Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Peter Schiff: Logic and Objective Analysis Have Come to be Considered "White" Concepts

The Debate Debate
By Peter Schiff

While there is wide agreement that the cost of college education has risen far faster than the incomes of most Americans, there is some debate as to whether the quality of the product has kept pace with the price. Not surprisingly, almost all who argue that it has (college administrators, professors, and populist politicians) are deeply invested either ideologically or financially in the system itself. More objective observers see a bureaucratic, inefficient, and hopelessly out of touch ivory tower that is bleeding the country of its savings, and more tragically, its intellectual acuity.

Nowhere is this more clearly illustrated than in the demise of collegiate debate. This once courtly rhetorical sparring ground for class presidents and lawyers-in-training is supposed to be forum for ideas, proofs, and conclusions. And while traditional debates did not typically offer high drama, they did teach students how to produce objectively superior arguments, a skill that many types of potential employers would value. But more recently, debate has succumbed to the worst aspects of moral relativism, academic sloth and politically correct dogma that have transformed it into an unintelligible mix of performance art and petty politics. It's not a debate, but we pretend it is.

The 2014 National Championship of the Cross Examination Debate Association (CEDA), one of collegiate debate's governing bodies, made headlines as the first to include two all-African-American finalist teams. The winning team, from Towson University in Maryland, was the first ever comprised solely of African-American women. The results were heralded as a triumph for minority achievement in a field traditionally dominated by white "elites." But this success has come at a great cost: A dramatic change in the rules of the game. The championships, as well as dozens of the CEDA sanctioned debates and championships, are easily found on YouTube. I challenge anyone to watch any of those "debates" and describe
the ideas and arguments that participants are supposedly addressing.

At this year's championship, the actual debate question concerned the wisdom of restricting the war powers of the U.S. president. But instead of addressing one of the most important U.S. foreign policy questions of the past half century, the two teams focused exclusively on how the U.S. was supposedly "at war" with poor black people. Although these arguments were clearly off-subject, it seems that the topic did not matter. The "debate" came off as a mix of rap, personal invective, speed talking, soapbox harangue, and explicative filled rants. When one contestant's time expired, he "brilliantly" yelled "F-ck the time!" As was the case in 2013, when another African American team took the championship, the arguments of the winners completely ignored the stated resolution, and instead used personal experience to challenge the "injustice" of the very notion of debate itself. But subjective arguments have been traditionally dismissed as poor rhetoric. "I won the lottery" is not a good argument in favor of the lottery system.

But in recent years, logic and objective analysis have come to be considered "white" concepts. In an Atlantic Monthly article (Apr. 16), Osagie Obasogie, a liberal law professor from University of California, is quoted as saying "Various procedures - regardless of whether we're talking about debate formats or law- have the ability to hide the subjective experiences that shape these seemingly 'objective' and 'rational' rules. ...This is the power of racial subordination: making the viewpoint of the dominant group seem like the only true reality." In other words debates, like much in society, was devised by white people to favor white people. This idea, which is the essence of affirmative action, may make professors and students feel good about themselves, but it simply means that minorities have license to underachieve.

Creating an alternate set of rules for people of different backgrounds creates huge problems. What would have happened to Venus and Serena Williams had tennis officials drew up a special set of rules for them to compensate for their background? While they may have won more tournaments, they would not have been pushed to achieve their true potential and their victories would have been empty achievements. While it's true that they faced more obstacles than privileged players from the suburbs, changing the rules to allow for their subjective experiences would have prevented their ultimate success.

That is exactly what is happening today, not just in debate tournaments, but across universities in general. Excuses are being made and rules are being bent in order to account for our personal differences, race, gender and sexual orientation in particular. This trend is producing a generation of marginally skilled, professionally unprepared graduates. The poor quality of our higher education means that we can't compete with other nations who insist on educating their young people through "objective" and "oppressive" systems. This can also be said of our economy. Dumbed down and subjective criteria allow us to pretend that our economy is growing even as living standards are falling, the labor force is shrinking, savings are evaporating, and opportunity is more and more elusive. Rather than admit the obvious, that we have a remedial economy, we have consistently redefined success downward with revisions to tools we use to measure our economy like GDP, inflation and unemployment.  See a deeper analysis of this trend in may latest special report, Taxed By Debt.

Like with our deteriorating educational system, our economy no longer measures up to previous standards of performance. In education, you can see the difference through comparison to a century old Jr. High School test that I believe would stymie most of today's college graduates. Our economic deterioration can be seen in our high trade deficits, big budget deficits, high public and private debt levels and the explosion in the number of people who rely on government assistance be it in the form of welfare, food stamps, or disability.

However, according to many economists, none of this is cause for concern as it is simply the way things work in our new "consumer-based," "service-sector," economy. Instead of growth through savings, capital investment, and production, we now rely on money printing, asset bubbles, leverage, and consumer credit. Inflation, which was once acknowledged as being bad, is now considered good. Persistent trade deficits, once a sign of economic distress, are now considered signs of strong domestic demand. Instead of dealing painfully with intractable problems, we have redefined our liabilities as assets and declared victory.

In the end, will awarding debate championships to undisciplined, barely comprehensible minority students really help these individuals succeed in life? No law firm or corporation will look to hire debate winners as the competitions have now lost all relevance. Similarly, dumbing down standards to whitewash our poor economy performance will only worsen our problems.  Fortunately the Supreme Court last week, with its decision to support Michigan's campaign to end race-based selection practices at state universities, took a tiny step in dismantling this lunacy. But we must be on the lookout for much lower profile aspects of the same confrontation. The front lines are everywhere.

Peter Schiff is the CEO and Chief Global Strategist of Euro Pacific Capital and best-selling author of The Real Crash: America's Coming Bankruptcy - How to Save Yourself and Your Country

23 comments:

  1. Black communities really are their own worst enemy's at times.

    Spending time in low income black populated areas, I can't tell you how many times I've seen some black kid ridiculed for using proper English instead of ghetto slang, the suggestion being he's or Oreo cookie or something along those lines.

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    1. A black kid has never been ridiculed by his peers for speaking proper English.

      Delete
    2. And you know this how? I went to an all girls high school in wash dc and I have personally witnessed this type of ridicule and it is harsh in the extreme.

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    3. JW- troll. Ignorant troll. Black kids are beaten EVERY DAY by their black "peers" for "acting white".

      Delete
    4. So saith the all seeing, all knowing Wolfgang-troll, whose argumentation methodology proves Schiff's thesis: "no he hasn't cause I said so."

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    5. You have obviously never spent 1 minute of your miserable life in a ghetto JW.

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    6. what is your deal?? do you think you are funny? do you really not have anything better to do? i feel sorry for you, i can just imagine what goes thru your head as you sit in your mom's basement.... "hmmmm, its 10 pm on a tuesday night, time to go troll wenzel's blog"

      Delete
    7. mang, he's Not sitting in his mom's basement. He's sitting in his employers office. A gooberment employer. Who the hell else has the time and wants to put n the effort to do what he/she/it does?

      - Helot

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    8. "A black kid has never been ridiculed by his peers for speaking proper English."

      Guys, this is why I maintain this person is just a plain internet troll playing with your heads for fun.

      Delete
    9. Who is the bigger fool: The fool or people who argue with the fool?

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    10. Now you've really revealed yourself, Jerry.
      What kind of privileged white sheltered world have you lived in?

      I don't know a single black kid in my various schools who spoke proper English and *wasn't* ridiculed.

      Delete
  2. Welcome to the third world.

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    1. Only huge amounts of wealth allow people to become this stupid. The wealth isn't found in the third world, nor this level of idiocy and stupidity, even among the poorest and least educated.

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    2. Anonymous (4/29/14 11:13 PM) has a point. There are all sorts of politically correct "problems" that couldn't even be perceived as problems without a certain degree of wealth, prosperity and comfort being previously achieved.

      People who live within a fantasy world of comfort and complacency have the luxury of acting holier-than-thou about the environment, sweatshops in foreign countries, "fair trade" coffee, etc.

      People who actually have to expend real time and real effort to *produce* something of economic value to feed, clothe and shelter themselves and save for the future do not have that luxury.

      Idle hands are the devil's playthings. Idle minds too.

      Delete
  3. I just watched 20 minutes of this debate and it's far worse than just a benign deterioration of intellectual standards. I couldn't believe what I was watching. There really was rapping (on both sides), stomping of the feet, hand-clapping, yelling, emphatic hand waving and just really poor English.

    I'm embarrassed that most academics have such low expectations of black people to the point that they're giving awards for this kind of behavior.

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    1. "such low expectations of black people to the point that they're giving awards for this kind of behavior."

      Thats The New America. The one the Power Elite wish to create. It's a Hunger Games kind of thing, eh?

      Top Down culture creation?

      "The man" forms you. ?

      - Helot

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  4. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HFbQftMe6qY <---debate link

    What in the hell did I just watch?

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    1. Please tell me that it was actually from the cutting room floor of an old Monty Python movie.

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  5. CEDA hasn't gone far enough. They need to extend their logic and allow participants to carry TEC-9s, so they can emphasize certain key points of their argument with their opponents.

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    1. I swear, watching parts of that debate(I could never watch the whole thing, I got the gist of it in less than 5 minutes) was like watching a cut scene from "Idiocracy".

      lol, you're comment about Tec-9's reminded me of President Camacho:

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Crdao-yNAIA

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    2. Mike Judge is a genius. I hope are all watching his brilliant "Silicon Valley".

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  6. Ok...so how would one set up a competing cross examination debate society? Shouldn't be too difficult.

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  7. Look up the Sokal affair, aka the Sokal hoax, which, reports Wikipedia, was "a publishing hoax perpetrated by Alan Sokal, a physics professor at New York University. In 1996, Sokal [who is a leftist] submitted an article to Social Text, an academic journal of postmodern cultural studies. The submission was an experiment to test the journal's intellectual rigor and, specifically, to investigate whether 'a leading North American journal of cultural studies – whose editorial collective includes such luminaries as Fredric Jameson and Andrew Ross – [would] publish an article liberally salted with nonsense if (a) it sounded good and (b) it flattered the editors' ideological preconceptions'."

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