Why We Won't Talk Honestly About Race. Harry Stein

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Why We Won't Talk Honestly About Race - Harry Stein


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      Table of Contents

       Praise

       Title Page

       Dedication

       Preface

       Introduction

       RACISM TODAY, RACISM TOMORROW, RACISM FOREVER

       MEDIA ENABLERS AND OTHER RACE MONGERS

       LET’S PRETEND NO. 1 - AFFIRMATIVE ACTION IS REASONABLE, NOT RACIST

       BOOKER T. WASHINGTON - THE NEGLECTED PROPHET

       IT’S NOT BRAINS, STUPID, IT’S CULTURE

       LET’S PRETEND NO. 2 - FATHERS DON’T MATTER

       LET’S PRETEND NO. 3 - CRIME HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH RACE

       LET’S PRETEND NO. 4 - MULTICULTURALISM MAKES FOR BETTER EDUCATION

       LET’S PRETEND NO. 5 - “ACTING WHITE” IS A PROBLEM (NOT THE SOLUTION)

       BLACK CONSERVATIVES - THE HEROES—AND HOPE—OF OUR TIME

       AFTERWORD

       Acknowledgments

       Copyright Page

      Praise for Why We Won’t Talk Honestly About Race (Previously titled No Matter What . . . They’ll Call This Book Racist)

      “No book I’ve read better captures the utter disingenuousness of America’s racial politics over the past half century. Stein certainly will be called a ‘racist,’ which is why this book is so brave.”

      —Shelby Steele

      “One of the best writers of our era, whose insightful new book, No Matter What . . . They’ll Call This Book Racist: How Our Fear of Talking Honestly about Race Hurts Us All is a must read.”

      —Rush Limbaugh

      “I sometimes hear from parents who have been appalled to learn that the child they sent away to college to be educated has instead been indoctrinated with the creed of the left. They often ask if I can suggest something to have their offspring read over the summer, in order to counteract this indoctrination. This year the answer is a no brainer: No Matter What . . . They’ll Call This Book Racist.

      —Thomas Sowell, The American Spectator

      “By the time you reach the final page, you will seriously wonder why the right has not had the courage to say this before; and, whether the right will, actually, ever have the courage to say it. In that regard alone, I give kudos to Stein who will almost certainly be attacked from all sides for putting this into print.”

      —Frank DeMartini, The Hollywood Republican

      “A fearless writer like Stein and his new book constitute a bold, refreshing first step toward that ‘frank conversation’ that Eric Holder is so eager to have.”

      —Mark Tapson, FrontPage Magazine

      “No Matter What is a fine book, and one that champions the earnest, positive message of lending a hand up rather than a handout.”

      —Joseph Cotto, The Washington Times

      To black conservatives everywhere, shock troops in the battle for America’s soul

       PREFACE

      When this book was published in hardcover in the spring of 2012, it was entitled: No Matter What . . . They’ll Call This Book Racist. Why is this, the paperback version, called instead Why We Won’t Talk Honestly About Race?

      The answer says almost as much about race and how we deal with it as anything in the pages that will follow.

      The truth is, I struggled with what to call the book from the start. There are, of course, countless books out there on the subject of race, but I believed this one was saying things that were distinctive and even important, and it needed a title that reflected that, one that would give pause and perhaps even provoke. Midway through the writing, I hit upon one I thought might work. It was lifted from the famous sex book (and Woody Allen movie) of a few decades ago: Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex*—with the asterisk reappearing at the bottom of the page—*But were afraid to ask. Since one of the points of my book was that, on this most sensitive of subjects, even the most decent and fair-minded among us rarely risk saying anything that might give offense, my variation would read Everything You Honestly Think About Race*, with the second part—*But are afraid to say—serving, as in the original, as a kind of unexpected and amusing subtitle. While I suspected such a title might be seen by others involved in the title search as problematic, I thought that would be mainly because the book and film were so old that many contemporary readers would miss the joke. Instead, the resistance had to do with the words themselves; everyone with whom I conferred seemed to think that most would assume all those hidden, honest thoughts referred to in the title were, in fact, viciously, irredeemably racist.

      As we went along, to one degree or another this proved to be a problem with almost every prospective title anyone proposed: there were lots of people out there ready, even eager, to misconstrue it. The list of discarded possibilities grew daily: ‘Blackmailed’; ‘Skin in the Game’; ‘Affirmative Reaction’; ‘The New Blacklist’. At one point my wife even put out the question to conservative/libertarian fellow thinkers on the Web, but they, too, came up empty.

      At last, I hit on the notion of finding a title that would stick it to those whose reflexive condemnation we’d been so assiduously seeking to avoid: all those who deploy the racism charge as a blunt weapon to intimidate and silence. Or, as I like to think of them, the real race baiters. A slew of new ideas reflected this thought. While some were simple and direct (‘The Racism Smear,’ ‘The Racism Lie’), and others mock-affronted (‘Who Are You Calling Racist?,’‘Al Sharpton’s NOT a Racist and We ARE?’), all displayed rich contempt for those who’d gotten away with playing the race card for so long.

      The end result was the title that appeared on the original version of the book. All right, it was unwieldy, and, on first hearing, almost impossible to remember, but it seemed to make the essential point with a bit of humor and even panache. And in case there was


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