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Anger in White America — Again
Kevin MacDonald
August 24, 2009
The health care debate continues to rivet the country. By most accounts, the sheer emotional intensity of the protests has forced Democrats to scale back their plans for nationalized health care. And who are these angry protesters? The vast majority of these angry citizens are White people — a topic I wrote about recently, but before the health care debate assumed center stage.
The health care debate seems to have
ratcheted things up a notch. As an NPR commentary of August 13
noted,
If
you've been anywhere near a TV in the past week, you have seen images of irate
voters berating their elected representatives. And if so, you cannot have missed
the strong representation of vociferous Caucasian males of a certain age. Theirs
are not the only voices raised, but they are surely the loudest and most
numerous.


Angry
A Democrat strategist commented,
the vocally disaffected represent a very real phenomenon that has been rising around the country since before Obama's election. It is growing in the face of a damaged economy, a series of bank and Wall Street bailouts, and big-dollar government programs to stimulate jobs and stave off foreclosures.
I've
never seen as angry an electorate as this one. …. They're as scared as I've ever
seen them, and that manifests into anger.
There
is a general fear that the American dream is not going to be there for them or
their children. … There is concern about trust broken between government and the
people.
Angry White
people. And we are not talking about elite Whites who
wouldn’t have to worry about health care no matter what the government does.
This is racially-based populism: The protest is coming from middle- and
lower-middle-class Whites, not Blacks and Latinos in the same social classes.
And it’s about more than health care. A month ago it was the angry White people who support Sarah Palin. And before that, it was angry Whites participating in "tea parties" protesting the stimulus bill.
It's not any specific issue, but a generalized fear that the country is slipping away from them — that the Obama presidency is moving America very rapidly into a country that they would not recognize and where they do not have political power. Our friend, Mark Potok, of the $PLC, comments, "Clearly, this president has set off a real rage. ... Certain people look around and see this is not the country their white Christian forefathers built, and they are angry."
Not that
there's anything wrong with that. These angry White people are quite right to
fear such a transformation. The anti-White
revolution is working beautifully. Legal and illegal immigration is
gradually but noticeably transforming the country so that the White populist
base will have decreasing political power. By my calculation, by 2012, the Republicans would have
to attract around 63% of Whites to get a majority (assuming Whites continue to
represent 90% of the Republican vote). In the ideal world of the left, however,
this transformation would be carried out without anger and mass protest, apart
from the occasional skinhead, swastika-painting fringe that replenish the
coffers of organizations like the $PLC and the ADL. White people would sink
peacefully into the sunset of American politics, happily joining multicultural
coalitions in both parties.
The problem for
the left is the anger. With huge majorities in both Houses of Congress and an
Obama presidency that seemed committed to nationalized health care, the
“progressives” are saying the Democrats should just
push through a plan. Elections matter. We’ve got the power, so let’s do it.
But trampling
on the sensibilities of what remains a large constituency is very risky. These
voters are energized in a way they were not during the 2008 election where the
media’s slobbering
love affair with Obama (including Chris Matthews’ “thrill going up my
leg” when Obama
speaks), the failed Bush presidency, the horrible economy, and John McCain (need I say
more) kept populist passions low.
The White House
seems to realize that simply having a large majority in Congress isn’t enough if
a large angry minority is so enraged that they start storming the barricades
with torches and pitchforks. Imagine the commentariat trying to explain away a
65–70% White vote for the Republicans in 2010 or 2012. The stark racial abyss of
American politics would be staring everyone in the face. Best not to wake the
sleeping giant until it’s really too powerless to matter much at all.
There are
doubtless a great many anxieties behind this anger. Certainly many lower-and
middle-class Whites have been devastated by the changes in the labor market
brought about by massive immigration (including the H1-B program that imports skilled workers), and many companies cutting
health benefits because of the need to compete in a globalized economy in which
American elites feel no obligation to protect American workers.
But I suspect
that a large part of the fear is about what health care would be like if the
progressive wing of the Democratic Party got its way. These middle class Whites
envision themselves standing in line with Blacks, Latinos, legal and
illegal
immigrants, and everyone else. And they realize that in general the taxes of
people like themselves are being used to support services for people quite a bit
unlike themselves — people who pay proportionately far less of the tax burden
and are part of the coalition of minorities that is the backbone of the
Democratic Party, while 90% of the Republican vote comes from Whites.
From an
evolutionary perspective, this is a classic case of a public goods issue in a
multicultural society. As noted
by Frank Salter
, because of closer ties
of kinship and culture, ethnically homogeneous societies are more likely to be
open to redistributive policies such as social welfare and nationalized health
care. European nationalized health care
systems were initiated decades
ago when those countries were ethnically homogeneous. In the US, the Medicare
system was enacted in 1965 — well before the
multicultural onslaught.
Some enraged Whites may also have read about the aspects of the bill that make it “affirmative action on steroids,” including what amounts to a quota system for "underrepresented minorities" in medical schools. It's one thing to have affirmative action professors teaching obscure subjects to college students. But do people really want affirmative action doctors performing heart surgery?
The problem for advocates of universal health care in the US is that this round of reform is being proposed at the precise point when general anxieties about America's multicultural future are on the minds of a whole lot of White people. It's not at all unreasonable for them to believe that universal health care will indeed be the embodiment of the multicultural nightmare of the future. And it's not at all unreasonable for them to be very angry about that.
Finally, in my recent fundraising appeal letter, I suggested that the next revolution — like the one that resulted in our current multicultural nightmare — will be a top-down revolution that begins by converting the elite opinion makers. This anger among non-elite Whites suggests there is a possibility of a successful movement energized by non-elite Whites. In the health care debate, there certainly seems to be a prominent role of elite conservative media figures, such as Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity, in mobilizing hostility toward the Obama plan and validating the energy of the protests. The question remains: Will these elite conservative voices openly advocate what needs to be done for their constituency to really take back the country?
Kevin MacDonald is a
professor of psychology at California State University–Long Beach.
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