Curmie makes no promises, but it may be that he’ll be
returning to writing more blog pieces in the future. He’s teaching a single course this summer,
and it not only has no meetings on Fridays, but it ends in late June. He’s officially retiring effective August 31,
although he’ll be teaching a couple of courses as an “adjunct” in the fall,
will keep the small cadre of advisees he now has (but add no more), and will
supervise a student production of a play he acted in several years before the
student director in question was born.
<Sigh.> I hope to maintain
at least my current level of scholarly activity—there’s a book chapter awaiting
my revision, two conference presentations for later this summer, and at least
two conference papers that I’d like to turn into articles. And I’ll continue my presidency of a national
honor society for another year or two, at least.
But it’s already clear that giving up the multitudinous service activities undertaken for the department, college, and university
will free up literally dozens of hours of time; taken in conjunction with the required
reduction in teaching load, I’ll definitely be able to devote myself to some
other things. A friend who retired from university teaching some years ago remains a more active scholar than I’ll
ever be; he describes his current life as “less of the same, and without the
boring bits.” I’m hoping for a similar
experience. One of the manifestations of
such an eventuality would be at least a weekly blog post. On y verra, as they say en France.
So, where to begin after such spotty blogging activity for several
years? There are a lot of potential
topics vying for attention right now, but what comes first to Curmie’s
mind is the anniversary earlier this week of the death of George Floyd. I approach this topic, curiously enough, in
the spirit of moderation.
Here, it might be valuable to tease out the differences in
meaning between two often conflated concepts: vagueness and ambiguity. The former suggests that there is no clearly
identifiable meaning; the latter implies that different, perhaps even opposed,
implications might exist simultaneously. The
George Floyd case is vague only in terms of details we don’t yet know and
probably never will. It is ambiguous or
even multivalent in virtually everything else.
Of course, it’s sometimes difficult to disentangle the strands. In Curmie’s world, a B student might have
gotten there with 3 B’s, or with 2 A’s and a D, etc. In the Floyd case, as with that hypothetical
B student, what is difficult to find is anything approaching a complete picture.
What we see in most of the “mainstream” press coverage of both the death of Mr. Floyd and its aftermath—the BLM protests, the trial, etc.—is a sort of gasping idolatry of a petty criminal, for that’s what Floyd was. (Curmie gets it: he wasn’t only that.) We barely hear about the medical examiner’s report that drug use and an underlying heart condition were contributing causes of Floyd’s death, albeit his ultimate conclusion was that the restraint by police, specifically by Derek Chauvin, was the primary cause. And the presumed racial motivation of Chauvin’s actions has been taken as given from the outset, without any evidence, let alone proof.
Nor is it possible to deny that some of the literally billions of dollars of damage from riots was caused by those who used BLM as a justification—or perhaps as a cover—for their actions. (Note: Curmie was seeing the catch-phrase “Black Lives Matter” long before the death of Mr. Floyd, but it didn’t achieve the spotlight until last year.)
So let’s get this straight.
Were Chauvin’s actions appropriate?
No. Criminal? Yes.
Murder 1? Doubtful at best. Felony murder or Murder 2? Maybe.
Manslaughter? In all likelihood. Was Chauvin a bad cop? Yes.
Should he have been removed from the police force long before this
incident? Apparently so. Was the system that kept Chauvin on the job
racist? Somewhere between “perhaps” and “probably.” Did Floyd’s race have anything to do with
Chauvin’s actions? Maybe, but there has
been literally no actual evidence adduced to support that
conclusion. Let me repeat that: none.
The fact that Chauvin is white and Floyd was black might, of course, be relevant, but it strikes me that this is ultimately a problem one encounters early in a course in formal logic: the fact that A implies B does not mean that B implies A. That is, all racists are inherently bad cops, but not all bad cops are racists. (Spare me the “all white people are racist” dogma. It gets us nowhere.) And, as Curmie noted in the aftermath, cops across the country, presumably aware of increased scrutiny, responded not by toning down the violence against black people, but evening the score by abusing a few white folks. The problem is bad cops, and a system that covers up for them; many, but nowhere near all, manifestations of these people’s unfitness involve racism.
So, were the protests legitimate? Yes, in the sense that the widely viewed
video seemed to tell us everything we needed to know (although it now appears
that perhaps it didn’t). Yes, in the
sense that racism certainly exists in this country and police forces are
particularly rife with it. Yes, in the
sense that protests are nearly always legitimate, using that term
to mean legally, morally, and ethically responsible. No, in the sense that this was not the event
that should be the watershed moment.
(Had it been the killing of Breonna Taylor or the death of Sandra Bland, Curmie would be more on
board.) No, in the sense that not all of
the protests were non-violent. Which
leads us to…
Was a good deal of the violence and property damage resulting
from protests that turned into riots perpetrated by BLM activists, or at least
by those claiming that affiliation with no denials by BLM leaders? Yes.
Was a good deal of that violence and property damage perpetrated by
white racists seeking to undermine the credibility of the BLM movement, or
simply by violence-prone assholes using BLM as an excuse? Yes.
Was a good deal of the violence in particular initiated by the toxic
masculinity, arrogance, and irresponsibility of police forces… and in at least
isolated cases, by federally-funded mercenaries? Yes.
So, is the introspection precipitated by the reaction to the
Chauvin/Floyd case a good thing? Yes, in
that honest self-evaluation is an inherent positive. Yes, to the extent that it brought about in
unprecedented ways an examination of the power structures in American society
and the extent to which that hegemony is exclusionary along racial lines. No, in that what started as a positive desire
to recognize and celebrate diversity has morphed into witch hunts, quotas, and frankly
Stalinistic thought control.
Lest you think Curmie is exaggerating the last point, allow me to direct your attention you to “socialist realism,” a policy which required Russian artists not merely to avoid saying or doing anything critical of the USSR or the Communist Party, but to actively advocate for those entities. How is that different from universities which now base hiring and promotion/tenure decisions to a large degree not on proven abilities as a teacher or researcher, but on demonstrated, active, commitment to the Great Gods Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. At the very least, faculty are expected to participate in “workshops” on these issues. Curmie has endured dozens of variations on this theme on many topics over the years. There are two constants: there is never any useful information, only opinion masquerading as fact; and Curmie always leaves far more angry than enlightened... and actively resistant to the propaganda he's just withstood. (Side note: many of the voluntary programs have, in fact, proved valuable. I did a weekend-long workshop in Rape Crisis Intervention 30-ish years ago, for example. I've only used it twice in the ensuing time... but I’ve used it twice in the ensuing time.)
Thirty years ago, Curmie got into trouble for saying that
whereas there is much to be gained by applying a feminist lens to texts, not
all feminist arguments are good arguments.
The cause du jour has changed, but the expectation of
ideological compliance has not. Alas.
Concentrating for a moment on the professional world Curmie inhabits: this enforced singularity of vision runs through
universities and professional organizations alike. Case in point: there’s an organization Curmie
has belonged to for decades. The
committee structure has always worked like this: committee chairs are elected
by the membership, subcommittee chairs are appointed by the chairs, and
committee members… wait for it… simply volunteer to serve; no one is turned
away. Anyone willing to work is given a
task. But it turns out that a couple of
committees have an “under-representation of people of color”… so white people,
some of whom have specific expertise, are now being denied access to those
committees on which POC folks have expressed no interest, and the organization
is denied access to their skills, in the name of “diversity.” We have to make those percentages work out, after all.
Of course, other power structures—state legislatures, boards
of trustees, and the like—are reacting in precisely the opposite way:
forbidding discussion of race-sensitive issues and attempting to enforce their
own monomaniacal vision, in which American exceptionalism is to be taken as a
given, but curricula must otherwise be “apolitical.” One group wants Critical Race Theory to be
mandatory; another wants it completely expunged. The idea that it might be available, possibly
required in certain specific disciplines in the sense of knowing its tenets,
but with no expectation of having to agree with its conclusions: this doesn’t
seem to be acceptable to the ideologues on either extreme… and it appears at first glance that
virtually everyone indeed positions themselves at those opposing poles. Curmie doubts this is actually true, but those positioned at both extremes demand absolute fidelity.
All of this messiness, this swirl of competing ideologies, this
series of simultaneously “yes” and “no” responses, never seems to all come into
focus at the same time in the same commenter. On the one hand, we have the majority of the
center-left news agencies and Democratic pols applauding George Floyd as some
sort of messianic hero, the noble if accidental progenitor of Racial Justice,
the Second Coming of MLK. On the other
side, we have the rightwing press and the GOP condemning all things
BLM-related, labeling anyone remotely affiliated with the movement as thuggish,
communist (!), anti-American, and probably responsible for the kidnapping of
the Lindbergh baby. OK, maybe not that
last one, but give them time.
At the moment, universities are more interested in pandering
to leftwing claptrap than to rightwing claptrap.
That will probably change, especially in state institutions in blue
states, before long. But the glorious
concept of the university as the testing ground for opposing ideas, as the site
where disputants recognize in each other the desire to seek the truth, as the vigilant
guardian of intellectual curiosity and freedom of expression: this vision, the
one Curmie believed in when he started out in the profession 40-odd years ago…
this noble cause lies in the ICU, gasping for what may soon be its last breath.
Do black lives matter?
Indubitably. What about Black
Lives Matter? Sort of. Any full-throated endorsement or condemnation
will forever leave Curmie saying, “yeah, but…”
2 comments:
Perfect---hope that Curmie will be helping the world with measured, reasoned analysis more frequently, followed by an excellent example of why this is much to be desired by all. That's a spectacular post, and not just because I have reached virtually the same conclusions.
The horrifying thing is that despite reading more commentary on the George Floyd mess than is good for me over the past year, I have not encountered a single analysis in a newspaper op-ed, a news broadcast, or a web opinion that was nearly as balanced and accurate as yours.
Thanks, Jack.
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