How Chris Rufo Became the Thing He Hates
His panicked manifesto contains a strong case against CRT activism, but he ultimately falls into the same trap as his enemies.

Christopher Rufo wants you to be afraid. A sinister woke ideology, promoted by a shadowy cabal, is infiltrating America's treasured institutions, from your childrens' classrooms to the corporate boardroom. Far-left activists have weaponized anti-racism to capture the commanding heights of politics and culture, thus "effectuating a wholesale moral reversal" under the banner of "diversity, equity, and inclusion."
It is a testament to Rufo's marketing talent that his complaints feel entirely mundane at this point in the culture war. Prior to Rufo, critical race theory, or CRT, had been an obscure school of legal thought relegated to a few radical law school departments. The proposition that CRT would become a lynchpin of American political discourse in the early 2020s would once have been laughable, but it became deadly serious when Rufo went on Tucker Carlson's cable news show in the summer of 2020.
There, Rufo blamed critical race theory for the post–George Floyd eruption of civil rights protests. That caught the attention of President Donald Trump, who promptly penned an executive order prohibiting CRT from being used in the federal government's training seminars and materials. Rufo has since been appointed by Republican presidential hopeful Gov. Ron DeSantis to the board of trustees at New College of Florida, where Rufo has spearheaded a purge of left-wing professors.
In America's Cultural Revolution, Rufo argues that CRT is both more prevalent and older than even many of its critics believe it to be. Inasmuch as CRT is the unifying ideological architecture of contemporary left activism, he claims, it is the culmination of a "genealogy of darkness" that runs back to the 1960s.
The book is divided up into four similarly structured sections. Each begins with a potted biography of a '60s radical (Herbert Marcuse, Angela Davis, Paulo Freire, and Derrick Bell), outlines their beliefs, and finally asserts their influence on left-wing activism today. The arc of each story is one of declension and renewal. As the heady successes of the '60s gave way to alienation by the '70s, Rufo writes, these radical prophets and their disciples retreated to safe havens in elite universities. Over the next half-century, Rufo claims, they planned a Maoist "long march through the institutions," finally reemerging as the elder statesmen of left-wing protest movements in the 2010s and 2020s.
Rufo's biographical accounts are accurate and his summations of his subjects' views are often correct (albeit highly selective), but he often struggles to show a significant connection between their influence in the sixties and any concrete connection to current movements. For example, while Herbert Marcuse was undeniably influential in the '60s, that does not mean he remains a major influence today. As a retrospective on his work in the left-wing magazine Dissent asked in 2014, "Has the stature of any intellectual fallen more dramatically than that of Herbert Marcuse?" Indeed, it is a cause of annoyance to many on the radical left that philosophers they accuse of being "neoliberal," such as Michel Foucault, are required reading in graduate schools while Marxists like Marcuse are marginalized.
Instead of doing the arduous work of intellectual history to prove a substantial connection, Rufo falls back on the fact that many of the phrases these radicals popularized in the '60s—such as "police brutality" and "racial equity"—are still in use today. Yet one of the markers of social movement formation is linguistic borrowing, and by itself that does not necessarily prove direct intellectual influence. After all, most 21st century libertarians proudly call themselves "capitalists," despite the term's origins as an epithet invented by 19th century socialists.
Doing this allows Rufo to paint contemporary social movements that he dislikes with a radical brush. Since Angela Davis probably got away with being an accessory to murder in 1970, and since her fellow Black Panther Stokely Carmichael coined the phrase "institutional racism," then ipso facto everyone using the phrase today—from George Floyd marchers to The New York Times—must be in Davis's dangerous thrall.
This is part of Rufo's evident interest in the tactical power of language. He accuses left-wing radicals of performing a Nietzschean "transvaluation of values," in which the outward form of a system remains the same even as its meaning is hollowed out and replaced with something entirely different. For instance, he asserts that the concept of "anti-racism" has been transformed from its original meaning of opposition to anti-black racism into a rhetorical weapon of anti-white activism.
But elsewhere Rufo has openly admitted to transvaluating the values of the left himself. As he explained in a series of tweets, his goal has been to take the narrow concept of "critical race theory" and "recodify it to annex the entire range of cultural constructions that are unpopular with Americans." Whenever ordinary people "read something crazy in the newspaper"—whether about civil rights or trans rights—Rufo wants them to "immediately think 'critical race theory" and thus "toxify" the brands of left-wing movements. In other words, Rufo is hollowing out the original meaning of the phrase "critical race theory" and filling it with content that is politically useful to him in direct proportion to how misleading it is to the public. He would do unto others precisely what he claims they are doing unto him.
As such, Rufo is an unreliable narrator. Each claim he makes in this book should be taken with a grain of salt, given his overt willingness to weaponize meaning for the sake of political utility.
A sense of misdirection surfaces repeatedly throughout the book. For instance, Rufo first complains that left-wing activists exaggerate how frequently unarmed black men are shot and killed by police, given that the actual number is about 15 a year. Yet he then turns around and lists each ambush of police officers in the aftermath of the George Floyd protests. The number of victims? Sixteen, total. For Rufo, the former statistic proves the puerility of left-wing complaints about police brutality while the latter is incontrovertible evidence of the inherently violent nature of anti-racism. That math only makes sense to the partisan score-settler.
Nor can the reader trust that the hard evidence being proffered—even when accurate—actually means what Rufo purports. For instance, in order to prove the pervasiveness of CRT in "virtually every discipline in the universities," Rufo searched two academic databases, including Google Scholar, and found 390,000 articles, papers, and the like referencing CRT. But anybody can do a quick search of Google Scholar for "conservatism" and see that the engine returns 1.02 million results. Should we infer that the academy is overrun with conservatives who have launched what "can only be described as an intellectual coup" after having "achieved victory through volume"? Of course not.
In another instance of inflation, Rufo points to a document using terms like "systematically racist" that was produced by the Treasury Department's Office of Minority and Women Inclusion as evidence that CRT has taken over the federal government. It's more likely that the document's primary impact was felt while hitting the bottom of a thousand Treasury trash cans, yet Rufo offers it as proof that "after fifty years, the long march had been completed" and the radical left had finally "attained ideological power within the American state." This is less Mao's long march and more Karen's short walk around the block.
Ultimately, the book convinced me of the opposite of its premise: America is doing all right. Rufo wants to scare readers with the prospect that the "slow, hulking machine of critical race ideology will continue to accumulate power and marginalize democratic opposition." Instead, I find a tale of the ways extreme views either sow the seeds of their own destruction by alienating the general public—which happened to many radical movements of the '60s, as Rufo outlines—or divert themselves into irrelevance in the hands of dull corporate human resource managers and government bureaucrats.
Rufo's book contains some legitimate examples of what can go wrong when unhinged activists gain control of a location or institution. But Rufo offers only an inverted mirror image of his targets. If the left seeks to abuse the power of the state to impose CRT orthodoxy on students and businesses, then Rufo would have the right impose an anti-CRT counter-orthodoxy. If the radical left wants a revolution, then Rufo says the radical right needs to launch a "counter-revolution."
A pox on both their houses. As Rufo himself declares, "The rule of the margins is not automatically better, but often worse, than the rule of the center." Classical liberalism offers a better path, one which eschews state overreach on behalf of the orthodoxies of either the far left or reactionary right.
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Rufo's book contains some legitimate examples of what can go wrong when unhinged activists gain control of a location or institution. But Rufo offers only an inverted mirror image of his targets. If the left seeks to abuse the power of the state to impose CRT orthodoxy on students and businesses, then Rufo would have the right impose an anti-CRT counter-orthodoxy. If the radical left wants a revolution, then Rufo says the radical right needs to launch a "counter-revolution."
Yep. If the left refuses to quit they musts be crushed. Sorry sunshine.
Name one time in the past 60 years where the evangelical right controlled the media, education, corporate human resources, big capital, prosecutors, and a political party that could get turnips elected President and Senator.
Name one child Rufo has surgically mutilated or shown porn to. Show me one neighborhood Rufo has burned down with total legal impunity.
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Hey Mr. al Gore, I want to be the first to congratulate you for having one of your comments featured by Chris Rufo in his twitter posts.
Your points are well taken. Matzko, believes, like Humpty Dumpty 'When I use a word, it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.’
So he can absolve people of their connection to Marxists of the 30's through the 60's with a flourish of epistemic panache! Just because the BLM leaders called themselves "trained Marxists" they bear no relation to their Marxist predecessors.
And just because "critical theories" have been used to commandeer the universities, the legacy media, social media, web search engines, Hollywood, most book publishers, elementary schools, middle schools, high schools and school boards, we should never refer to it as the "march through the institutions" because these marchers disavow Gramsci and Marcuse.
Trump did not ban the teaching of CRT, he banned it's implementation which seems to be something that Matzko doesn't grasp. It's one thing to teach that CRT is a doctrine of racial power struggles where white people have the upper hand and by virtue of the institutions that they created, they can dominate other races. It's something else to tell all of the white students in the class that they are oppressors and that they must apologize to all non-white students who are the victims of that oppression. The first is teaching a doctrine, the second is implementing it.
So you can say "reproductive health care" even if it actually means "anti-reproductive health care". You can say that self-defense is murder and that murder is political protest. Why not? Words mean whatever the speaker says they mean, especially when pretending that both sides are indistinguishable even when one side is willing to mutilate children as a means of separating them from their parents and the other side is the parents.
Left: We're going to take over by weaponizing words!
Right: We're going to fight back for freedom by weaponizing words!
Left: YOU FASCISTS!!!!
I get it, hypocrisy is a charge that is easy to bandy about, but in this case the right side of the debate is the right side of the debate.
Where is this cabinet level official or Senator or Dean of a prestigious university, or human resources department head, or CEO of a major corporation, or prosecutor, or DNC member who is a fan of Herbert Marcuse or Angela Davis? What is their name? Where are these left wing activists who have surgically mutilated children or shown porn to children or burned down neighborhoods and gotten away with it?
Where are these left wing activists who have surgically mutilated children
Any doctor who performed a "gender-affirming surgery" on kids.
or shown porn to children
Librarians and teachers showing "Gender Queer" to children.
burned down neighborhoods and gotten away with it?
I guess someone missed the Fentanyl Floyd riots.
Anyway, you troon freak, you should actually conceal carry so you can 41 percent yourself.
How about in the past 600 years?
Religion was very influential in all of those areas before the 20th century.
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You're being pretty hard on turnips comparing them to brain dead politicians.
I mean, a counter-revolution is basically how it works. When the left gets too uppity, they end up provoking a massive backlash that results in the pendulum swinging in the opposite direction.
For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. As Overt has pointed out, if you don't want the reaction, don't allow the action to take place.
As Overt has pointed out, if you don’t want the reaction, don’t allow the action to take place.
If Rufo and DeSantis want to ban CRT from schools and parents resist the ban, is that action or reaction?
Reaction to reaction.
Reaction²
I've been wondering if the Ruling Reptiles are purposefully *arranging* the CounterRevolution.
Good, Ore people reaching this conclusion every day. I’m not sure how long it will take to reach critical mass, but the sooner better. I’m not sure how much more America can take.
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I could only make it to:
Prior to Rufo, critical race theory, or CRT, had been an obscure school of legal thought relegated to a few radical law school departments.
Rufo, and others, have provided an imperial f**kton of documentation that this simply isn't true. And the fact that the author is still trying to palm off this established lie casts serious doubt on his and Cato's good faith.
"Chris Rufo has become the thing that he hates".
What's that a guy whose interviews make Reason staffers prattling morons or a guy who gets the panties of the Cato gang all in twist.
The sheer gaslighting going on here is appalling. If Matzko wants to try to defend the CRT influenced claptrap by Ibrahim X. Kendi and Ronin DiAngelo and others, that would at least have some kind of integrity, but to pretend it does not exist is corrupting the debate from the start.
Standard Marxist rhetorical tactic.
Rufo is wrong because nothing bad is happening, because Reason doesn't consider it bad. Institutions haven't been captured; they just support what all right thinking people have always believed.
" Institutions haven’t been captured"
Especially not Reason!
This is a consequence of Rufo having deliberately decided to use CRT to describe everything 'Anti-Racist.' What he's really against is the ideology of 'Anti-Racism.' CRT, as such, is a red herring, which is what enables his critics to assert that he doesn't know what he's talking about.
Except even there, idiot lefties (but I repeat myself) in school administration have admitted to using CRT based ideas in their K-12 lessons.
This column still comes across as major gaslighting and bullshittery.
"Anti-racism" is CRT
Rufo, and others, have provided an imperial f**kton of documentation that this simply isn’t true. And the fact that the author is still trying to palm off this established lie casts serious doubt on his and Cato’s good faith.
Yeah, the assumptions in this shit were all being pushed in humanities courses in the 1990s, when I was in college. Even if the originators weren't directly cited, their pretenses were easy enough to discern. And that was specifically because academics were inculcating them as part of their quasi-seminary philosophical doctrines.
For fuck's sake, there's been multiple articles just on Reason talking about how college students support throwing people in jail for "hate speech," and "snitching" on profs who make "offensive statements," such as today. That's exactly what Herbert Marcuse said the left should do in his "Repressive Tolerance" essay, which is absolutely critical to understanding how today's left thinks.
This article is the equivalent of claiming that Augustine and Thomas Aquinas had no real effect on Catholic theology after they wrote "City of God" and "Summa Theologica," or that John Calvin wasn't that important to the First Great Awakening.
That’s exactly what Herbert Marcuse said the left should do in his “Repressive Tolerance” essay, which is absolutely critical to understanding how today’s left thinks.
This should be required reading, yes. I would argue that more important even are people like Frederic Jameson, Jean-Francois Lyotard, and Raymond Williams - i.e. the Marxists who engaged with the post-modern/deconstructive takedown of Marxism without rejecting Marxism but instead fully and self-consciously embracing logical contradiction as itself a revolutionary act.
I would combine that with what I saw as a graduate student instructor in Humanities in the late-'90s/early-'00s (I think you have a similar background, and have made comments that lead me to believe you saw this, too):
What I saw was that in the face of challenges like those mounted by Foucault and Derrida in the Humanities and Thomas Kuhn in the sciences that really pulled the rug out from under academic claims of authority and exposed them (this is more Derrida/Foucault than Kuhn) as just more ideological puffery oriented around justifying and maintaining existing power structures, academic culture actually doubled-down on the authoritarianism and at this point pretty much refuses to acknowledge that any of those guys made any critiques of academic pretentions to authority and privileged access to Truth.
This has led to an academic culture that openly values ideology over fact, where a vaguely Marxist sounding language of "social justice" is used to shut down any discussion or critique of ideas that are facially self-contradictory.
"There is no Truth to be found" quickly morphed into "No Truth but in Social Justice," without confronting how one, in the post-modernist paradigm, defines "social" and "justice."
What I saw was that in the face of challenges like those mounted by Foucault and Derrida in the Humanities and Thomas Kuhn in the sciences that really pulled the rug out from under academic claims of authority and exposed them (this is more Derrida/Foucault than Kuhn) as just more ideological puffery oriented around justifying and maintaining existing power structures, academic culture actually doubled-down on the authoritarianism and at this point pretty much refuses to acknowledge that any of those guys made any critiques of academic pretentions to authority and privileged access to Truth.
This has led to an academic culture that openly values ideology over fact, where a vaguely Marxist sounding language of “social justice” is used to shut down any discussion or critique of ideas that are facially self-contradictory.
I've attended academic conferences since finishing grad school over 20 years ago, and although I'm not in academia itself, this has been my experience as well since it's reflected in the papers and presentations that are set up.
The one exception was a few years ago during the Trump years when a professor actually said, paraphrasing, "we need to figure out how to incorporate civic nationalism" into left-wing academia. I don't think they've really squared that circle in the years since then, but it will probably be in situations like the Pride picnic at the White House. I suppose we'll know for sure if it's arrived when it's fully monetized to become a consumer holiday with 25% off sales.
Critical race theory begins with the assumption that there is structural racism that is holding black people back in society. The effect is to teach black kids that the system is stacked against them so why bother, and to teach them that any adverse outcome for them in life is likely due to structural racism. A demonstration of structural racism is not considered necessary. Yesterday I read a study entitled Association Between Markers of Structural Racism and Mass Shooting Events in Major US Cities, looking for how they described structural racism, or determined its existence. They started with this:
The purpose of the study was to see if there was a correlation between mass shooting events (MSEs) and “measures of structural racism.” Here was one of their findings:
In other words, the higher the black percentage of a population, the greater is the structural racism. What they are finding is that the higher the black percentage of a population, the greater is the likelihood of MSEs and they are reporting it as the greater the structural racism the greater the likelihood of MSEs.
Yup, that's where I stopped reading because it was obvious that the author was trying to feed me a shit sandwich and claim it was goose liver pate.
Eat a dick, Reason
https://twitter.com/ian_mckelvey/status/1682213979194572800?t=U5R1a8kx8Z8qTM78ga900Q&s=19
Leftists have taught people that:
Men are stupid, helpless, ineffectual rage monsters who subjugate women and have destroyed the earth.
Minorities can’t succeed without a guiding hand (from white leftists).
Women are oppressed and the only way they can be successful is if they marginalize men and reject the idea of the nuclear family.
Children are incapable of determining who and what they are/will be and must be forced to accept a “gender” that adults feel is appropriate for them.
The planet will die unless collectivism is forced upon the masses and the concept of self determination is destroyed.
Religion has only ever hurt people and that science must necessarily become the religion shared by all humans. We are to ignore the fact that science is carefully controlled and must adhere to a political narrative.
A “one world government” is the key to a sustainable future and that bureaucrats educated at progressive universities shall decide what is best for all others.
Leftists view these “important issues and lessons” as key in creating a happy and sustainable future, despite the fact that collectivist ideologies have created the worst suffering this planet has ever known. Unfortunately, collectivists are unwilling or unable to acknowledge the mistakes of the past. Each new generation is educated on the lofty societal goals that can only be achieved by the winnowing away of individual rights, but they never discuss the tens of millions that have been killed as a result of such thinking. “That wasn’t ‘real’ socialism,” they say with a straight face. “Real socialism has never been tried.”
I cannot think of a more backwards and dangerous way of thinking, yet leftists feel that the world cannot survive without their superior intelligence. This would be laughable if not for the deadly consequences that are inseparable from their “perfect society.”
"It is a testament to Rufo's marketing talent that his complaints feel entirely mundane at this point in the culture war. Prior to Rufo, critical race theory, or CRT, had been an obscure school of legal thought relegated to a few radical law school departments."
Yup, absolutely no influence of CRT in social sciences, activist groups, political platforms, and public education.
When did Cato turn into Vox?
Long March through the institutions. That means ALL institutions.
I just find it a bit terrifying that the March is so far along that they'd even bother with Reason. It's just a mopping up operation at this point, isn't it?
the reason the Romans would salt the earth of their enemies after defeat was so that the people there could never grow back to threaten Rome again.
^ This. They don't want the partisans to regroup.
In lieu of that, I favor depositing democrats into landfills by the dump truck load and then paving over it when full.
Charles Koch has more than a little to do with that.
Just for shits and giggles?
Long March through the institutions.
The "Long March," per Gramsci, was supposed to be conducted by the working classes to displace the fundamentally bourgeois culture of social institutions.
What actually happened is that the bourgeois institutions adopted the language of Marxism and stripped it of class content, turning it into a cultural struggle of the bourgeois against the conservative social values of the working classes. Marcuse was key in appropriating Marxist discourse and applying it to the 'oppressed' bourgeois college student who needed more time to dedicate to his poetry and painting.
Marcuse was key in appropriating Marxist discourse and applying it to the ‘oppressed’ bourgeois college student who needed more time to dedicate to his poetry and painting.
Yeah, Foucault gets a lot of the post facto attention, but a lot of people have no idea how influential Marcuse really was on the American Left in the 60s and 70s. The assumptions in his works can be seen in pretty much every academic paper of the last 30 years or so, and they've been inculcated as dogma now from the corporate board all the way down to the kindergarten classroom. The Weather Underground terrorists practically used "Eros and Civilization" as a social guide.
Yeah, Foucault gets a lot of the post facto attention, but a lot of people have no idea how influential Marcuse really was on the American Left in the 60s and 70s.
This is one of the things I find frustrating, in that Foucault, like Marx, gets very selective attention. I was even told once as an undergrad when I was writing a paper on institutional reinforcement of ideology that drew on Althusser, an actual Lenninist who was jailed for murdering his wife, to use Foucault instead since I could use Foucault to make the same argument without the baggage of bringing Althusser into it.
IOW, there's a distinct tendency to take ideas from people like Marcuse or Althusser, both of whom had some markedly authoritarian impulses, and dress them up in the skin suits of Marx and Foucault hoping to command the same respect.
In reality, both Marx and Foucault are closer to Nietzsche or Derrida in their anti-authoritarianism-for-its-own-sake, but you'd better not mention Nietzsche or Derrida in an academic context if you don't want to be accused of being a Nazi. Foucault seems to still teeter on the brink of being okay as long as you only focus on certain parts.
Meh, if you work out they’ll call you a Nazi.
“The proposition that CRT would become a lynchpin of American political discourse in the early 2020s would once have been laughable, but it became deadly serious when Rufo went on Tucker Carlson’s cable news show in the summer of 2020”
No it did not. My god the reporting here is shallower than a rain puddle on Texas asphalt.
There crt was, minding is own business in the obscure bowels of academia when... ALL OF A SUDDEN!!!
Nice
Rufo dragged CRT, kicking and screaming out of the warm, comfortable womb of academia...
Pouncing? Rufo pounced.
Wasn't there something else that happened in summer of 2020?
10% of Americans dead from COVID and Trump. (According to public polling, at least the COVID part.)
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Fuck no! Go!
Prior to Rufo, critical race theory, or CRT, had been an obscure school of legal thought relegated to a few radical law school departments.
So now we're sticklers for precise definitions? What are the precise definitions for "fascists", "white supremacists", and "racists"?
Rufo first complains that left-wing activists exaggerate how frequently unarmed black men are shot and killed by police... then turns around and lists each ambush of police officers in the aftermath of the George Floyd protests.
And? The former is a tragedy of the commons; a consequence of training and the frequency with which officers encounter situations where deadly force is appropriate. The later is premeditated murder; a misguided political act of retribution against innocent targets. The massive escalation of violence in the reaction is striking, which is why Rufo highlights it. Matzko would imply that ambushing police is just tit for tat game theory? That is fucked up.
It's also worth noting the denominator: There are a LOT more black men than there are cops!
Another libertarianism plus! Article.
New! Libertarianism (TM) means telling you only what is best for the system.
Rufo is hollowing out the original meaning of the phrase "critical race theory" and filling it with content that is politically useful to him in direct proportion to how misleading it is to the public.
I wondered where that stuff about Rufo came from the other day.
Evidence that not only is jeffy incapable of original thought, he fails to attribute his sources.
My suggestion to Matzko: when you have sophists like jeffy regurgitating your accusations, you might want to pump the brakes. This definitely falls into the "it's happening, but it's not as bad as you think it is" level of gaslighting.
This has been a talking point of the left for years, since Rufo posted these tweets. And when you see a person arguing that this is what Rufo meant, you know that they are feeding you a narrative that they gained on their steady diet of Blue Bubble institutions.
1) Note that they are trying to contrast Rufo's long book with A FUCKING TWEET- a one off, hastily written quip.
2) If you look at the context of the tweet, Rufo isn't trying to "hollow out" the meaning of CRT. He is trying to link the actions of CRT adherents to what they are doing. "The activists are realizing that their ideas, once put into practice, are generating discontent. "
3) If you read his many other works, this is a common theme- these people use innocuous sounding themes and slippery re-definition of terms to affect bad policies. "We are just 'against fascism'! How can you disagree with that?", "We are just being 'anti-racist', how can you disagree with that?" Rufo is pointing out that his goal was to stop that constant re-definition of THEIR ACTS, and "freeze their brand".
If you read all this, Rufo's point is clear: It is the marxist activists who have been moving from term to term. The same people who tried to create class-warfare based on economic-classes in Europe are redefining class-warfare to be based on Racial Classes in the US. Anti-Fascist, Anti-Racist, Anti White Supremacy, Critical Race, Equity, Diversity and Inclusion, Reparations, even Climate Change- all these causes and brands have been different masks that the same people have constantly donned as they push THE SAME PRESCRIPTIONS under a new name each time.
So Rufo is not talking about "Hollowing out" the definition of CRT. he is talking about "Freezing the brand" (his quote) to prevent them jumping to the next word salad in pursuit of the same tactics.
I'm half lit at the YYZ bar, but this is one of the dumbest fucking articles I've read at reason in like a week. Maybe ten days.
Lol
The brazen gaslighting is what gets me. Like we don’t have eyes and eras and memories longer than 3 years
Yeah, +1 LOL.
I usually avoid "CRT" and just say "woke bullshit" to avoid those stupid arguments.
^
Same. And I’m working hard to turn ‘wokie’ into a pejorative that offends them as much as possible.
I use "woketard".
I follow the Reason Comment Board manual for citations:
Do your own fucking homework, asshole.
Still got that massive chip on your shoulder from being majorly butthurt by Chuck?
You should also follow the advice given to you here and go away forever. If you can’t manage that, then perhaps suicide is your solution. Did you know that if your fat ass stopped farting from the many metric tons of processed shit you consume (undoubtedly the source of your morbid obesity), it would reduce global CO2 emissions by .0000000000001%?
If you really cared about the planet and stopping AGW, you would kill yourself. Since you haven’t, tell us, why do you hate the planet?
When people in Chucky’s tribe are all making the same or similar accusations, it is because they are critical thinkers who came to the same well-researched logical conclusion independently, and their ideas deserve further consideration.
When people in my tribe are all making the same or similar accusations, it is because we are all sophists regurgitating baseless accusations that can be safely discarded.
Completely understood!
chemtard is all about claiming that his opponents are not "critical thinkers," but when presented with actual material that refutes his pretenses, such as Klaus Schwab's book on remaking the world in the image of technocrats, or reporting on a court case that hammered his lefty boos in academia, he suddenly isn't all that intellectually curious himself.
Don't even ask chemtard to read "Repressive Tolerance," or "Counter-revolution and Revolt," or "Pedagogy of the Oppressed," or "Mapping the Margins," or "Undoing Gender," or "Thinking Sex," because that might pop his little self-righteous bubble.
Every word written by Herbert Marcuse is accepted uncritically and worshipped and idolized by every left-winger everywhere. Because they are a hive-mind with no independent thought whatsoever.
Right-wingers on the other hand are capable of independent critical thought, and it is just a total coincidence that they all parrot the same talking points from the same narrow set of right-wing sources on a daily basis.
Every word written by Herbert Marcuse is accepted uncritically and worshipped and idolized by every left-winger everywhere. Because they are a hive-mind with no independent thought whatsoever.
Shorter chemtard: "Please accept this strawman to deflect from Marcuse's influence on the New Left and it's subsequent socio-political movements, which are now parroted by corporate marketing, school curriculums, and mass media."
Right-wingers on the other hand are capable of independent critical thought, and it is just a total coincidence that they all parrot the same talking points from the same narrow set of right-wing sources on a daily basis.
Geez, I'm sorry that reading real, actual books instead of your left-symp mush is such a difficult task.
“Please accept this strawman to deflect from Marcuse’s influence on the New Left and it’s subsequent socio-political movements, which are now parroted by corporate marketing, school curriculums, and mass media.”
Hey kids! You too can also commit logical fallacies!
Herbert Marcuse said some things.
Some other people also said the same things.
Therefore, those other people are students of Herbert Marcuse.
Let's play together!
Hitler loved his mother.
RRWP also loves his mother.
Therefore, RRWP is a Nazi.
He really got to you, didn’t he Fatfuck?
"What a piece of work is jeffy, How ignoble in Reason, how infinite in fallacies, In form and moving how grotesque and abominable, In action how like a Weasel, In misinformation how much like Vox, A creeper in comments, The paragon of trolls. And yet to me, what is this quintessence of twats?"
Please note that I gave respects to William Shakespeare in my mockery of his soliloquy from Hamlet.
Thanks for proving you're too lazy to read a few books, even when the citations are spoonfed to you, and that you're a left-symp piece of shit.
You are welcome to demonstrate what an asshole I am by linking a time you referenced Rufo prior to 2 days ago. I was completely unfamiliar with him prior to that and his work doesn't seem like something you normally follow. If you have been referring to his work for the last 3 years and I missed every reference, that is on me.
Personally, I post links or at least note the original thinker when I am referencing another's thoughts because I am honest that way.
I was completely unfamiliar with him prior to that and his work doesn’t seem like something you normally follow.
I don't know whether Jeff is a Fifth Column listener, but they actually did an extended interview with him several years back in which they were very respectful and gave him his say, and he turned around and shat all over them after it aired.
I've been following him loosely ever since, and yeah - the guy is a douche. It's unfortunate that he's taken this up as a cause, because I legitimately think he's doing more harm than good.
Reason staff deserves to get shit on.
Chris Rufo is clearly over the target
“I don’t understand sex any more. The Supreme Court changed my sex life forever”
Okayyyyyyyy
Let's decolonize Reason, who's with me?
De-colon-ize?
Could be shitty.
Well it sounds like a bunch of crap to me.
Reason. What an appliance.
Hey look, terrible editing once again.
"How Chris Rufo Became the Thing He Hates"
Are any readers paying attention surprised that at no point did this article demonstrate "how" Rufo became the thing he hates? Of course not.
This headline is your standard, cliched pablum. The editor came up with the idea of "he's the people he hates", and just added the "how" part because it sounded clever. That editor doesn't care if it isn't technically accurate. Because in the 5 minutes they could be bothered to think about an article that will be permanently released into the ether, they never once considered that their job is to help represent the article correctly, or to make author's better at their job.
A real editor would have some passing familiarity of the book being reviewed- maybe even read it. They certainly would NOT accept Matzko making summary after accusing summary of what Rufo thinks without any substantive quote from the actual book.
Consider that this article about Rufo's book has MORE scare quotes, and MORE quotes from Rufo's tweets than actual quotes from the book. It is the job of an Editor to see Matzko's sloppy work and say "Hey, you should back up your accusation here with an actual quote or two from the book." But instead the Editor slapped on a slur like, "Panicked Manifesto" and thinks their job is done for the week.
SMDH.
It's CATO town, dude...
That, IMO, is the worst part. Hurried newsrooms, rushed deadlines, readership numbers… corners were cut, articles were rushed... but, Cato? They’re a fucking think tank. It’s like the retired people in my life talking about how they don’t have enough time in the day play pickleball *and* keep up with current events. WTF was going on in the other ~15 hours of your day? How the hell were you the least bit functional when ~8 of that was consumed by work?
BOAF SIDEZ was overused
The editor came up with the idea of “he’s the people he hates”, and just added the “how” part because it sounded clever.
Considering that the True Libertarians have been ramping up usage of this specific rhetoric over the last year, I would assume it is now a standard talking point among left-libertarians having adopted it from the hard left just as Rufo has outlined.
There's a thing called CRT? What is it? Not interested, but here's how Republicans are pouncing on it.
"A critical theory is any approach to social philosophy that focuses on society and culture to attempt to reveal, critique, and challenge power structures. Horkheimer described a theory as critical insofar as it seeks "to liberate human beings from the circumstances that enslave them". Marx explicitly developed the notion of critique into the critique of ideology, linking it with the practice of social revolution, as stated in the 11th section of his Theses on Feuerbach." All clear now why we are interested in it even though you pretend not to be?
I think that was supposed to be a sardonic summation of the article's content.
Sardonic? Accurate, I submit
Por que no los dos?
As an opinion, critical race theory deserves to be considered and debated by scholars and it is protected by the First Amendment. As a public school curriculum item being pushed by teachers with an agenda, it is fair game to be opposed by the other side in the culture wars. I seriously doubt that as a propaganda item it is brainwashing any children in public schools, but I don't doubt at all that some college students will be down-graded by socialist professors for arguing against critical race theory in college classes. My own experiences in both public schools and in college courses is that the vast majority of school children remember what they're taught just long enough to pass the quiz - if even that long - and then forget it again after recess.
As an opinion, critical race theory deserves to be considered and debated by scholars and it is protected by the First Amendment. As a public school curriculum item being pushed by teachers with an agenda, it is fair game to be opposed by the other side in the culture wars.
^
No.
Critical race theory is fucking idiotic.
Unless your willing to debate Nazi Aryan theory too, because they're the same fucking thing.
Critical race theory may be idiotic but lots of things that were thought to be idiotic turned out later to be true. And lots of orthodox theories turned out to be wrong. You might just as well say that Jesus is a myth and religion is idiotic. You might be right but refuting them are useful exercises anyway.
I seriously doubt that as a propaganda item it is brainwashing any children in public schools,
The younger generations show no signs of an unfounded belief that race is the root problem in America? They don't uncritically accept the existence of "systematic racism"?
My kids graduated in 2013 and 2015. I had to dissuade them of those very notions. It has not gotten better in the last 8 years.
https://www.umass.edu/news/article/umass-amherst-poll-examines-americans-views-race-issues-including-critical-race-theory
https://newrepublic.com/post/173726/new-poll-shows-majority-black-americans-believe-racism-will-get-worse
Where do they get these ideas?
The younger generations show no signs of an unfounded belief that race is the root problem in America? They don’t uncritically accept the existence of “systematic racism”?
For what it's worth, my 15-year-old thinks this is stupid, and has noticed that the single most racist group on her campus is the black students, and that this is encouraged by the teachers.
I think there are definite signs that this shit has jumped the shark.
My kids thought it was stupid, but that doesn't mean it didn't color their thinking. I remember having a conversation with my younger son about saying "that was racist" over something that was not racist and false equivalence.
The point of dripping CRT into schools is to preemptively confound critical thinking.
My kids thought it was stupid, but that doesn’t mean it didn’t color their thinking. I remember having a conversation with my younger son about saying “that was racist” over something that was not racist and false equivalence.
I can see a difference between the anecdotes. It's definitely jumped the shark in my two teens (and most of their friends) but most would, out of active dissidence or passive indifference contribute to the "poll shows majority of students think racism will get worse" poll. But then, they and, again most of, their peer group have always been subversive in that fashion. There are a couple members of the group who, whether just playing a comedic straight man bit or earnest believers/salsemen trying to fit in and/or bridge gaps, can and do confuse parents on both sides.
Half of the CRT nonsense was convincing children that Racism is the cause of all ills in our country.
The other half was giving teachers and activists the pretext to shout down and shame anyone who disagrees with that notion. I know a lot of kids who roll their eyes when they see this shit brought up. But they WILL NOT SPEAK UP about it. Because they know that if they do that, they will be called a racist.
And this permeates corporate america now. At my previous gig, there were two types of millennial: the kids who constantly bleated on about uncovering systems of white supremacy in our company, and the kids who shut the fuck up and did their work. There were absolutely no kids willing to push back on that stuff- it was left to the older employees, and every one of them was dragged in front of HR tribunals for their trouble.
There's a bit of a Boomer aspect to what you're saying. If Boomers and Gen Xers are getting hauled in front of HR tribunals, why would more junior Millennials stick their neck out, keep your head down, get the pay/skills/experience/bennies/title/shares and get out or... true to the 1A notion of 'grant the opposition a platform to speak lest they conspire in silence' don't say shit at the HR policy meetings where it's stated that black people will be hired preferentially and then let/assist/encourage the white-adjacent person feed HR their own bullshit when they hired unqualified black people over brown/yellow/red/other.
Admittedly and to your point, it shouldn't have to work this way and there are some lines that definitely have been crossed outside the market but within, sometimes a few small quiet companies make a few small quiet mistakes and people learn some small quiet lessons and sometimes several large companies or whole industries or even branches of every company have to crater their all their earnings and more and leave thousands of employees standing in the rubble in order for everyone to say, "Holy shit, we should *never* do that again!"
It’s definitely jumped the shark in my two teens (and most of their friends)
In all seriousness, thanks for sharing this. Peer pressure can be a wonderful tool for good. Similar to subliminal advertising, indoctrination doesn't work when you know it is happening. This is why the lefties gunning so hard to censor social media.
In all seriousness, thanks for sharing this. Peer pressure can be a wonderful tool for good.
I've mentioned it before and I bring it up because, to a degree, Square = Circle is otherwise right and "jumped the shark" isn't exactly the right analogy, the plane is at least running out of runway or that the efforts to segregate the melting pot were doomed to failure before they began.
The genre of jokes shows up from time to time in big name movies, but true to comedic-non-SJW fashion doesn't strive to beat people over the head.
My kids thought it was stupid, but that doesn’t mean it didn’t color their thinking.
It does, yes, and it's bad. We live in a pretty working-class, very mixed-race area, and my daughter never thought about race until the woke progressives at her middle school sorted them all into racial groups and started talking about White Privilege.
It's toxic, but it's also doomed to fail and even potentially create backlash. On the lighter side, it's already a joke among my daughter and her peers to call every random thing racist. On the darker side, as many have been pointing out for years, it didn't take a rocket surgeon to figure out that racial grievance politics would eventually inspire a white-grievance backlash among underprivileged white people.
I just don't think it's a linear thing that's going to keep accelerating - to me the signs are that things are already swinging the other way and in 10-15 years we'll think of race activists the way we increasingly think about drug warriors from '80s.
"in 10-15 years we’ll think of race activists the way we increasingly think about drug warriors from ’80s."
You mean we will be electing them president? Please don't say that.
You mean we will be electing them president?
Will be?
it’s already a joke among my daughter and her peers to call every random thing racist.
I will admit to becoming a pedant on specific issues and racism is one of them. My son was doing that joking thing when I confronted him.
Trust, but verify.
Ah, yes, we had a rather less innocuous version of that in my youth. There was a particularly stupid skinhead who was peripheral to the scene we were a part of, and damned near everything was, in his parlance, a "fuckin' faggot whatever". So in order to mock him, we picked this up and used in in increasingly ridiculous fashion.
"Fuckin' faggot washing machine!""
"Fuckin' faggot toaster!"
"Fuckin' faggot quantum physics!"
Etc., and said in a particularly derpy tone of voice.
Still, likely to give offense to people who weren't in on the joke.
My kids thought it was stupid, but that doesn’t mean it didn’t color their thinking. I remember having a conversation with my younger son about saying “that was racist” over something that was not racist and false equivalence.
I get what you're saying, but it's also important to remember in those moments that this a responsibility of being an involved parent, anyway. It's more pervasive because the radical left dominates these institutions now, but that simply means that parents who don't agree with this shit need to be proactive and actually bring these things up to their kids long before it actually becomes a problem. Yeah, a lot of it might go in one ear and out the other, but it's still a duty as a parent to be the guide your kids need.
When they become adults, those decisions become fully their responsibility, but at least you can try to say you did all you could to put them on the right path. Whether they choose to take it is up to them.
I think there are definite signs that this shit has jumped the shark.
I've noticed, in a related matter, that the writer's/actor's strike has reflected this blowback. They've been trying to frame the whole thing as being about AI and getting "fair" residuals, while pretending that they haven't been pumping out utter rad-left ideological shit for several years that finally led their core customers and 25% or more of their potential audience to stop giving them money. The results have been dramatic as Hollywood has been losing hundreds of millions of dollars lately.
They've got their mobys arguing that "rich actors shouldn't need more money" as a strawman to state that the pay affects the blue-collar workers too, and suddenly developing amnesia about their tactics in the culture war, such as pushing a "not so secret gay agenda" and "inserting queerness into everything," or prioritizing "diversity and dinosaurs" over "good storytelling." Pushing back against this shit in their comments sections has been a blast, because they literally have no answer to it.
I’ve noticed, in a related matter, that the writer’s/actor’s strike has reflected this blowback.
Yeah - it's been interesting to watch the collective yawn it's been greeted with.
The poll found that over half of Americans (53%) believe that white people in the U.S. have certain advantages because of the color of their skin, and 7 in 10 (69%) say they are angry that racism exists.
So if a poll finds that a majority of Americans believe that white people have advantages due to skin color, they should be ignored because it is proof of liberal indoctrination.
But if a poll finds that a majority of Americans believe that the 2020 election was stolen, it represents an imperative that the government immediately act to address their pressing concerns.
The difference is that problems with elections are things that the government can and should do something about. People being racist or having particular biases about certain groups, as much as I might find that reprehensible, is not. Freedom of conscience and freedom of association are important.
And, the funny thing is, the system we have, the actual system that's supposedly being critiqued, functions in the exact opposite manner specifically due to race in both directions. Voter reform can't happen because any reform that doesn't automatically create more votes is inherently racist out of the gate and before the pen even touches the page. SNAP, healthcare, abortion, housing, OTOH, get funded and reformed and refunded at regular cycles and continue to not solve the social issues that they're not even supposed to solve. Education is probably the most crystalline example (but voting is also pretty good). We can't reform Education in terms of school choice because it would (probably) disadvantage black and brown kids, but we can sure as hell and almost entirely without question close down schools and bend the knee to Unions in order without regard to whether it (continues to) disadvantages black and brown kids, their families, and their communities.
As far as false equivalencies go, that is one of the worst I have ever seen. Are you not getting enough sleep? I know it has been a rough week for you.
It’s groomer Jeffy. Did you really expect anything different?
"So if a poll finds that a majority of Americans believe that white people have advantages due to skin color, they should be ignored because it is proof of liberal indoctrination."
It is a fact that over the past decade, the number of people thinking the country's problems are rooted in racism has increased, and that is especially true among the young.
Now you might believe like these younglings that this teaching is correct: that in fact the country is racist at its core, and this is what causes most bad outcomes. Or you might believe that this is a wrong-headed notion, that takes an incredibly complicated set of circumstances and ascribes boogyman racists and "teh system" as the root of all evils.
What you cannot deny is that this belief (correct or incorrect) has largely been caused by the rise of CRT-derived teaching in schools that has mainstreamed concepts that were once fringe or controversial- concepts such as Equity (i.e. the primacy of equality of outcome), White Privilege & guilt, and systemic racism.
What you cannot deny
Have you never read any of his comments before? He can deny anything up to and including reality itself.
The fact that you were able to dissuade them proves that they were not brainwashed. Youth believe all kinds of idealistic myths. As they become adults we hope they will abandon simplistic fine-sounding myths in favor of logic, facts and personal responsibility. The fact that the the world is still progressing supports the success of that.
You need to look at some surveys of young high school graduates. Critical theory and neo-Marxism have completely warped their minds.
If you believe the polls. I personally do not believe the polls. I have training and experience in conducting surveys in academic research and I, unlike much of the public, realize that polls start off highly sensitive to the biases of the researchers and the wording of the questions; and taper off into unreliability from there. Worse than that, as an "expert" in causation (scientifically speaking) I'm painfully aware that correlation does not prove causation. You will have to do much better in asserting that CRT in schools has caused a shift in the "survey" results, let alone the actual opinions of students.
Fortunately, good governors like DeSantis are getting this shit out of the government schools. Of course, the democrats are acting like CRT should be part of school curriculums by default.
Now if we could just get the schools out of the government ...
it's total freedom and liberty when the government-run schools approve and impose CRT and gender theory on your kindergartners but it's TOTAL FASHISM if when the government-run schools choose NOT to impose CRT and gender-theory on your kindergartners.
Got it.
Hint: get rid of public schools if you want the moral high ground on government control of schools.
A sense of misdirection surfaces repeatedly throughout the book. For instance, Rufo first complains that left-wing activists exaggerate how frequently unarmed black men are shot and killed by police, given that the actual number is about 15 a year. Yet he then turns around and lists each ambush of police officers in the aftermath of the George Floyd protests. The number of victims? Sixteen, total. For Rufo, the former statistic proves the puerility of left-wing complaints about police brutality while the latter is incontrovertible evidence of the inherently violent nature of anti-racism. That math only makes sense to the partisan score-settler.
Why? Why would you write this? If somebody paid you to write "I'm a retarded, unscrupulous cocksucker." and publish it with your name at the bottom, would you?
Anybody over the age of about 12 can see and understand that there's not just racism and anti-racism or revolution and counter-revolution but non-racism and non-revolution as well. Further, that by portraying Rufo's work as such without any direct citation, only your vague inference*, you are not only lying about Rufo's work but lying to prop up a racist and divisive narrative?
Really, my original question was inadequate. The real question is more along the lines of "Paid or not, why would you take the time and expend the effort to generate a genuine piece of personal work saying 'I'm an unscrupulous, cocksucking, racist dickbag.' for public consumption?"
* Does Rufo actually say the police killings are supposed to be quid pro quo with supposed racially motivated killings or is he just pointing out that 15 people per year, whether by ambush or other is more on par with lightning strikes and shark attacks and anything resembling apartheid or genocide? Does Rufo specifically select the year after George Floyd's death for the citation of police ambush to make the explicit quid pro quo argument or does he just select a/the most recent year that makes the rare argument? Because him deliberately selecting the year after George Floyd's death as though it were normal would be about as stupid as you trying to dispel anti-racist boogeymen by acting like it's OK for 15 people murdered by race-based social unrest.
Well, I guess you would have to read the book to find out if Rufo makes the quid pro quo assertion if the reviewer doesn’t impose his own opinion on it in the review. The opinion of the reviewer that Rufo himself engages in the tactic that he appears to be criticizing in advocates from the left doesn’t mean that Rufo’s opinion is wrong, just that the tactic is the alarm he’s raising in his book.
The opinion of the reviewer that Rufo himself engages in the tactic that he appears to be criticizing in advocates from the left doesn’t mean that Rufo’s opinion is wrong
Yes. People tend to get caught up in the trap of "if you criticize Rufo and his tactics, you must support Wokism."
I didn't say anything about Wokism or Rufo's tactics. I said Matzko's a shitty dickbag reporter/reviewer because he can't report Rufo's work and tactics objectively enough to for anyone to know what they are or if they agree one way or the other.
If you read that as a commentary on Wokism, that's on you.
Lighten up, Francis - I wasn't talking to you.
Most people would have the scruples not to misrepresent others in conversations not directed at them or acknowledge the mistake if they did. At the very least, they’d have the basal wit to recognize that “I wasn’t talking to you.” doesn’t address or justify the misrepresentation.
But you don’t have to worry about any of that because I’m neither talking to nor misrepresenting you.
Poor you.
Further, that by portraying Rufo’s work as such without any direct citation, only your vague inference*, you are not only lying about Rufo’s work but lying to prop up a racist and divisive narrative?
Which is totally different from
if you criticize Rufo and his tactics, you must support Wokism
Or I guess we could continue to pretend Rufo just appeared out of thin air and nobody has any idea who he is or how he's participated in politics in recent years.
Oh look, now I am talking to you. Countdown to pissy, defensive word salad in 3 . . . 2 . . .
... Which is totally different from...
Yes, citing someone's tactics directly and criticizing *their* tactics as such is totally different from presenting your own straw man tactics as someone else's and attacking them.
Sorry these three-sentence word salads are too difficult for you.
Sorry these three-sentence word salads are too difficult for you.
No need to apologize.
Allegedly. No direct example really given.
No. I can know without reading The Principia whether someone is being a stupid dickbag and presenting false equivalences about gravity or physics.
Similarly, everyone can see that when you say "doesn’t mean that Rufo’s opinion is wrong" it deliberately conflicts with "misdirection" and the combination of "puerility" and "incontrovertible evidence of the inherently violent" between yourself and Matzko, the two of you would struggle to find either one of your asses with all four hands whether I agree with you or not.
Also, the national populations of "black people" and "police officers" are nowhere near equal.
Misuse of statistics and epidemiology is the stock in trade of editors, academics and politicians everywhere and everywhen. I have little doubt that 1) big city police departments were founded for the explicit purpose of protecting white neighborhoods from black neighborhoods; 2) that those founding principles continue to run implicitly through the culture of big city police departments; 3) that most police officers are not particularly racist but that cultural pressure prevents them from objecting to abusive tactics or reporting violations of policies and procedures by their fellow officers; 4) that a combination official corruption, powerful police unions, and incestuous political relationships between city hall and police chiefs protects abusive officers from being punished or effectively discouraged from aspiring to Rambo or the Justice League; 5) and that what properly designed epidemiological studies using proper statistical methods are available, do support all of the above opinions.
So the bottom line is:
Conservatives as a rule don't want kids learning that there is such a thing as systemic racism. They would prefer that kids learn that racism is instead an individual trait, and that racism as a dominant force in society has largely been eliminated, by the Civil Rights Act and from social progress thereon forward. Disparities in individual results are the result of disparities in individual effort or individual circumstances, not the result of systemic factors like racism.
BUT, instead of trying to make the intellectual case for this, conservatives like Chris Rufo say "hey folks, be very afraid, what your kids are actually learning is CRITICAL RACE THEORY which is this crazy left-wing academic theory that you don't want your kids to be learning." He is counting on the fact that most people didn't know what CRT actually is. So for his audience, he got to define what CRT is for them. So he got to say that some curriculum, which is perhaps teaching about systemic racism, is "CRT" when that is not, strictly speaking, what CRT is. Does CRT have elements that rely on the concept of systemic racism? Well, yes. Just like for example, biology has elements that rely on concepts of chemistry. That does not mean biology and chemistry are the same thing, just like CRT and "systemic racism" are not the same thing either. But it doesn't matter. He doesn't have to be accurate. He just has to convince his audience - which is composed of less-well-educated conservatives who have never heard of the term before and are already receptive to the idea of getting this curriculum removed from the schools in the first place - that what they are seeing is "close enough" to CRT to satisfy them. And it's not a hard sell.
And then it is up to those conservatives to demand their Republican politicians and Republican school board members to get rid of "CRT" in the classroom. Again, these individuals might know better what CRT really is or is not, but THEIR incentive is to get re-elected, so again for them accuracy doesn't really matter. And the rest of us, we are stuck in this interminable debate of whether some curricular item really is or is not CRT. When that is the debate that people like Rufo WANT us to have. Because to him it is a complete sideshow. IT COMPLETELY DOESN'T MATTER. Objective truth doesn't matter. All that matters is what a large enough majority believes. Welcome to postmodernist hell.
So we see how Rufo, a cynical postmodernist demagogue, is able to take an obscure concept and prey on the ignorance of people to not just enact an agenda, but to alter the meaning of a word and change reality itself in true postmodernist fashion.
And just put left vs. right aside for a moment, it shouldn't be much of a surprise that some people wouldn't be in favor of any person cynically manipulating the public in this way. It's not honest and it's not right. It's not honest when Rufo does it and it's not honest when any demagogue does it.
So you didn't read any of the other comments before posting this drivel? Care to provide a single citation of something that Rufo actually wrote to support your criticism?
Your opinion is utterly worthless. I raised two children who were educated in public school. I know what they were presented with. You can't gaslight me, you mendacious twat.
Let me make it plainer for you then:
Rufo deliberately decided to use CRT to describe everything ‘Anti-Racist.’ What he’s really against is the ideology of ‘Anti-Racism.’ CRT, as such, is a red herring, which is what enables his critics to assert that he doesn’t know what he’s talking about.
Does that make more sense to you?
Rufo believes that "anti-racism" was born in CRT. But first, you should probably define what you mean by "anti-racism" and how it differs from CRT, since, as Rufo often notes, the term "anti-racism" itself is chosen because only a horrible person would be against anti-racism, and has little to do with what its actual practical application would be.
But first, you should probably define what you mean by “anti-racism” and how it differs from CRT
Since the quote is from me, I'll take a stab:
'Anti-Racism' is something that is largely independent of CRT, but that likes to point to CRT as a motte-and-bailey form of legitimization.
CRT really came out of black academics who were looking to theorize disparate social outcomes without resorting to arguments from racial/cultural inferiority. This was not a valueless study - for example when reason points out that some of the worst things government has done to the non-white population comes in the form of public housing policy, minimum wage laws, gun control laws, and occupational licensing laws, this reflects findings that have come out of CRT studies - i.e. that the government has policies that disparately impact non-white communities separately from anything that may or may not being going on in those communities.
"Anti-Racism," on the other hand, reeks of a desperate political ploy by Democrats who have been selling themselves (falsely) as "the folks who brought you the CRA and ended racism" for so long they have no idea how else to sell themselves (and, let's face it, don't really have any other selling points). They are thus increasingly desperate to both find new victim groups to champion (I'm looking at you LGBTQIA+2S) and to hold together the existing racial grievance coalition (please don't leave us, Asians!).
This is not a legitimate field of study, but is straight up politically motivated social manipulation combined with a lucrative grift. "Anti-Racism" justifies itself by pointing to CRT and claiming-by-association its theoretical rigor at the same time that it denies any accusations that it has anything to do with CRT (which should be the first clue that something's not kosher in Denmark).
Rufo thinks he avoided the trap by attacking CRT instead of "Anti-Racism," but he actually face-planted head first into it.
Anti-racism and CRT are the same thing, no matter how hard you try to bullshit about it
It is not an issue of comprehension. Just because you assert it doesn't make it true. Try providing evidence.
I have not read Rufo. Based on what little was presented of his writings, it matches up with my experience.
Oh, sorry. Here is my citation.
https://reason.com/2023/07/21/how-chris-rufo-became-the-thing-he-hates/?comments=true#comment-10164508
It must be having your head up your ass that leads to all the circular thinking.
At this point, I think he has it so far up his ass, he might be able to see daylight.
He sits upon the shoulders of giants. By which I mean he's fat and has his head up his ass.
At least you're now arguing over the merits of the curriculum instead of whether or not a state government is somehow evil for overseeing their state-funded publicy-run schools' curricula.
CRT is and has always been a racist, neo-Marxist belief system.
And as such, it has no place in the US public school curriculum, except perhaps as something to be condemned.
It obviously doesn't to you.
Of course it is. CRT is born of Marxist Critical Theory. This is why Fat Jeffy is defending it.
Conservatives as a rule don’t want kids learning that there is such a thing as systemic racism.
I would put more nuance on it than that.
For one "there is such a thing as systemic racism" steals a base where not everyone agrees that systemic racism is a valid concept. That alone makes mandating that it be taught in elementary school curricula as fact at least a little bit problematic.
Likewise, if on the one hand there is value in distinguishing between what critical races theorists are really saying and what 'Anti-Racist' educators are practicing, there is also value in acknowledging what parents are actually complaining about under the mantle of 'CRT.'
For those of us with kids in the education system right now, it's impossible not to notice how politically one-sided the curriculum is and how kids are pretty forcefully being taught to think in racial terms about absolutely everything all the time and to never separate someone's 'racial identity' from who they are as an individual.
And this is presented as "Anti-Racist."
As junkmailfolder notes below, Rufo has the political sense to realize that the term "Anti-Racist" is pretty deliberately designed to have baked into it the notion that you're a horrible racist if you're against it, and so he's rebranded it as CRT, which has the added factor of "sinister radical academic philosophy."
Where I think this is a failed calculation on his part is very similar to where I think Jordan Peterson failed in his debate with Zizek - i.e. he opened the door for his critics to ignore everything he has to say under the mantle of "he doesn't understand the theories he's criticizing."
So, in short, on the one hand, yes - if Rufo has any deep understanding of Critical Race Theory as such he's never shown it. On the other, it's important not to simply dismiss the very real complaints that parents have about the school system that Rufo is looking to marshal politically.
Conservatives as a rule don’t want kids learning that there is such a thing as systemic racism.
The fact that chemtard radical deathfat started off with this kind of circular reasoning and a strawman means the rest of his post can be summarily dismissed for the long-winded nonsense that it is.
"It is a tale Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, Signifying nothing."
Everything he writes. And yet he persists.
Inceljeff Retarded Pederast sure uses a hell of a lot of verbiage and bandwidth to say very little at best.
Conservatives as a rule don’t want kids learning that there is such a thing as systemic racism.
Oh there definitely is such a thing as systemic racism it's just not what you think it is.
Well said, but incomplete. Racism isn’t just a personal trait, it is also a cultural trait. And even deeper, xenophobia is a genetic survival trait built into the human genome by over a million years of survival of the fittest. So to start with, each human has a tendency to fear “difference” and “others.” Through thousands of years of intelligence overcoming instinct, humans have learned that tribe and village have advantages over family alone; that specialization and trade have advantages over subsistence; that learning from strangers can add to your toolkit; and that complexity frequently increases prosperity and security. It is LEARNING that reduces racism to a primitive instinct and replaces it with tolerance, cooperation and rationality.
Nevertheless, opportunistic politicians and academics have convinced a significant number of people of color that they cannot succeed in the face of microaggression by entrenched white power; made them into dependents while pretending to help them overcome a racist society with the handouts intended to help them; and fueling resentment from the people accused of racism who are being punished unfairly by the politicians and shamed by the academics. The reason racism is no longer a dominant force in American society is that a growing number of people refuse to take the lazy approach, they see that many people of color have escaped the trap and that, although people of color may still be aware of subtle attitudes towards them and justifiably remain cautious in their relations with white people, that their success from their own efforts disproves the cynical narrative.
Those same politicians have managed to convince a significant number of white people that they should resent people of color for the "help" they are being given, to blame them for whatever problems they are having personally and for social ills such as crime and perceived moral decay and for not carrying their weight in the American experiment. Politicians are experts at manipulating people using fear and lies and one of the major reasons that racism is no longer a major force in American society is that most white people no longer believe the politicians or their lies.
Ideas march through history, and like viruses, often mutate as required to survive.
The Marxian framework for leftist movements is to find or even concoct social division and manipulate people by their beneficent intentions to join the movement and memorize the narrative and the glossary. No thinking required.
I find this characterization to more than a little strained. Ideas do not march anywhere; ideas are marched by people. Philosophers frequently promote an "idea" for implementation by politicians. When a particular idea starts to fail as an excuse for imposing government on the public, it's easiest for them to "mutate" the failing idea rather than come up with a totally new idea. The only constant along the route of these marches is the desire of philosophers to feed politicians with the "ideas" they need to convince the people to allow themselves to be used as social guinea pigs by the philosophers. If the people just once said, "Sounds like manure to me," and refused to let the politicians impose the ideas of the philosophers on society, the long march would be over.
Matzko is off to a surreal start with:
“….philosophers they accuse of being “neoliberal,” such as Michel Foucault”
Foucault was a real piece of work, who approached the imposition of social control in the name of ideology with sadistic enthusiasm.
Libertarians should be vey afraid of the Left’s enthusiasm for Surveiller et Punir precisely because Foucault liked people being very afraid.
Foucault . . . approached the imposition of social control in the name of ideology with sadistic enthusiasm
Tell me you've never read Foucault without telling me you've never read Foucault. This is literally the exact opposite of Foucault's stance toward authoritarianism. Nearly his whole career was engaged in the analysis of how authoritarians use discourse control to subjugate individuals.
the Left’s enthusiasm for Surveiller et Punir precisely because Foucault liked people being very afraid
You don't seem to understand that that book is a critique of the way state power uses the concept of law enforcement and criminalization to control populations.
This is on par with interpreting the Declaration of Independence as a pro-monarchist document because it details the ways power can be abused.
You can say the same about Hitler, Goebbels, and Stalin.
That doesn't mean that Foucault opposed authoritarianism. He opposed the form of authority that was in charge at the time he was writing. Like radical leftists then and now, he was likely perfectly happy with other forms of control and authoritarianism. In particular, Foucault had absolutely no problem using state power to expropriate some people and redistribute the money to other people.
You can say the same about Hitler, Goebbels, and Stalin.
No, you can't. You can say that these three guys had whole careers engaged in the practice subjugating individuals.
That doesn’t mean that Foucault opposed authoritarianism.
Again, his whole career as a philosopher was almost exclusively oriented around his opposition to authoritarianism.
Like radical leftists then and now, he was likely perfectly happy with other forms of control and authoritarianism.
Foucault was not a leftist. He rejected Marxism and believed in markets. Hence why he's now called a "neo-liberal." Do you want to see a contemporary Marxist spit? Mention Derrida or Foucault.
In particular, Foucault had absolutely no problem using state power to expropriate some people and redistribute the money to other people.
Examples?
Perhaps, first you should write:
Dude, they already print enough Trump, DeSantis, and Neo-Post-Truth-Nationalist-Fundamentalist Conservative articles.
Oh, you meant write a real honest introspective article on how they went from Pro-Ron Paul, Anti-War, Anti-Deep State, Anti-Bush, Anti-Top-Down-Regulation Libertarians to Reluctantly-Pro-Biden, Pro-Ukraine, Bake-the-Cake, Pro-Globalist libertarians? LOL.
It's not his job to prove that when leftists in 2023 use the same terminology as leftists in 1963, they are referring to the same concepts and ideas.
And "CRT" isn't a "social movement", it is an academic theory and political strategy; those are not some kids that haphazardly borrowed some words they once heard, those are academics that take scholarship, terminology, and history seriously. And you can trace this movement back if you care to; for example, the Obamas were both educated in, and steeped in, critical theory.
Furthermore, objectively, CRT today does refer to the same concepts and ideas as critical theory, neo-Marxism, etc. in the 1960's.
This article is complete garbage.
Reason Commenters:
Why Libertarians Should Become Cynical Demagogues To Advance The Cause of Liberty
Chemjeff:
Why Libertarians should become propagandists and liars for neo-Marxist ideology to advance the cause of liberty.
Apparently, even pretending that neo-Marxism in 2023 is a completely different ideology from neo-Marxism in 1963 is perfectly fine!
NOYB2:
Why Everyone Who Isn't Like Me Is A Marxist
Funny, he never said anything like that. You just don’t like him, because he calls out your leftist bullshit. Same as you hate me, and the rest of us non leftists here. We don’t allow you to get away with your lies and sophistry.
You’re a leftist, and don’t be¡omg here. Time for you to go. I assume you have another barrel of Ben & Jerry’s to devour. So fuck off, and go do that.
Bye bye Fatfuck.
Synonyms of CRT thought:
Systemic racism
Structural racism
Anti-racism
Equity
The fact that Rufo focused on one term that represents a whole shit-load of racist thoughts about society, isn't really the important point.
"A sinister woke ideology, promoted by a shadowy cabal, is infiltrating America's treasured institutions, from your childrens' classrooms to the corporate boardroom. Far-left activists have weaponized anti-racism to capture the commanding heights of politics and culture, thus "effectuating a wholesale moral reversal" under the banner of "diversity, equity, and inclusion."
Seems to be a true statement. I see it in every newsletter email I receive from the CEO of the large hospital system I work for. Every time I receive a new issue of JAMA, its right there in the opinion section without fail. When I go watch my local pro sports team, people are waving DEI related political flags. When I look at patient's demo data in my EMR, there is now a separate section for "sex assigned at birth" and "legal sex".
"When I look at patient’s demo data in my EMR, there is now a separate section for “sex assigned at birth” and “legal sex”."
How are you hurt by any of that? Aren't you pleased that leftists are expending energy on such inconsequential matters instead of pursuing traditional goals like hanging the capitalist by the guts of the bureaucrat?
"Aren’t you pleased that leftists are expending energy on such inconsequential matters?"
No, we’re not pleased that it is being IMPOSED on us using the power of government – directly with new laws; and indirectly by forcing us into (healthcare) collectives where Federal regulations require our employers to comply with it. I strongly support the right of people to refer to themselves with whatever pronouns they prefer and to love any (consenting adult) they like. I object to attempts to try to shame me for being a racist or for simply having light-colored skin, just as people of color resent being treated differently for the least relevant genetic trait we can imagine. Politicians are the problem, not the academics. Academics engage in mental masturbation that would be harmless if people didn’t adopt their ideas and politicians didn’t forcibly impose them on us.
You should always be upset at authoritarian actions to force you to both accept and engage in a false reality. The fact this doesn't bother you should be concerning.
I am grateful that REASON posts a variety of viewpoints and writers, because this is the dumbest fu**ing thing I’ve read here in a very long time.
Rufo has gained traction in part *because* Matzko’s “better path” has utterly failed. More accurately, no real path to success was ever defined, only a utopian destination.
I am grateful that REASON posts a variety of viewpoints and writers, because this is the dumbest fu**ing thing I’ve read here in a very long time.
This is probably the best defense of diversity I've heard at Reason in a decade.
The new school curriculum in Florida wants to teach children that slavery was more like an unpaid internship
The majority of Libertarians don't acknowledge what they really are, and how they only ever enable what they claim to "hate". Many are libertine leftists, hedonists, why nots who only ever attack the restrictions of the right making them handmaidens of leftist authoritarianism. They don't care that they functionally are enablers of the left as they only take the label to fit in with their leftist friends while still being able to disagree on things like taxes.
Academic Agent sums it up, libertarians don't understand power theory, how governments and human systems actually work, and how they only ever expand government and corporate power.
Academic Agent Retrospective #11: Critiquing Libertarianism
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e1gGLfbYdEA
Power Theory only applies to the Prince and to the Sheeple. If you are neither power-hungry nor susceptible to being stampeded; if you see the immense advantages to specializing and trading your efforts with other like-minded contributors to your mutual benefit; if you are willing to tolerate differences in order to promote the more important goal of prosperity and security; then your only interest in the Power System is how to defeat it. Learning to use Power in order to defeat Power is an illusion.
I am not particularly hedonistic, but if you are hedonistic I see no reason to interfere in your pursuit of hedonism as long as you don’t hurt innocent bystanders in the process. If it turns out that your hedonism leads to your starving to death in the woods next winter while suffering from syphilis and heroin addiction, I’m perfectly willing to let that happen too. Libertarians understand the concept of “enabling” all too well and I can assure you that letting the D’s and R’s destroy each other and, potentially taking the nation down with them, is not as painful as resisting the temptation to join the D’s or the R’s as the “lesser of two evils.” If you think the red team or the blue team will ever stop the expansion of government and corporate power then you are part of the problem and I feel sorry for you in your delusion.
None of that matters under unqualified liberal democracy which becomes a game of looting an ever expanding state, dysfunctional clients groups heavily favored.
https://youtu.be/wy4XpbZO5WA?t=1363
The innocent bystanders are many as there are negative externalities to a culture of license, as we see today.They do not just harm themselves, but spread their dysfunctionality and their vote.
The mistake of libertarians is thinking the individual matters, it does not. Under any democratic system especially once women are enfranchised people will become insulated from the consequences of their choices by misplaced mothering, and the natural disposition of rejecting accountability. The weak out number the strong and as such will have their preferences take over in any democracy.
The first time I heard about critical race theory was in 1999 at the University of Florida. I was not in law school though. Just, regular business administration. So when it started popping up all over the place I remembered it from long ago.
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The Nazis are headed to your door and you are still plumping up your footnotes !!
Another amazing example of leftist misdirection.
What is being taught in schools isn't CRT itself - which is the theoretical framework. A CRT world-view (the notion that everyone should ALWAYS view EVERYTHING through the lens of "assumed racism") is what is being taught. Those making up the lessons study CRT, but they are teaching the lessons as if they were facts rather than insidious propaganda / a destructive worldview.
As such, Rufo is an unreliable narrator. Each claim he makes in this book should be taken with a grain of salt, given his overt willingness to weaponize meaning for the sake of political utility.
I am always willing to start with an assumption that people in politics are sincere in what they say and say that they believe until I see evidence otherwise. But seeing someone admit that they are looking to take existing terms and redefine them in a politically useful way is evidence of a lack of sincerity. It is evidence of calculation. I am reminding constantly when looking at people like Rufo of Rep. Dan Crenshaw’s statements about “grifters” and “performance artists” among conservative GOP legislators. His observations apply even more so to people that aren’t elected to anything but have roles of influence in a political movement. Ordinary people with partisan or other strong political beliefs should always be wary of those that are trying to sway them to think and vote in their way while they don’t hold any productive job or responsibility other than as a political “influencer”.
"sow the seeds of their own destruction by alienating the general public"
But this doesn't just happen. Someone like Rufo comes along and MAKES it happen. As mentioned early in the review, it took Rufo going on Tucker Carlson, defining terms in the way he wanted, and getting people worked up about the issue.
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