In spite of the fact that they funded Leontyne Price in her climb to the
Metropolitan Opera,  what government department also hired William F.
Buckley and contributed to the founding of the National Review?

REH


February 24, 2003
Looking Back at an Ugly Time
By BOB HERBERT



Sometimes it helps to take a look back and see just how far we've come.
In a response to the Brown v. Board of Education decision ordering the
nation's public schools desegregated, William F. Buckley Jr.'s guidebook to
conservative thought, National Review, declared the following in the summer
of 1957:

"The central question that emerges - and it is not a parliamentary question
or a question that is answered by merely consulting a catalogue of rights of
American citizens, born Equal - is whether the White community in the South
is entitled to take such measures as are necessary to prevail, politically
and culturally, in areas where it does not predominate numerically? The
sobering answer is Yes - the White community is so entitled because, for the
time being, it is the advanced race. . . .
"National Review believes that the South's premises are correct. If the
majority wills what is socially atavistic, then to thwart the majority may
be, though undemocratic, enlightened. . . . Universal suffrage is not the
beginning of wisdom or the beginning of freedom."

In those days blacks were frozen out of the mainstream of American life,
routinely turned (or shoved) away not just from public schools, but from
hotels, restaurants and movie theaters, from department stores and soda
fountains, from most trades and professions, from polling booths and
hospitals, from even the semblance of a shot at equal opportunity.

To be black was to be condemned to an environment of perpetual humiliation.
My father swallowed his journalistic aspirations and lived out his life as
an upholsterer. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., cruelly harassed to the
very end, was widely derided as "Martin Luther Coon."

That was not so long ago. So in some sense it's remarkable that by the end
of the 20th century so many battles against racism had been won and a broad
national consensus in favor of a more tolerant, more inclusive society had
been reached.

The task now, in the 21st century, is to build on those victories and that
consensus. Which brings us to affirmative action.

A glance at the current challenges to affirmative action in higher education
would show little more than the fact that a number of white applicants have
asserted in court that they were illegally denied admission to college or
law school because of preferences given to racial or ethnic minorities.
That is their right and they have the support of many principled people.

A closer look at these challenges, however, would show that they are largely
being driven by a huge, complex and extraordinarily well-financed web of
conservative and right-wing organizations that in many cases are hostile not
just to affirmative action but to the very idea of a multiracial,
pluralistic America.

A new book published by the Institute for Democracy Studies in New York -
"The Assault on Diversity: An Organized Challenge to Racial and Gender
Justice," by Lee Cokorinos - documents in exceptional detail this nationwide
effort to roll back a proud half-century of progress toward social justice
and a more inclusive society.

The driving force behind the Michigan University cases, for example, is the
Center for Individual Rights, a right-wing outfit that in its early years,
as Mr. Cokorinos noted, received financial support from the Pioneer Fund, an
organization that spent decades pushing the notion that whites are
genetically superior to blacks.

We need to see this picture more clearly. There's a reason why so many
mainstream individuals and groups, and some of the nation's largest
corporations, have filed briefs with the Supreme Court in support of
Michigan's effort to save its affirmative-action programs. The United States
is a better place after a half-century of racial progress and improved
educational opportunities for racial and ethnic minorities, and women.

We have all benefited, and voluntary efforts to continue that progress,
including the policies at Michigan, are in the interest of us all.

Justice Lewis Powell, who wrote the controlling opinion in the Bakke case in
1978, eloquently addressed the matter of campus diversity when he said that
"a robust exchange of ideas" is of "transcendent value to us all."

An unchallenged right-wing war against the very idea of diversity will turn
us back in the direction of the noxious beliefs spewed out by National
Review in 1957.

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