benlehman: (Default)
benlehman ([personal profile] benlehman) wrote2010-02-09 11:06 pm

The Victim test

I've been thinking about this lately. One thing which often comes up in discussions of discrimination is "but I'm discriminated against for being [white, conservative, male, whatever.]" My initial thought range here is "conservative."

I think that a lot of conservatives use this argument (this is me giving them the benefit of the doubt: that they're not just immature losers) is because they see it working with liberals, but don't really understand why. For instance, in some discussions, I'm going to privilege a woman speaking over a man speaking, for any number of reasons. Conservatives see that privileging, and want a piece of it, but don't really understand how to get it.

To be fair, that they are discriminated against is almost certainly true on some level. I cannot imagine any category which someone could belong to which would not cause someone to be biased against them in some way, particularly if we're going to include unconscious bias. The question is: do I have to give a fuck? Or, in other words, are they discriminated against enough that I should care?

I have found my line in the sand for this!

"If, in your society, someone who belongs to said group has suffered un-punished murder at the hands of a group -OR- uninvestigated murder at the hands of the police, explicitly due to them being a member of said group. Furthermore, the more recently this is the case, the more I give a fuck."

So. Gays? Check. Black people? Super-check. Women? Yeah, although not as much as black people. Indians? Jesus Christ.

Jews? Sorta check.

So the question is: has anyone ever been institutionally murdered in the US for being a conservative?

The answer is yes. During the revolutionary war, people were killed -- sometimes in brutal ways -- for the crime of being Loyalists. Now, this was a long time ago. But if a conservative wants to identify themselves with the Loyalist faction (which is, indeed, their intellectual ancestry) I will grant them a privileged voice in appropriate conversations*. But I'm not sure any conservative I know would be willing to do that.

* Offer also extends to communists, who were much more recently institutionally murdered in the US.

(Anonymous) 2010-02-11 03:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Millions or no, the guy was a relatively benign proto-wacko at worst, but his wife and children were shot by snipers. The people who organized and carried out that operation weren't put in jail. I'm just providing a counter-example here.

But my real point isn't that conservatives of a certain stripe have any right to cry discrimination, it's that they *fear* discrimination. There's a strong feeling among some on the right that things don't have to change much before conservatives find themselves hauled off in handcuffs and shot; indeed, a suspicion that there are those who are just waiting for the opportunity. It's a feeling that you will find repeated in every identifiable minority group in America whether their experience of brutality is current, recent, or hundreds of years past.

[identity profile] platonic1.livejournal.com 2010-02-11 06:37 pm (UTC)(link)
I've been thinking about this all morning. You've clearly struck a nerve.

What I think you're saying here is that you're looking to draw a line for yourself in what claims of discrimination you're going to take seriously, and which you won't, which is a reasonable distinction to make.

Where I disagree is in your assessment of why a conservative would make such a claim in the first place. For "conservative" I'm going to say "person of privileged race and relatively traditional political and social views". That's not a universally valid definition, but I think it works here. Why would such a person ever claim to be discriminated against?

Conservatives view liberty as something that was historically won and must be continually protected. It's something that can vanish in the course of a single generation or less. Conservatives fear this acutely. Marginalizing them, say by telling them they're too privileged for their complaints to carry any weight, is a step towards ultimately depriving them of their liberty.

As for the conservative response to, for example, women claiming discrimination, based on my observations it's not so much a case of "wanting a piece of the pie" as being somewhat bewildered at the approach they're taking. Many conservatives mythologize self-reliance, so asking society to redress its wrongs might seem outré.

[identity profile] benlehman.livejournal.com 2010-02-11 07:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Tony, I don't get this. Are you arguing with me? Because, even though you're framing your response like an argument, you're saying something that is unrelated to the things I'm saying.

You're spending a lot of time talking about things that people believe or feel which are not really part of my above assessment. For these purposes, I don't care whether, to someone on the right wing, Ruby Ridge feels just like Leo Frank because it isn't just like Leo Frank.

Secondly, your last paragraph may be true of many self-identified conservatives, but is not true of this particular sub-group, because I'm talking about people who are asking for special treatment based on their political beliefs. Thus, while they may be confused about the actual reasons for such treatment, they're clearly not opposed to receiving it.

yrs--
--Ben

(Anonymous) 2010-02-12 01:29 am (UTC)(link)
Huh. I thought it was a propos, but I may be completely missing what you're getting at.

I took your post as being about who can and can't legitimately claim to be discriminated against as a matter of public discourse. It sounded like maybe you were saying conservatives didn't have this right.

So I think my answer there is that anybody can claim to have been discriminated against, and it's important to examine those claims. Feeling matter because they are part of the motivation for claims of discrimination: i.e. as opposed to seeing there's pie to be had and wanting to get a piece of it.

If your argument is about who can make a claim for some kind of special treatment or recompense on the basis of being discriminated against, that's a very different matter. Re-reading and trying to understand, I see that maybe that's what you were talking about all along.