March 06, 2003
Privilege Before the Law
[Originally published in
The American Conservative
2-24-03]
By Paul Craig Roberts
Equality before the law is an
achievement of a thousand-year struggle, but Americans
have carelessly thrown it away. We have spent the past
37 years resurrecting feudalism, a system of
differential legal rights based on status. The new legal
aristocrats are “preferred minorities”—an official
designation—whether they are native-born descendants of
slaves or walked across our border today.
In the
University of Michigan racial quota case before the
Supreme Court, we have an opportunity to drive a stake
through the heart of the new feudalism before it is too
late and to reaffirm equality before the law. But if the
Bush administration’s legal brief against the University
of Michigan’s quota scheme and the Supreme Court’s
Bakke ruling a quarter century ago are guides to the
outcome, our future lies with feudalism.
The Bush administration’s brief
against Michigan’s racial quotas is a political one. It
is against racial quotas but for diversity. This was the
Bakke (1978)
decision, one that the brief urges the Supreme Court
to follow: quotas are unconstitutional, but for
preferred minorities race can be a factor in granting
admission to university or medical and law schools. To
help prepare the ground, the Bush administration’s two
high-profile blacks, Secretary of State Colin Powell and
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, have made
the rounds of the TV talk shows expressing their support
for the view that “race should be a factor.”
When we say that race should be a
factor, we mean that skin color is a factor that
mitigates or trumps the requirements for admission in
order to make certain that some percentage of those with
privileged pigmentation are admitted on terms not open
to white applicants. Regardless of how we disguise
quotas with euphemisms or elaborate admission schemes,
we are speaking of racial privilege.
Privilege has a way of not going
away. Indeed, the Supreme Court has precedent for ruling
that preferred minorities have squatters’ rights in
racial quotas. When the controversial Roe v. Wade
abortion ruling came back before the Court in 1992, a
plurality
ruled that despite the absence of a legal or
constitutional basis for the pro-abortion Roe v. Wade
ruling, the passage of time had given women
squatters’ rights to abortions: “An entire
generation has come of age free to assume Roe’s
concept of liberty in defining the capacity of women to
act in society and to make reproductive decisions.”
Five years previously in 1987
Justice John Paul Stevens voted to extend quotas in the
Johnson case even though he acknowledged that
Congress forbade quotas in the
1964 Civil Rights Act. Justice Stevens said that the
“petitioner would unquestionably prevail” if
Congress’ original “’color-blind’ rhetoric” controlled
the Court’s decision, but that the intent of statutory
law was no longer controlling, because “Bakke
and Weber have been decided and are now an
important part of the fabric of our law.”
How did we
end up with racial quotas when the 1964 Civil Rights
Act expressly forbids them? It was primarily the work of
one man, an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
bureaucrat named Alfred Blumrosen, now a Rutgers
University law professor. Blumrosen’s thoroughgoing and
illegal rewrite of the Civil Rights Act was accepted by
the Supreme Court in Griggs v. Duke Power (1971).
A brief history of the Civil Rights Act’s
transmogrification will help the reader understand the
impotence of statutory law and the Constitution when
assaulted by
unaccountable federal bureaucrats and crusading
justices.
Although Republicans received
little credit for the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights
Act, it passed because of the support of Senate Minority
Leader
Everett Dirksen (R-Ill). Hubert Humphrey and the
bill’s sponsors were
insistent that racial quotas were absolutely
forbidden by the act. Nevertheless, passage of the bill
required amendments.
Dirksen tightly bottled up quotas
with statutory language and added an amendment that
defined discrimination as an intentional act that could
not be inferred from statistical disparities. Senator
John Tower (R-Tx) added an amendment that protected
employment tests from Title VII of the bill. House
Judiciary Committee Chairman Emanuel Celler (D-NY)
amended the bill to prevent the EEOC from making any
substantive regulatory interpretations of the act.
Neither the clear statutory language of the act and the
amendments nor the act’s unambiguous legislative history
could prevent Blumrosen and the Burger Court from
standing the Civil Rights Act on its head.
Blumrosen ignored the act and its
statutory prohibition against regulatory interpretation.
He bet that he could get away with rewriting the act
because of the courts’ deference to the regulatory
agency. Blumrosen redefined discrimination to be
statistical disparity or under-utilization of blacks. If
an employer’s work force contained a smaller percentage
of blacks than blacks comprised of the local population,
the company was discriminating. Anything that had
disparate impact, such as employment tests, Blumrosen
declared to be discriminatory. Having eliminated intent,
he was able to shift the act’s focus from specific
discrimination against individuals and initiate agency
proceedings against employers even in the absence of
complaints of discrimination.
Griggs (1971)
was the first test of the
Blumrosen Civil Rights Act. Chief Justice Warren
Burger declared that the illegal “administrative
interpretation of the act by the enforcing agency is
entitled to great deference.” The Court ruled that Duke
Power was discriminating against blacks, because the
company’s requirements for promotion—either a high
school diploma or a passing grade on Wonderlic and
Bennett intelligence and mechanical comprehension
tests—were “built-in headwinds for minority groups.”
The Court ruled with Blumrosen that discrimination did
not require intent, only consequence.
Blumrosen’s rewrite of the Civil
Rights Act required employers to adopt racial quotas in
order to avoid federal lawsuits. Private employment and
promotion quotas are held to be legal because of the
fiction that they are “voluntarily adopted” and not
required by federal statute. They are required, of
course, to avoid federal lawsuits.
Blumrosen’s redefinition of
discrimination created “reverse discrimination.”
Whites lose opportunities for racial reasons alone. When
Brian Weber’s reverse discrimination case came before
the Supreme Court in 1979, the Court
ruled that Kaiser Aluminum’s discrimination against
whites in the company’s training program was “benign
discrimination” consistent with the “spirit” of the
Civil Rights Act.
Public universities, being public,
are restricted by the Constitution’s equal protection
clause from voluntarily adopting racial quotas like
private companies. Other rationales have had to be
created, such as “a compelling government interest,”
“remedying past discrimination,” and “diversity.”
No court has yet explained the power granted these
concepts to trump the Constitution. But a number of
judges, justices, and law professors have assumed that
these exemptions to the Constitution’s equal protection
clause exist.
The Bush administration’s complaint
against the University of Michigan’s racial quotas is
artificial. Michigan has been evading merit based
admission by granting preferred minorities 20 points for
skin color, whereas a perfect SAT score only receives 12
points. The Bush administration will be happy if
Michigan adopts the Texas or Florida stratagem of
guaranteed admission to
some top percentage of high school graduating
classes. This quota system favors blacks in segregated
schools over those in integrated schools. But it still
trumps a competitive merit system with guaranteed
admission on the basis of race.
The question that has not been
answered these 37 years is: why are political, legal,
and academic elites determined to replace equality
before the law with racial privilege? One possible
answer is that elites are too caught up in “the
righteous cause of the Negro” to comprehend that they
are destroying the legal foundation of modernity and
re-creating a feudal legal order. Another explanation is
that elites believe blacks cannot compete with whites on
equal terms and can only be rescued by privilege from
being a permanent underclass. A third explanation is
that elites accept Gunnar Myrdal’s view that all whites
are “aversive racists;” therefore, democracy cannot
deliver justice to blacks and must be supplemented or
superseded with legal coercion.
The common denominator of these
answers is that justice for blacks requires whites to
become second class citizens in law. Second class
citizenship for whites is a definite result of
Blumrosen’s rewrite of the Civil Rights Act. Every
administration since Nixon’s and every Supreme Court
since the Burger Court has diminished the rights of
white people. The resurrection of a feudal legal system
is occurring without debate. Moreover, it is white
elites who are destroying the rights of white people.
The vast majority of whites either accept the diminution
of their rights or they are unaware of it.
The famed jurist Benjamin Cardozo
said that in law there is a tendency for a principle to
unfold to the limits of its logic. We have watched the
principle of special rights for preferred minorities
unfold in the myriad ways racial quotas have been
institutionalized in public and private life. We are now
observing this principle unfold in the creation of
crimes that can only be committed by whites against
preferred minorities. Whites have been indicted and
jailed for “hate crimes” when they are overheard using
racial epithets in private conversation with family
members (Janice
Barton case in Michigan) and for using “racist
language” when they come to the defense of wives and
family members who are physically assaulted by preferred
minorities (Lonny
Rae case in Idaho). The recent demise of Senate
Majority Leader
Trent Lott (R-Miss) confirms the power of preferred
minorities to censure the speech of white persons. Even
ancient words such as
“niggardly” can no longer be used due to the
misinterpretation of the word by uneducated preferred
minorities.
Such speech control is very much a
one-way street; the explicit demonization of whites is
growing more commonplace. Vanderbilt University
mathematics professor
Jonathan Farley recently
wrote that “the race problems that wrack America
to this day are due largely to the fact that the
Confederacy was not thoroughly destroyed, its leaders
and soldiers executed, and their lands given to the
landless freed slaves.”
Noel Ignatiev, an academic associated with Harvard
University’s Institute for African-American Research,
thinks that
all whites, not only southern ones, are the problem.
He
says that “the key to solving the social problems
of our age is to abolish the white race.” Ignatiev
edits a journal,
Race Traitor, which has as its motto: “treason to
whiteness is loyalty to humanity.”
White professors, no matter how
distinguished, who spoke similarly about preferred
minorities would be instantly sacked and most likely
arrested for committing hate crimes. However, neither
Ignatiev nor Farley even had to issue an apology. What
does this say about the position of whites in their
society?
The only possible way diverse races
can live peacefully together is in equality before the
law. If the Supreme Court wimps out like the Bush
administration and cannot marshall the courage and
wisdom to strike down racial criteria, period, the
Blumrosen Civil Rights Act and continued
massive immigration from the Third World could mean
the collapse of a peaceful social order.
Paul Craig Roberts is coauthor
with Lawrence Stratton of
The New Color Line, a history of U.S. racial quotas,
their origin and consequences.