Commentary/Rajeev Srinivasan
The discreet rage of the bourgeoisie: Are reservations necessary
The US, as a pluralistic society, shares some of
the characteristics of India's society: it is widely known that there are
large numbers of non-whites in a population composed mostly of white
people. What is less well-known is that in some parts of the US, whites
will soon be less than 50 per cent of the population.
According to Stanford professor and journalist Dale
Maharidge (a winner of the Pulitzer Prize for his previous work), California
is where this will happen first, as soon as 1998. And California
is the place where everything happens first, the bellwether state whose
fads, fashions and fancies generally become nationwide trends soon thereafter.
In the US context, the term 'minority'
applies to everyone who has been historically disadvantaged in comparison to white
males--and this includes blacks, Hispanics (Spanish speakers), Asians, and
women of all races. But what is happening to whites is that they will become
a numerical minority. To avoid confusion, I shall refer to racial minorities
as 'non-whites'.
According to Maharidge, whose book The Coming
White Minority in California
has received considerable publicity, the paranoias of whites, both the
articulated fears and the hidden ones, are driving
the US towards a new intolerance. He believes whites are fundamentally
acculturated to be unable to deal with being in the position of a numerical
minority.
The first victim of this newly fashionable prejudice
is the sense of fair play and the philosophy of support for the disadvantaged,
which has been a mainstay of American political thought since the
1960s. In other words, the Civil Rights Movement, which gave representation
and hope to non-whites, is now under serious attack.
In California, in the last two years, two ballot
propositions won handsomely. One was Proposition 187, which essentially
barred all sorts of support for illegal immigrants; this was aimed at
the large floating population of economic migrants from Mexico and Central
America -- Guatemala, El Salvador. Apparently forgotten is the fact that
they are the essential agricultural labour for California.
The second, Proposition 209, passed in November 1996,
completely negates the concept of civil rights, as propounded by Martin
Luther King and others. It argues that any race-based or gender-based positive
discrimination is illegal. In one fell swoop, the legislation wipes
out any suggestion of a helping hand for those who are disadvantaged, in
education or hiring.
The story of Proposition 209 is an ongoing saga.
The American Civil Liberties Union filed suit against it, and a temporary
restraining order has been placed on it by a federal judge in San Francisco.
Ironically, this judge is a former civil rights lawyer. Incidentally,
the US justice department also announced it would oppose the legislation,
as it considers it unconstitutional.
What is worrisome about the arguments made in favour
of these propositions is that they depend on easily disproved and fallacious
axioms: 'merit' should be the only criterion, we have a level playing field,
and so nobody should be given any particular help.
Unfortunately, none of these 'axioms' is
true. First of all, 'merit' is considerably more complicated than pure grades alone.
In fact, if grades were to be the only criterion, almost 70 per cent of the
seats at the prestigious University of California, Berkeley, would go to Asians, who
are the most studious young people. It is not entirely clear that
this is what the proponents of Proposition 209 have in mind.
It is abundantly clear that we do not yet have a
level playing field. We have been deluged lately with reports of sexual harassment
and rapes in the army: the Pentagon estimates 55 per cent of all women in
the armed forces in the US -- more than 100,000 female soldiers--have been
subject to harassment.
Similarly, large companies, such as Texaco and Shell
Oil have recently been found guilty of systematically denying promotions
and job advancement to blacks. Texaco settled a class-action suit by paying
$170 million in damages and by agreeing to actively increase the number of
non-whites and women in management positions.
A report in the San Jose Mercury News alleged recently
that the CIA, as part of its Iran-Contra arrangement to supply guns to
anti-Communists in Nicaragua, hit upon the ingenious idea of financing
this by supplying crack cocaine -- an extremely addictive substance -- to inner-city
blacks in Los Angeles and other cities. (Incidentally, the London
Times reported recently that Israel had hit upon a similar strategy -- supplying
pot -- to keep the Egyptian army and economy off balance!)
Even after decades of affirmative action, the vast
majority of top managers in the US are white males. Since hiring managers
prefer to hire others like them, we can then imagine the unconscious advantages
a white male has in an organisation. The number of women managers has increased
a little, but women still only earn 72 cents for every dollar a male
in a comparable job earns.
So all this talk about level playing field is pure
nonsense. It is especially disturbing that it is not just the average
racist who believes it, but even the professionals of Silicon Valley,
who have reason more than most others to see multiculturalism in action: The
Valley is full of non-whites doing quite well indeed. The discreet
rage of the bourgeoisie worries me, because they actually vote.
It must be abundantly clear what all this has to
do with India. The very same arguments are put forth by the enraged bourgeoisie
of India to attempt to suppress reservations for disadvantaged groups
there. And the arguments are equally false; the one true difference with the
US is that the disadvantaged groups in India have the strength of
numbers.
I am amused whenever I hear a fellow Indian-American
holding forth about the evils of reservations. For almost all of us are beneficiaries of
the 'reservations' of the Civil Rights Acts,
which put an end to the Asian Exclusion Act as recently as 1965. Before that time,
an Indian had to be a world-famous scientist or artist to be able to emigrate
to the US; and face legal racism once here, as well.
I do believe that some Indians have found their educational
and career opportunities somewhat curtailed in India; one of
my vehement friends tells me of his fury at this 'discrimination'.
This attitude is reflected in the demeanour of the average diaspora Indian. For example,
the Rediff Chat with V P Singh, in all honesty, was an electronic
lynching, mostly on the issue of Mandal.
The paradox then is that the political forces in
India that support egalitarianism and liberalism are also indifferent
nationalists; in fact their rhetoric even suggests a belief in that tired,
hoary colonial chestnut: 'India is not a single nation, but
an uneasy coalition of nations'. On the other hand, the outspoken nationalists
are notoriously coy on the issue of equal opportunity.
Perhaps this is an opportunity for a new political
ideology altogether: how about an egalitarian nationalist movement? You heard
it here first. Whoever manages to pull this positioning off will be guaranteed
a plurality.
The fact of the matter is that the US, out of sheer
compelling need for competitiveness, will attempt to empower all of its
citizens, regardless of race and gender. Similarly, India must also ensure
that every one of its citizens is given equal opportunity: the disadvantaged are no
longer content to be second class citizens.
Without equal opportunity, the result may be armed
struggle, as in South Africa. Nobody wants Maoists like the People's War
Group or the equivalent of Peru's Shining Path to set out the agenda for
India's future, I daresay. It is a simple calculus of self-preservation for
all Indians. Better a V P Singh than a Kondapalli Sitaramaiah or an Abimael
Guzman.
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