A Real, Live Bigot
A former leftist earns a place on the
wild-eyed right
BY JACK E. WHITE
Last week, just when I was starting to be worried that, in my old age, I was
"Tomming out" because of my qualms about affirmative action, I ran across
a column by a prominent right-wing ideologue named David Horowitz on http://salon.com/
and felt young and militant again. It reminded me that blatant bigotry is alive
and well, even on one of the Internet's otherwise most humane and sophisticated
websites. So many racists, so little time!
Like all good propaganda, Horowitz's piece, titled "Guns don't kill black
people, other blacks do," started plausibly, with a critique of the N.A.A.C.P.'s
lawsuit against gun manufacturers. Why, he asked, should gun companies, instead
of the killers, be held accountable for the appalling rate of black-on-black homicide?
But that pointed query was merely a launching point for Horowitz's real message:
a blanket assault on the alleged moral failures of African Americans so strident
and accusatory that it made the antiblack rantings of Dinesh D'Souza seem like
models of fair-minded social analysis.
The N.A.A.C.P. lawsuit, Horowitz contends, is part of an insidious campaign
by black leaders to create a "politically inspired group psychosis [in which]
we find it natural to collude with demagogic race hustlers in supporting a fantasy
in which African Americans are no longer responsible for anything negative they
do, even to themselves." Shaking down guilt-feeling whites, he says, has
allowed "racial ambulance chasers" like Jesse Jackson and the N.A.A.C.P.'s
Kweisi Mfume to live like millionaires. If blacks are really oppressed in America,
he asks, "why isn't there a black exodus?"
Well, what does Horowitz want us to do, go back to Africa? Is he really unaware
of concerted attempts by African-American civil rights leaders, clergymen, educators
and elected officials to persuade young black men and women to take more responsibility
for their actions? Just two weeks ago, at the National Urban League convention
in Houston, I heard Jesse Jackson preach a passionate sermon on that theme. In
fact, he and other black leaders have been dwelling on such issues for years.
Horowitz's slander wouldn't matter much if he spoke only for himself. But for
the past three decades, Horowitz, 60, has been a conduit through which extreme
political ideas gain access to the mainstream. During a previous incarnation as
a leftist radical in the '70s, he was the editor who put a picture of a burning
bank building on the cover of Ramparts magazine with the line, "The students
who burned the Bank of America may have done more toward saving the environment
than all the teach-ins put together." And the guy who continued to raise
thousands of dollars for the Black Panther Party for years after everybody else
had figured out that its leader Huey P. Newton was no revolutionary but a dangerous
thug. During the 1980s Horowitz began to embrace the Ridiculous Right as passionately
as he had once clung to the Lunatic Left. He founded the Center for the Study
of Popular Culture, based in Los Angeles, whose purpose is to make inroads for
conservatism in notoriously liberal Hollywood. Last week Horowitz told me that
he had earned the right to talk down to blacks "because of all I did in the
'60s." I think we'd all be better off if he'd just shut up.
Salon: David
Horowitz responds
END