Is antiracism mainly virtue signaling or an earnest attempt to change minds?
Push and pull on Vox Conversations with John McWhorter, author of Woke Racism: How a New Religion has Betrayed Black America, for whom antiracism "functions more like a religion than an ideology or a political project. And its adherents are obsessed with 'performing' virtue, not for the sake of societal change but because of the sense of purpose it offers them."
Good listening:
Ta-Nehisi Coates writes this article, and people are writing about it as if it was the second coming. And it wasn’t that I was thinking, “Oh, this isn’t that good.” I was just thinking, “Why are people acting as if he’s opening up a discussion that we’ve never had before, or that was only had, say, 40 or 50 years ago?” And I realized, “Okay, you see, it was scripture.” People were reading it not as something new — they weren’t learning from it. He was saying something they already knew well. And I thought to myself, “That’s interesting. To them, that article is like reading from the New Testament.”