724 pages, Free
Press, ISBN-13: 978-002908102
“Virtually
all contemporary liberal assumptions about the origin of racism, its historical
significance, its contemporary effects, and what to do about it are wrong”,
announces Dinesh D’Souza in The End of
Racism: Principles for a Multiracial Society, another characteristically
thought-provoking and controversial book, and he is to be applauded for
documenting the politically incorrect race facts and discussions of our times,
facts that (sadly) have changed little in the 20+ years since this book was
written. His scrupulously researched study of the history, nature and effects
of racism will certainly ruffle many feathers, particularly those of cultural
relativists and liberal “antiracists” whose opinions he aims to discredit. But
thinkers of all political persuasions would benefit from reading this
conservative’s eloquently presented views as he “excavates beyond the usual
digging sites” to present a unique and troubling vision of the “neurotic
obsession” with race that continues to divide American society.
Much
of what D’Souza says flies in the face of liberal doctrine: he maintains that
there are cultural differences that account for distinct levels of achievement
among races, and that racism cannot be blamed for “black failure”. He argues
that racism is not a universal phenomenon, but is rather a relatively recent
Western intellectual concept, and because we can trace racism’s beginnings we
can likewise bring about its demise. He deals blow after blow to longstanding
myths about race, criticizing the “civil rights industry” (what an awesome
term), rejecting misguided solutions (such as multiculturalism and proportional
representation as “fighting discrimination by practicing it”), and even calls
for a repeal of the near-sacred Civil Rights Act of 1964 (good luck with that). This is not an easy book to read,
but it is an important one, and even if more than a few disagree with D’Souza’s
assumptions and arguments, all should welcome his well-considered, insightful
treatment of this immensely difficult topic.
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