September 10, 2007
Pundits Ignore Vulnerable Groups
Pundits Ignore Vulnerable Groups
[This letter was published in the Boston Herald on Wednesday September 12, 2007]
Pundits from Robert Putnam to Pat Buchanan share the same limited notion of
diversity. (Jose De La Isla, "Not quite bowled over," September 8, 2007) Nowhere
in this article are the populations of persons with disabilities and elders
mentioned. Is it because they lack a political action committee to make campaign
contributions?
Upper class persons of color, upper class women and upper class homosexuals
show they are diverse. The ethnic lobby shows their diversity as well. But they
exclude poor persons, persons with disabilities and older citizens.
That is bad enough. But upper class journalists who ignore this overt bias
show that they too share the prejudices toward those two groups and have no
shame about doing so.
Roy Bercaw, Editor, ENOUGH ROOM
Not quite bowled over
Gutterball by Harvard’s diversity detractor
By Jose De La Isla
Saturday, September 8, 2007
http://www.bostonherald.com
Opinion & Editorial
Forget presidential politics. The real debate might be taking place outside that
arena. And a good thing, too. The dumbed-down, lightning-fast, popular vanity
answers by presidential aspirants might be irrelevant.
In August, The Wall Street Journal’s deputy editorial page editor, Daniel
Henninger, brought up an important concern about the times we live in. The
header boldly read, “The Death of Diversity.”
He reported that Harvard sociologist Robert Putnam, author of the best seller
“Bowling Alone,” claims after 30,000 interviews in 41 U.S. communities, “People
in ethnically diverse settings don’t want to have much of anything to do with
each other.”
This doesn’t sound very promising for those who believe we can all not only get
along but thrive when real and imagined barriers come down.
That typically happens when our social networks (called “social capital”) do
their job and provide economic and cultural security. But that type of
solidarity seems to go down when immigration is up.
Henninger, who otherwise appears to be sort of middle-of-the-roadish, has a
definite spin on all this. He thinks advocates for campus, corporate and media
diversity “gave short shrift to assimilation” and elevated “differences” to
another category by challenging the old ways in court.
Because the diversity issue (ethnic, race, gender, sexual orientation) was
unnerving, “little wonder the immigration debate is riven with distrust.”
I disagree with Henninger’s perspective.
Diversity issues, at least since the 1970s, have been about fairness standards.
Why should all citizens pay for higher education when their own kids don’t stand
a chance there, or how fair are glass ceilings for our educated, well-qualified
daughters?
Pitting diversity concerns with immigration movements implicitly looks at social
change from a xenophobic point of view. It makes the traditional populations
seem as if they are under jeopardy of some kind because they might feel they are
losing power.
In fact, Putnam says in the first line of his scholarly paper that new ethnic
and social heterogeneities pose both challenges and opportunities not just in
the United States, but in most advanced countries.
In this changing of the guard, especially in Western Europe, the traditional
networks to find a job, get a mate, raise children, enjoy status and even have
prominence within a circle of acquaintances is changing.
Simply put, Putnam says ethnic diversity will increase substantially.
In the short to medium term, immigration and ethnic diversity will challenge the
established social solidarity.
In other words, “different” people will be trying to get into our networks or
will be forming networks of their own.
So far, so good. But now comes Pat Buchanan and others with another
interpretation. They wrongly claim Putnam says greater diversity causes greater
distrust in our country. Imagine that! The increasing lack of trust researchers
have reported since the 1960s happened because of immigrants of the 2000s.
Conveniently misunderstanding what Putnam says misleads the country about an
important insight.
Yes, “bonding” within social groups becomes less solid in the face of diversity
and immigration. But that doesn’t mean there’s not a lot of “bridging” with
non-traditional groups. That’s why Putnam says immigrant societies dampen the
negative effects of diversity by constructing new, more encompassing identities.
Negative-oriented people, like Buchanan, will never get it. They can only look
at a situation and think about what was “lost.” They can’t see all the new
gains.
Or, as Putnam puts it, the main challenge is “to create a new, broader sense of
we.”
Now of those running for president, which candidate is enough of an intellectual
to understand the big picture and lead us there instead of scaring us?
Article URL:
http://www.bostonherald.com/news/opinion/editorial/view.bg?articleid=1030054
[This letter was published in the Boston Herald on Wednesday September 12, 2007]
Pundits from Robert Putnam to Pat Buchanan share the same limited notion of
diversity. (Jose De La Isla, "Not quite bowled over," September 8, 2007) Nowhere
in this article are the populations of persons with disabilities and elders
mentioned. Is it because they lack a political action committee to make campaign
contributions?
Upper class persons of color, upper class women and upper class homosexuals
show they are diverse. The ethnic lobby shows their diversity as well. But they
exclude poor persons, persons with disabilities and older citizens.
That is bad enough. But upper class journalists who ignore this overt bias
show that they too share the prejudices toward those two groups and have no
shame about doing so.
Roy Bercaw, Editor, ENOUGH ROOM
Not quite bowled over
Gutterball by Harvard’s diversity detractor
By Jose De La Isla
Saturday, September 8, 2007
http://www.bostonherald.com
Opinion & Editorial
Forget presidential politics. The real debate might be taking place outside that
arena. And a good thing, too. The dumbed-down, lightning-fast, popular vanity
answers by presidential aspirants might be irrelevant.
In August, The Wall Street Journal’s deputy editorial page editor, Daniel
Henninger, brought up an important concern about the times we live in. The
header boldly read, “The Death of Diversity.”
He reported that Harvard sociologist Robert Putnam, author of the best seller
“Bowling Alone,” claims after 30,000 interviews in 41 U.S. communities, “People
in ethnically diverse settings don’t want to have much of anything to do with
each other.”
This doesn’t sound very promising for those who believe we can all not only get
along but thrive when real and imagined barriers come down.
That typically happens when our social networks (called “social capital”) do
their job and provide economic and cultural security. But that type of
solidarity seems to go down when immigration is up.
Henninger, who otherwise appears to be sort of middle-of-the-roadish, has a
definite spin on all this. He thinks advocates for campus, corporate and media
diversity “gave short shrift to assimilation” and elevated “differences” to
another category by challenging the old ways in court.
Because the diversity issue (ethnic, race, gender, sexual orientation) was
unnerving, “little wonder the immigration debate is riven with distrust.”
I disagree with Henninger’s perspective.
Diversity issues, at least since the 1970s, have been about fairness standards.
Why should all citizens pay for higher education when their own kids don’t stand
a chance there, or how fair are glass ceilings for our educated, well-qualified
daughters?
Pitting diversity concerns with immigration movements implicitly looks at social
change from a xenophobic point of view. It makes the traditional populations
seem as if they are under jeopardy of some kind because they might feel they are
losing power.
In fact, Putnam says in the first line of his scholarly paper that new ethnic
and social heterogeneities pose both challenges and opportunities not just in
the United States, but in most advanced countries.
In this changing of the guard, especially in Western Europe, the traditional
networks to find a job, get a mate, raise children, enjoy status and even have
prominence within a circle of acquaintances is changing.
Simply put, Putnam says ethnic diversity will increase substantially.
In the short to medium term, immigration and ethnic diversity will challenge the
established social solidarity.
In other words, “different” people will be trying to get into our networks or
will be forming networks of their own.
So far, so good. But now comes Pat Buchanan and others with another
interpretation. They wrongly claim Putnam says greater diversity causes greater
distrust in our country. Imagine that! The increasing lack of trust researchers
have reported since the 1960s happened because of immigrants of the 2000s.
Conveniently misunderstanding what Putnam says misleads the country about an
important insight.
Yes, “bonding” within social groups becomes less solid in the face of diversity
and immigration. But that doesn’t mean there’s not a lot of “bridging” with
non-traditional groups. That’s why Putnam says immigrant societies dampen the
negative effects of diversity by constructing new, more encompassing identities.
Negative-oriented people, like Buchanan, will never get it. They can only look
at a situation and think about what was “lost.” They can’t see all the new
gains.
Or, as Putnam puts it, the main challenge is “to create a new, broader sense of
we.”
Now of those running for president, which candidate is enough of an intellectual
to understand the big picture and lead us there instead of scaring us?
Article URL:
http://www.bostonherald.com/news/opinion/editorial/view.bg?articleid=1030054
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