. The MSM cherry picks an important part of his argument which is "If a white male said the same thing would it be considered racist?" The answer is obviously yes. He would be forced to withdraw his name and be forever labeled a racist. I think this should not be used against Sotomayor but against the professional race baiters.

    It is unfair no matter what side uses the argument. This is something McClaren misses.
  • Sorry, but that's not really true because it misses the context -- which is that 1) American authority exists mostly in a white, male-dominated culture; and, as a result 2) it's "understood." No one, for example, calls the rantings of, say, Rush Limbaugh "white male anger" because it's understood as such (in fact, if you called it such he might brand you a racist).

    In the movie "Cry Freedom," the black activist said to the "liberal" white newspaper editor who had accused him of racism, "We know how you live -- we cook your food, clean your rubbish. How would you like to see how we live -- the 90 percent of your countrymen who have to get off your white streets at 6 o'clock at night?" Well, he did and subsequently found out just how ignorant he was.

    Oh, and as for "professional race-baiters," Rush also fits into that category -- as does much of the conservative wing of the Republican Party. They're the only reason Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton can stay in business.
  • jeffp
    I think you missed the point of my post for the purpose of springing into one of your rants. The point is the MSM and McClaren purposely take Gingrich's comments out of context for their own purpose of slander.

    My point is it is unfair to search for some quote and then smear that person. What was the context? Did they misspeak? Were they having a bad day? What else have they said and done? In other words put the quote in context with their life. The right and left both do it all the time. As Christians we should rise above this no matter what are politics are. McClaren is so interested in tearing others down that he misses this.

    BTW, I like the choice of Sotomayor. It could have been much worse. Obama chose the best Hispanic woman available. Liberals should be the ones complaining. Look at her record, she looks better then GHW Bush's picks.
  • The point is the MSM and McClaren purposely take Gingrich's comments out of context for their own purpose of slander.

    As someone in the MSM, I dispute that. Gingrich has said a lot of controversial things but to my knowledge never accused the press of misquoting him -- which leads me to believe that he means what he says and says what he means. That's why, despite having little real constituency, he's still considered a leader in the conservative movement.
  • jeffp
    This is one of those cases where he is purposely quoted only in part. Your reply doesn't deal with my point, does that mean you are agreeing with me?

    Here is what all the libs are missing, we don't mind the Sotomayor pick. This is all a smoke screen. If the progressive activist groups look closer at her and have the guts to speak up (this includes SOJO) they will not like what they see. She is not going to be a consistent progressive vote. This is one case of identification politics that will work against the Dems.
  • This is one of those cases where he is purposely quoted only in part. Your reply doesn't deal with my point, does that mean you are agreeing with me?

    Hardly. As I said, Gingrich pretty much means what he says, which is why he's still considered viable in the conservative movement.

    Here is what all the libs are missing, we don't mind the Sotomayor pick. This is all a smoke screen. If the progressive activist groups look closer at her and have the guts to speak up (this includes SOJO) they will not like what they see. She is not going to be a consistent progressive vote. This is one case of identification politics that will work against the Dems.

    To believe that you would have to subscribe to a false premise -- that "liberals" are simply mirror images of the conservatives and act and react in identical ways. In fact they aren't, because liberals will accept incremental change and compromise and have never been "all-or-nothing," which makes them easier to split -- and also add to their numbers. ("True" liberals considered Bill Clinton, to give one example, a total sellout and leading Democrats deeply resented him but still supported him overwhelmingly considering the alternatives. Today he's somewhat popular even among some conservatives.)
  • squeaky
    Waitaminute...are you saying that Limbaugh's and etcs' comments are all a Right Wing ploy to whip the Left Wing into such a frenzy of Sotomayor defense that the Left fails to look closely at whether or not she is Liberal enough and winds up confirming a candidate the Right actually like?
  • jeffp
    I wouldn't say the Right likes her. But she is not a disaster for us. There are two strategic ways of approaching this; 1. Use this as a wedge to divide Obama's base of loony lefts from the more centrists left. or 2. Take the pick as a gift knowing this judge will lean more towards pro-business and pro-life then other picks.

    If there is silence from the left the question will be, Were they duped by the Right or were they intimidated into silence by Obama.
  • jkc1945
    My problem with "reaching better decisions" because of a person's upbringing essentially negates the requirement, supported by the oath of office that a Justice of the Supreme\ Court takes, to extend the same judgment to rich and poor alike, as well as the requirement to make one's judgments based on the Constitution of the United States, which is the limiting document for the Supreme Court justices. One is not called to the Supreme Court to find ways to 'empathize' or 'synmpathize' with any individual or group. To the extent any justice does that, they violate their oath, it seems to me, since the Constitution is likely temporarily set aside to allow for the empathy. Supreme Court justices, indeed, all judges, are bound by the letter of the law, and / or Constitution, in the case of Federal judges. No other criteria for judgment are called for, or allowed, else the oath of office is essentially violated.

    Additionally, it is an interesting fact of human perception that Mr. McLaren reads the speech that he posts, and finds it apparently entirely acceptable in its revelation of Ms. Sotermayor's perception of the role of federal judge. I read that same speech, however, and with respect to Mr. McLaren, it supports my hearing of Ms. Sotermayor's words as - - reverse racism. I continue to believe that Ms. Sotermayor must retract her words in this regard, or else she must not be affirmed by the Senate, to the court.
  • squeaky
    The argument of whether or not a Supreme Court Justice should have empathy is a far more relevant argument than whether or not her comments were racist. McLaren, however, was not addressing that. He was addressing the question of whether or not those comments are racist, and whether or not they were taken out of context.

    Sotermayor's comments were not racist. It's a simple fact that someone who lived as a Latina woman will be far more qualified to make wise decisions pertaining to women or Latinos than a white male would. It is a fact that as a white woman, I am far more qualified to make decisions pertaining to white women than a black male would be. And to use perhaps a less political analogy, as a percussionist, I am far more qualified to make decisions about percussion than a trumpet player would be.

    As she said, it isn't impossible to make such decisions without the matching experiences, however. She went on to say it requires far more thought and consideration. A trumpet player would need to learn and understand what it means to be a percussionist before making valid decisions about percussion. That is called making an informed decision, and it can also be called empathy.

    What is so inflammatory about such statements? Nothing. Such statements are nothing more than common sense that each one of us understands from our own experience.

    McLaren's point is valid--the only reason her statements are seen as inflammatory is they were taken out of context and spun that way.
  • WaveTossed
    Actually, I heard some comments by Samuel Alito when he was discussing his experiences of discrimination as an Italian-American during his confirmation heartings. And yet there was not a peep from Limbaugh or the other neo-con types about this.

    It's not Sotomayor and her discussions about experience that these "conservative" pundits are complaining about. It's the fact that she isn't a true-blue bona-fide "conservative" with views similar to their own.
  • A trumpet player would need to learn and understand what it means to be a percussionist before making valid decisions about percussion. That is called making an informed decision, and it can also be called empathy.

    This is why would-be music teachers are required to play several instruments -- to understand their capabilities and ranges. This is also why you have had whites masquerade as blacks to go down South and learn what it really was like to be black, especially in the 1950s.
  • squeaky
    Exactly.
  • mscynthia
    Privileged White Males have been judged by the spirit of the law for quite some time and it has benefited them quite abundantly.
    If they had been judged by the letter of the law all this time they would not be particularly happy about it.

    I advise you to continue to hope that you will be judged by the spirit of the law in the future.
    As being judged for our true crimes most of us need some wisdom and grace.
  • paradoxtor
    "Second, I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn’t lived that life."
    I agree with Sotomayer that our life experience and culture cannot help but affect our decisions. I also agree that it is important that we listen to others experiences. That said I have a serious problem with the statement above (even in context). One, is the phrase the "richness of her experiences". Why are the experiences of a Latina woman richer than those of a white male? Why do they make her decisions better than his? I believe that statement is inherently bigoted regardless of context. I have no doubts that if a white male had simply reversed the statement, the context would have been irrelevant and he would have been immediately disqualified. I do not think she says that white males always make inferior decisions. But she is saying that they are more likely to make inferior decisions. If I said that Latina women are more likely to make inferior decisions, I would be considered a racist.
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