Non-Fiction
Related: About this forumA Lightning Rod in the Storm Over America’s Class Divide - Charles Murray's "Coming Apart"
WASHINGTON When Charles Murray and Richard J. Herrnsteins book The Bell Curve appeared in 1994, it was denounced by social scientists, liberal pundits and a little-known Chicago civil-rights lawyer named Barack Obama, who in a commentary on NPR accused the authors of calculating that white America is ready for a return to good old-fashioned racism as long as its artfully packaged.
Anyone who remembers the firestorm over that 845-page doorstops dense arguments about race, class, genetics and I.Q. might be tempted to look at the cover of Mr. Murrays latest book, Coming Apart: The State of White America, 1960-2010, and think, Here we go again.
But Coming Apart, which depicts members of white elites as hypocrites living in a bubble and the white working class as succumbing to moral decay, is hardly a flattering portrait of white people, let alone, Mr. Murray insists, a partisan barnburner.
Its not a brief for the right, Mr. Murray said in a recent interview at the American Enterprise Institute here, where he has been a scholar since 1990. The problem I describe isnt a conservative-versus-liberal problem. Its a cultural problem the whole country has.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/06/books/charles-murrays-coming-apart-the-state-of-white-america.html?pagewanted=1&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=tha28
Jim__
(14,456 posts)... lower classes.
From the review:
Looking at America Mr. Murray sees a country increasingly polarized into two culturally and geographically isolated demographics. In Belmont, the fictional name Mr. Murray gives to the part of America where the top 20 percent live, divorce is low, the work ethic is strong, religious observance is high, and out-of-wedlock births are all but unheard of. Meanwhile in Fishtown, where the bottom 30 percent live, what Mr. Murray calls Americas four founding virtues marriage, industriousness, community and faith have all but collapsed.
The book says little about the roots of Fishtowns problems, but in conversation Mr. Murray doesnt hesitate to name the villain. The 60s were a disaster in terms of social policy, he said. The elites put in place a whole set of reforms which I think fundamentally changed the signals and the incentives facing low-income people and encouraged a variety of trends that soon became self-reinforcing.
Its an argument familiar from Mr. Murrays 1984 book, Losing Ground, which established him overnight as a major policy intellectual and helped lay the groundwork for the 1996 law overhauling welfare. But in Coming Apart Mr. Murrays recommendations are both more vague and far more ambitious. The first step, he writes, is for the people of Belmont to drop their nonjudgmentalism and lecture Fishtown on the importance of marriage and nondependence: to preach what they practice, as Mr. Murray puts it.
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More unsubstantiated horseshit from Murray.
Warren Stupidity
(48,181 posts)Nuff said.