By Thomas Sowell
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In other words, if
you are a politician, you can get lots of people, with different concrete
ideas, to agree with you when you come out boldly for the vague generality of
"social justice."
Justice Oliver
Wendell Holmes said that a good catchword can stop thought for 50 years. The
phrase "social justice" has stopped many people from thinking, for at
least a century -- and counting.
If someone told you that Country A had more "social justice" than Country B, and you had all the statistics in the world available to you, how would you go about determining whether Country A or Country B had more "social justice"? In short, what does the phrase mean in practice -- if it has any concrete meaning?
In political and
ideological discussions, the issue is usually whether there is some social
injustice. Even if we can agree that there is some injustice, what makes it
social?
Surely most of us
are repelled by the thought that some people are born into dire poverty, while
others are born into extravagant luxury -- each through no fault of their own
and no virtue of their own. If this is an injustice, does that make it social?
The baby born into
dire poverty might belong to a family in Bangladesh, and the one born to
extravagant luxury might belong to a family in America. Whose fault is this
disparity or injustice? Is there some specific society that caused this? Or is
it just one of those things in the world that we wish was very different?
If it is an
injustice, it is unjust from some cosmic perspective, an unjust fate, rather
than necessarily an unjust policy, institution or society.
Making a
distinction between cosmic justice and social justice is more than just a
semantic fine point. Once we recognize that there are innumerable causes of
innumerable disparities, we can no longer blithely assume that either the cause
or the cure can be found in the government of a particular society.
Anyone who studies geography in any depth can see that different peoples and nations never had the same exposure to the progress of the rest of the human race. People living in isolated mountain valleys have for centuries lagged behind the progress of people living in busy ports, where both new products and new ideas constantly arrive from around the world.
If you study
history in addition to geography, you are almost forced to acknowledge that
there was never any realistic chance for all peoples to have the same
achievements -- even if they were all born with the same potential and even if
there were no social injustices.
Once I asked a
class of black college students what they thought would happen if a black baby
were born, in the middle of a ghetto, and entered the world with brain cells
the same as those with which Albert Einstein was born.
There were many
different opinions -- but no one in that room thought that such a baby, in such
a place, would grow up to become another Einstein. Some blamed discrimination
but others saw the social setting as too much to overcome.
If discrimination
is the main reason that such a baby has little or no chance for great
intellectual achievements, then that is something caused by society -- a social
injustice. But if the main reason is that the surrounding cultural environment
provides little incentive to develop great intellectual potential, and many
distractions from that goal, that is a cosmic injustice.
Many years ago, a
study of black adults with high IQs found that they described their childhoods
as "extremely unhappy" more often than other black adults did. There
is little that politicians can do about that -- except stop pretending that all
problems in black communities originate in other communities.
Similar principles
apply around the world. Every group trails the long shadow of its cultural
heritage -- and no politician or society can change the past. But they can stop
leading people into the blind alley of resentments of other people. A better
future often requires internal changes that pay off better than mysticism about
one's own group or about "social justice."
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