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One Drop-Still - A racialist's Census.


'THE United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  is the only country in the world in which a white woman can give birth to a black baby but a black woman cannot give birth to a white baby." Not long ago, when the civil-rights movement was unquestionably un·ques·tion·a·ble  
adj.
Beyond question or doubt. See Synonyms at authentic.



un·question·a·bil
 on the side of the angels, liberals were fond of pointing that out, with a mixture of dismay and smugness. How stupid! they said. You were deemed black if either of your parents was black. Indeed, you were deemed black even if your only black ancestor was one great- grandparent-the infamous drop" rule made it so.

That rule was essential to the either-or logic of the Jim Crow Jim Crow

Negro stereotype popularized by 19th-century minstrel shows. [Am. Hist.: Van Doren, 138]

See : Bigotry
 system, in which being only part-black was as inconceivable as being part- pregnant. Nor was there room for people with other racial identities; those who were not white were thrown into the category of-as the Census Bureau Noun 1. Census Bureau - the bureau of the Commerce Department responsible for taking the census; provides demographic information and analyses about the population of the United States
Bureau of the Census
 traditionally termed it-"Negroes and other races." Under this system, if you recognized the remarkably mixed ancestry of a Tiger Woods Editing of this page by unregistered or newly registered users is currently disabled. , what public school would you assign him to? Where would you have him sit on the bus?

Jim Crow is now dead, but its legacy lives on in current racial- classification practices. Ironically, though, it is now those on the left, who are pleased to call themselves liberals, who insist that we all belong in rigid, mutually exclusive Adj. 1. mutually exclusive - unable to be both true at the same time
contradictory

incompatible - not compatible; "incompatible personalities"; "incompatible colors"
, color-coded compartments. Their views, alas, are reflected in the decisions made recently about the Census of 2000, now in mailboxes throughout the country.

In the past, the Census Bureau was not totally oblivious to the reality of the American marital melting pot melting pot

America as the home of many races and cultures. [Am. Pop. Culture: Misc.]

See : America
. To the question about "ancestry or ethnic origin" that appeared in both the 1980 and 1990 Censuses, it was allowable to give as many as three answers. You could report your ancestry as German, Italian, and Irish, or as Polish, Greek, and Swedish. But when it came to identifying yourself racially, no such latitude was given. The "races" of the United States were assumed to be mutually exclusive categories, and you could name only one.

This rigid rule came under growing criticism in the 1990s because of the spectacular surge in intermarriage in·ter·mar·ry  
intr.v. in·ter·mar·ried, in·ter·mar·ry·ing, in·ter·mar·ries
1. To marry a member of another group.

2. To be bound together by the marriages of members.

3.
 between Americans of different "races." In some Asian groups-not so long ago categorized as "Orientals" and forbidden to marry non-Asians in some states-a majority of current marriages are to non-Asians, mostly whites. Fully half of all American Indians American Indians: see Americas, antiquity and prehistory of the; Natives, Middle American; Natives, North American; Natives, South American.  today are married to non-Indians. Even black/white intermarriages, once illegal in all southern states Southern States
U.S.

Confederacy

government of 11 Southern states that left the Union in 1860. [Am. Hist.: EB, III: 73]

Dixie

popular name for Southern states in U.S. and for song. [Am. Hist.
 and taboo in all but the most cosmopolitan communities, are by now far from uncommon. More than one in eight African Americans who married in 1994 had white spouses, and that figure is doubtless higher by now. The rapid growth in the number of children born of racially mixed unions, and the resentment of their parents at being forced to put the child in just one racial box, forced the planners of the 2000 Census to recognize the new reality. It would now be possible, they announced, for racially mixed Americans to identify with more than one racial group when they fill out their forms.

In the infighting in·fight·ing  
n.
1. Contentious rivalry or disagreement among members of a group or organization: infighting on the President's staff.

2. Fighting or boxing at close range.
 that led up to the decision, the battle to preserve the old, mutually exclusive conception of race was led, not by white dinosaurs, but by the major civil-rights organizations. If a significant proportion of African Americans reported themselves as partly white, they worried, it could mean fewer affirmative-action slots at colleges and universities, fewer jobs for black applicants, a smaller share of public contracts set aside for black-owned businesses, fewer safe black seats on city councils, in state legislatures, and in Congress. All of these programs take proportional representation proportional representation: see representation.
proportional representation

Electoral system in which the share of seats held by a political party in the legislature closely matches the share of popular votes it received.
 as the goal, so a decline in the total numbers of a minority group means a reduced entitlement.

In a 1995 Vanderbilt Law Review The Vanderbilt Law Review is Vanderbilt University Law School's flagship academic journal. The law review is published six times per year. [1] The Vanderbilt Law Review is ranked tenth among general-topic law reviews, based upon the number of times its articles are  article, an African-American attorney pursued the implications of the new "civil rights" position on this issue to its appalling but logical conclusion. Since race was now being used to award societal benefits, and properly so, he argued, it was necessary to devise new legal tools to prevent "racial fraud." Whites would have a much better chance of getting into the school of their choice or of finding a desirable job if they claimed they were black. To prevent that, the author called for a stricter racial-classification system for all Americans, with "fines and immediate job or benefit termination" for those who "falsified their racial identity." What was needed was a new body of law that recognized the "permanent importance" of racial divisions.

Of course, many of our states had such laws before; these laws were essential to the Jim Crow system. For example, a 1924 Virginia statute required statewide racial registration and provided a year in jail as the penalty for making a "false" report of oneracial identity. Obviously, this was designed to discourage blacks from attempting to "pass" as white. One of the arguments advanced by the plaintiffs in Plessy v. Ferguson Plessy v. Ferguson, case decided by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1896. The court upheld an 1890 Louisiana statute mandating racially segregated but equal railroad carriages, ruling that the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth amendment to the U.S.  was that Homer Plessy Homer Plessy (March 17, 1863 – March 1, 1925) was the American plaintiff in the United States Supreme Court decision in Plessy v. Ferguson. Arrested, tried and convicted of a violation of Louisiana's racial segregation laws — his great-grandmother was black  was entitled to sit in the "white" railroad car because he was white, being only one-eighth black. But the Supreme Court was not impressed, declaring that it was up to the state of Louisiana CODE, OF LOUISIANA. In 1822, Peter Derbigny, Edward Livingston, and Moreau Lislet, were selected by the legislature to revise and amend the civil code, and to add to it such laws still in force as were not included therein.  to decide "the proportion of colored blood necessary to constitute a colored person Noun 1. colored person - a United States term for Blacks that is now considered offensive
colored

archaicism, archaism - the use of an archaic expression
." To be one-eighth black in Louisiana was to be black-that was that. It is breathtaking to find old ideas about "blood" now resuscitated re·sus·ci·tate  
v. re·sus·ci·tat·ed, re·sus·ci·tat·ing, re·sus·ci·tates

v.tr.
To restore consciousness, vigor, or life to. See Synonyms at revive.

v.intr.
To regain consciousness.
 in a respectable law review, and by an African-American scholar. The fear now is that whites will try to "pass" as black. We have come a long, long way from the days of the Brown litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute.

When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation.
, when Thurgood Marshall For people and institutions etc. named after Thurgood Marshall, see .
Thurgood Marshall (July 2, 1908 – January 24, 1993) was an American jurist and the first African American to serve on the Supreme Court of the United States.
 insisted that "classifications and distinctions based upon race or color have no moral or legal validity in our society."

Fortunately, the attempts of the civil-rights organizations to preserve "racial purity" were unsuccessful. The Census Bureau agreed to modify the instructions that accompanied the race question on the 2000 Census, and to indicate that it was possible to choose two or even more racial identities. Homer Plessy could say that he was both white and black, if he chose. Racially mixed Americans would be counted as they wished to be counted.

"Counted" in the simple sense that they may record their perceptions of their own racial identity. But what they report themselves to be, it has now become clear, will be of no practical import. The Office of Management and Budget The Office of Management and Budget (OMB), formerly the Bureau of the Budget, is an agency of the federal government that evaluates, formulates, and coordinates management procedures and program objectives within and among departments and agencies of the Executive Branch.  has just issued guidelines governing how all federal agencies are to employ the racial and ethnic data gathered on the 2000 Census. Those guidelines reveal that the civil-rights lobby lost the battle but won the war. When it comes to figuring out the racial composition of the population for purposes of "civil rights monitoring and enforcement" (i.e., to set quotas, goals, or targets in education, employment, and public contracting, and to determine whether racial minorities can claim that their right to political representation has been "diluted"), the complex identifications of racially mixed Americans will be ignored.

Though the Bureau will not tabulate (1) To arrange data into a columnar format.

(2) To sum and print totals.
 data for every possible racial combination, it will keep track of a mind- boggling 63, so that we will have figures, for example, on the number of people who consider themselves part-white, part-black, and part-American Indian. But when the figures are to be used to determine whether civil-rights laws have been violated, these distinctions will disappear. Citizens who say they are not only white but also a member of a "minority race" will be counted as belonging to the "minority race"-period. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, for these purposes, it is still the case that "a white woman can give birth to a black baby but a black woman cannot give birth to a white baby." If you have enough black or Asian "blood" to mention it on the census form at all, you will be put in the black or Asian column that the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and similar agencies will be using to decide whether some company has "enough" employees of the right kind.

This decision means that civil-rights groups need not fear that the number of their constituents will be reduced. Indeed, they will grow, if Americans of mixed race who reported themselves simply as white on past censuses now choose to mention that they have black ancestry as well. That mention will land them in the black column.

The most dramatic, indeed bizarre, effect will be on the enumeration 1. (mathematics) enumeration - A bijection with the natural numbers; a counted set.

Compare well-ordered.
2. (programming) enumeration - enumerated type.
 of the American Indian American Indian
 or Native American or Amerindian or indigenous American

Any member of the various aboriginal peoples of the Western Hemisphere, with the exception of the Eskimos (Inuit) and the Aleuts.
 population. A mere 2.1 million people checked the "American Indian, Eskimo, Aleut" box on the 1990 Census race question. That is the figure everyone uses for the Indian population in that year. But the separate question about "ancestry or ethnic origin" on the same Census, on which multiple choices were possible, yielded a staggering 8.7 million people who claimed to have some Indian ancestors. If all of the additional 6.6 million identify themselves as both Indian and something else on the 2000 Census race question, now that multiple race choices are possible, the Indian-population figures used for purposes of civil-rights enforcement will suddenly quadruple. And most of these born-again Indians will be thoroughly assimilated Americans who have no contact or cultural connection to any Indian tribe INDIAN TRIBE. A separate and distinct community or body of the aboriginal Indian race of men found in the United States.
     2. Such a tribe, situated within the boundaries of a state, and exercising the powers of government and, sovereignty, under the national
 today; but they will now count as if they had never left the reservation.

Some of us hoped that making it possible to give multiple answers to the race question would reveal a picture of such intricate complexity that it would call into question the very effort to divide us all into racial boxes. Sadly, our federal government today is attempting to prevent this fate, by retabulating the raw information in a manner that seems designed to ensure the "permanent importance"-as that Vanderbilt Law Review contributor put it-of race.

Deplorable though this is, it is too simple to say flatly that we should stop gathering any information at all about the racial and ethnic composition of the U.S. population. I have been strongly tempted to take the abolitionist position on this issue, and I respect Ward Connerly Wardell Connerly (born June 15, 1939) is a political activist, businessman, and former University of California Regent. He is also the founder and the chairman of the American Civil Rights Institute, a national non-profit organization in opposition to racial and gender preferences.  and others who do. I'm certainly disgusted to see that Americans who have been sent the Census short form-and they are five out of six of us-are asked to provide virtually no information except what racial box they belong in. Nevertheless, I have regretfully re·gret·ful  
adj.
Full of regret; sorrowful or sorry.



re·gretful·ly adv.

re·gret
 concluded that it is impractical and unwise to go to the extreme that many of my comrades in the anti- preference camp advocate.

Why? As early as the middle of the 19th century, the United States made its decennial de·cen·ni·al  
adj.
1. Relating to or lasting for ten years.

2. Occurring every ten years.

n.
A tenth anniversary.
 census into something more than a simple head count of the population. The 1850 Census was the first to inquire into such matters as who had been born abroad and in what country, the occupations Americans were engaged in, and the school attendance of their children. Subsequent enumerations added questions about income and unemployment, housing, modes of travel to work, and dozens of other topics. All modern societies have felt compelled to compile such information, not least because businesses find such information extremely useful. The libertarian view that none of these matters is a proper concern of government is hopelessly utopian.

Even if all racial and ethnic questions were removed from the census, surely we would continue to hear complaints that blacks are far more likely than other Americans to live in poverty. Indeed, in the absence of authoritative data, the magnitude of such social problems would likely be even more exaggerated. Even with official statistics, a recent Gallup poll Gallup Poll
Noun

a sampling of the views of a representative cross section of the population, usually used to forecast voting [after G H Gallup, statistician]

Gallup poll n
 found that the American public thought that 32 percent of the population was black and 21 percent Hispanic (more than double the actual figures). Further more, it is only by gathering the facts that we are able to discern the close connection between black poverty, the remarkably high proportion of female-headed black families, and the huge racial gap in levels of literacy and numeracy numeracy Mathematical literacy Neurology The ability to understand mathematical concepts, perform calculations and interpret and use statistical information. Cf Acalculia. . Surely we want to know if black third-graders are far behind whites in reading and math competence, and the correlation between that difference and family structure or economic circumstances. It is at least possible that social-science knowledge will guide us towards solutions.

The problem, then, is not with the gathering of social and economic facts. The problem is what might be termed the "the privileging of race." The idea that mankind is divided into a very few, physically and culturally distinctive, racial groups is a thoroughly outmoded and discredited 19th-century notion. In setting out the officially recognized racial categories, the Office of Management and Budget cautions that "these classifications should not be interpreted as being scientific or anthropological in nature." That's for sure-but this admission only makes OMB's decision to use them more dubious. If these categories are not "scientific" or "anthropological," what are they? Why should the U.S. government distinguish some citizens from others on a basis that is not "scientific" or even "anthropological" (whatever that means) and use these distinctions in allocating public resources? "Race" is a bad idea whose time has come and gone. It does not belong in statistics that appear with the stamp of approval of the government of the United States.

Ethnicity (as distinct from crude, unidimensional u·ni·di·men·sion·al  
adj.
One-dimensional.

Adj. 1. unidimensional - relating to a single dimension or aspect; having no depth or scope; "a prose statement of fact is unidimensional, its value being measured wholly in terms
 race categories), however, is another matter. We cannot pretend that African Americans are not a distinctive group with an uniquely oppressive history they are still struggling to overcome, nor that Chinese Americans or Ukrainian Americans are like everyone else in every way. But we need not assume that Americans of Chinese origins are a separate "race," while classifying Ukrainians as "white." The census question on "ancestry or ethnic origin" is quite sufficient to identify subgroups of the population, and it will do the job nicely-with one important modification.

In the past, the Census Bureau has framed the instructions on the ancestry question in a manner that discourages the response "American." Despite that discouragement, 13 million people-5 percent of the population-said that their ancestry was "American" or "United States" on the 1990 Census, and another 27 million-11 percent of the population-said that were unable or unwilling to specify any ancestry. If it were made clear that "American" is a perfectly acceptable response, those numbers might soar. And that would not be a bad thing at all.
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Author:THERNSTROM, STEPHAN
Publication:National Review
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 17, 2000
Words:2374
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