Archive for the ‘Culture Wars’ Category

How the Election Will Be Won | Opinion – Newsweek

Bill Clinton's strategist, James Carville, famously coined the phrase, "the economy, stupid," ahead of the 1992 presidential election. As America recovered from a recession, Carville knew that this was one of three key areas in which Clinton's campaign team should focus if it wanted to win. They took his advice and Clinton stormed to victory, unseating President George H.W Bush after just one term in office.

Over the last few months, I have been wondering which issue would become pivotal in the 2020 election. Would it hinge on which candidate has the best plan to rebuild the economy after the havoc wrought by the world's reaction to COVID-19? Or might it boil down to who inspires the most confidence when it comes to handling the COVID-19 crisis itself, and its aftermath?

The answer to both of these questions is, "no." In fact, after the death this month of the liberal Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, I now have no doubt that the Senate battle to replace her means that this election will be dominated by America's ongoing culture wars. After months of riots and increasing violence and disorder in cities across America, the time has come to deliver a verdict on the Black Lives Matter movement. And in this context, I am certain that President Trump just got lucky.

The primary appeal of Joe Biden that he is busy selling to America is that he is not Donald Trump. Polling tends to confirm that this is his strongest pitch. The image that Biden wishes to project is that he is the calm, experienced, all-around good guy who has endured personal hardship, including the death of his first wife and infant daughter in 1972, with fortitude. Another card he is willing to play is that President Trump has handled the COVID-19 crisis badly. (As it happens, we see much the same approach from Sir Keir Starmer, the leader of the Labour Party in Britain. Having caught up with Boris Johnson in the polls, Starmer has been making the COVID argument, as well.) Biden's other main claim is that, having served as vice president in both of Barack Obama's terms, he bequeathed Trump a strong economy.

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Biden may be able to wield a certain amount of capital out of any or all of these arguments, but one sphere in which he is on much shakier ground concerns the problems on the streets and the anti-police narrative that now engulfs America. Biden's problem is that he cannot condemn the Antifa and Black Lives Matter movementswhich want to "defund" the policein the trenchant terms that would appeal to law-abiding Americans. The simple reason for this is that the rest of his party is working hand in glove with these groups. Their obsession with political correctness will, ultimately, do Biden great damage.

Trump, meanwhile, is currently working out who should replace the late Justice Ginsburg. A Supreme Court nominee who represents the Christian values of the United States of America and the rule of law would certainly appeal to the middle-class suburbanites and the elderlytwo key groups that will help to determine November's result. Small wonder that Amy Coney Barrett, a devout Catholic, is considered the leading candidate as of this writing. Adding to Biden's difficulties, incidentally, is that he also has a fire to fight in the form of fresh allegations that his son, Hunter, has made a considerable fortune working with the Chinese. This unhelpful distraction will be hard for him to shake off.

For Trump's base, a Supreme Court that moves from a 5-4 to a 6-3 majority in favor of conservative values will be a cause for celebration with consequences for American cultural life that could last for many years. A court of this complexion may further embolden the president in his quest to tackle the "woke" cultural revolution that is spreading at speed.

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With that said, Trump's support from his base is solidand some people that I have spoken to, including pollsters, fear that he is already focusing on this group too heavily. At the same time, his handling of the pandemic has upset some older Trump voters, and comfortable suburban middle-class voters have never really liked his brashness. Therefore, a campaign centered on values is his best opportunity.

With this in mind, I expect to hear even more from him in the coming weeks about patriotism, as well as further denunciations of the various "hateful lies" about America that he feels are being told by the Left. Trump has already begun to crack down on 'critical race theory" training in federal agencies, calling it a "cancer" and a "hateful Marxist doctrine." He believes this agenda is not in favor of hard work, the family and everything else that decent Americans traditionally prefer. He did talk about this two weeks ago, but there was little pickup. As the Senate debates the new Supreme Court nominee, however, this line of attack will become increasingly important for Trump. Ordinary, honest Americans will, I have no doubt, recoil when they learn in greater detail what these new theories from the Left actually involve.

This argument over values will, I predict, push talk of COVID-19 lower down the agenda, and will be a very valuable diversion to the Republicans. Huge numbers of older voters are appalled that they are now considered "racist" when criticizing an individual or a group, even though race is actually very far from their minds. For them, being branded in this way is the equivalent of being in what Hillary Clinton memorably referred to four years ago as Trump's "basket of deplorables".

The 2020 election is all about what kind of country America wants to be. My belief that Trump will win in just under six weeks' time is now stronger than ever.

Nigel Farage is senior editor-at-large of Newsweek's "The Debate" platform.

The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.

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How the Election Will Be Won | Opinion - Newsweek

New Cal State chancellor will be first native Californian and first Mexican American in position – Inside Higher Ed

Minutes after being named the next chancellor of the California State University system Wednesday, Joseph I. Castro appeared at a virtual Board of Trustees meeting and thanked his mother, who was watching from Hanford, Calif., in the San Joaquin Valley.

He grew emotional for a moment.

Im the son of a single mom, so she sacrificed a lot for me -- and so did my grandparents, Castro said in an interview later in the day. Sorry, Im getting choked up again now, but its on days like this when I think about the sacrifices they made for me.

Castros grandparents were immigrant farmworkers from Mexico. His mother worked as a beautician to support her family. Castro would become the first in his family to graduate from a university before going on to earn a Ph.D. and eventually becoming president of Cal States university in Fresno in 2013, where he remains today.

So after he was publicly named the next chancellor of Cal State, the sprawling 23-campus, 482,000-student system, Castros thoughts returned for a moment to the path his family traveled over the last century.

From starting out in tents here 100 years ago, he said. That was how my family started out. In tents. To today.

Castros coming chancellorship is a watershed moment for Cal State, which touts itself as the largest four-year higher education system in the country. Hell be the first California native and the first Mexican American to hold the position.

Its similar in significance to Castros leadership at Fresno State. The university is located in that same San Joaquin Valley, a region noted for its agricultural production but also high levels of poverty.

When I started here, I was the first president born in California and the first from this region, Castro said. The fact that I was Latino was also important. But probably the most important thing was knowing a Hanford boy is our president. They loved that. I hope California is happy today to have a California boy leading.

Castro sees higher education as both professional and personal work. It is also likely to be challenging work for him in the coming months and years.

Castro is slated to take over a Cal State system that has been led since 2012 by Timothy P. White, who is retiring after eight years that include notable successes boosting graduation rates and hiring diverse campus presidents. The system is holding classes primarily online in this year's fall semester because of the coronavirus pandemic and plans to do the same in the spring.

It has long recorded high levels of deferred facilities maintenance. Public funding for education is under pressure in California, where recessions typically cut deeply into budgets. Further, the system has a strong faculty union that less than two hours after Castros name was announced issued a list of 10 bullet points urging him to take certain actions.

Faculty members were hopeful for his tenure. There is every reason to believe Castro could be a good chancellor, said Thomas Holyoke, professor in the political science department at Fresno State and chair of the universitys Academic Senate.

I think he is aware that he is coming to the system at a tough time, Holyoke said. The State of California decided that funding the public university system maybe is not a top priority in a COVID world. Weve all been taking cuts, and it could be worse, for all we know. Hes going to have to manage that.

Continuity Versus Change

The next Cal State chancellor is in a unique position between continuity and change. Castro was one of the first presidents appointed by the systems current chancellor, White. He says he wants to build on Whites tenure and names as one of his top priorities a key effort to increase graduation rates instituted under White. But he also says changes will be necessary to adapt to a world forever changed by the coronavirus pandemic.

Since 2015, the system has been operating under an effort called the Graduation Initiative 2025, which aims to boost graduation rates, eliminate equity gaps in who earns degrees and position the system to produce graduates meeting the states workforce needs. The initiative remains a key priority, Castro said. To support those efforts, hell seek public and private funding and try to mobilize alumni.

At the same time, changes driven by COVID-19 have stimulated innovation in teaching and learning that will change what faculty members and students can do and which classes are best delivered in person or online.

The CSU will look different, Castro said. Post-COVID, it will be more of a hybrid approach is my sense. But it will really be about how the faculty feel. Ive seen them get inspired by that.

White himself has talked about the need for the system to change in the future. The system needs to follow a consistent vision and mission while finding new innovations, he said in a January interview.

Find policies or innovations that I couldnt come up with, he said at the time. If it stayed the same, Id be sad, actually.

White announced last fall that he would be retiring. He initially planned to leave in June but delayed his departure because of the pandemic. During Wednesdays Board of Trustees meeting, he kept his remarks short, congratulating Castro and offering him support in the coming months and weeks. Castro is slated to take over Jan. 4.

Cal State benefited from keeping White as its leader in the early days of the pandemic, said Lillian Kimbell, the systems board chair. White was able to make informed, authoritative decisions such as moving most classes online for the fall and spring semesters.

It was not an easy decision, and a lot of people were critical, Kimbell said. He knew it was the right thing to do. He has a science background, and he is always very clear about it: its the science and the right thing to do.

Cal States search process changed significantly in the nearly years time since White announced he would be retiring.

The search essentially came to a halt because of the pandemic, Kimbell said.

And the whole world changed, and we started looking again, and we started reassessing the candidates, she said.

Faculty leaders and Castro himself also nodded to a search changed by COVID. Holyoke at Fresno State remembers Castro essentially taking himself out of the running for the chancellorship last year. Castro said the pandemic prompted him to consider the position.

I was inspired by the COVID situation to pursue the search, and I was invited to jump in, he said. I believe in the direction were heading, and I know this is a challenging period. But leadership matters, and I thought it was important.

Challenges for Leadership

No shortage of challenges await the chancellor-in-waiting.

While Cal State was among the first and most prominent systems of higher education to announce plans for primarily online learning this fall -- and again for the spring -- the percentage of students living on campus varies between institutions. So too do enrollment trends amid the crisis. Managing an eventual return to in-person instruction will be a logistical and potentially political challenge.

As will navigating tensions around an ethnic studies course requirement put in place by the states Legislature. Debate over ethnic studies and social justice general education requirements stretches back years at Cal State and includes a disagreement over system requirements and a requirement already in place at Cal State Northridge. Proposals to change mathematics admissions requirements have also been a major point of contention.

Finances are top of mind for Kimbell, the system board chair.

We rely so much on personal income tax, she said. That goes up. That goes down. Its really maddening, to be unable to plan things.

The California Faculty Association identified several other issues. In a news release welcoming Castro, it called on him to protect the rights of undocumented students, respect academic freedom, work with unionized employees instead of against them and fill funding holes with Cal State financial reserves instead of tuition increases, job cuts or service cuts, among other things.

Castro has been accessible to faculty members, Holyoke said. When Holyoke first became chair of the universitys Academic Senate, Castro provided his phone number. The two meet regularly, and when Castro attends Academic Senate meetings, he takes questions and criticisms. Castro seems to have a genuine interest in shared governance, Holyoke said.

He never brushes us off, Holyoke said. I get the impression he has instructed the senior administrators to also be very responsive to faculty needs. I can contact all the vice presidents and usually get a response within an hour.

Fresno States budget has been one relatively small point of concern over the years, according to Holyoke. Faculty members wish the university had built deeper reserves than it currently has to help it navigate a financial downturn like the one currently unfolding.

The university has also drawn attention for dicey issues of freedom of speech and academic freedom in the era of the new culture wars. In one 2017 case, the university alerted federal authorities after a professor sent several controversial tweets including Trump must hang. At the time, Castro issued a statement saying the inclusion of violence and threatening language was inconsistent with the universitys core values.

In another case, Castro criticized inflammatory tweets from a professor in the wake of former first lady Barbara Bushs death.

Both faculty members remained employed at Fresno.

Over all, Holyoke believes Castro could be a good system chancellor.

He is a good listener, Holyoke said. He does, I think, genuinely make every attempt to try to reach out and listen to everybody whos got something to say to him, and hes thoughtful.

Cal State has yet to announce an interim appointment to lead Fresno State after Castro becomes chancellor. A national search is expected to eventually lead to a permanent replacement.

Looking Forward

The pandemic has taught Castro not to harden his view on many matters, he said. He deeply values institutional mission and vision but believes certain ideas that might seem unreasonable one day could become very reasonable the next.

He expects to lean on his deep knowledge of California higher education and government. Before coming to Cal State, he was in the University of California system for 23 years, most recently as vice chancellor of student academic affairs at UC San Francisco.

Castro is close with Eloy Oakley, chancellor of the California Community Colleges system. And as he puts it, many of the people in the state capital, Sacramento, might have been students when he was assistant dean of public policy at UC Berkeley in the 1990s.

Those are all assets in leading this complex university system, he said. Over time, we need to strengthen this ecosystem so that it better supports our students from all different backgrounds.

At Fresno State, Castro enjoyed being in the San Joaquin Valley, near home. The night before he was announced as Cal States next chancellor, he had dinner with his mother.

I wasnt sure if we were going to be able to eat if I told her at the beginning of the meal, he said. So I told her at the end. She was concerned about me leaving.

Then he transitioned from the personal anecdote to how it fuels professional work.

I found that with all presidents, there is a powerful story, he said. We all have powerful stories, and each of them has a story. This work is personal and professional. Thats how I felt since Ive been in higher education.

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New Cal State chancellor will be first native Californian and first Mexican American in position - Inside Higher Ed

The Spectator, the Co-op and cancel culture a cautionary tale – Spectator.co.uk

Earlier this month, there was a bit of a fuss when the Co-ops Twitter account said it would not be advertising in The Spectator due to our coverage of transgender issues. This is a pernicious trend in the media and The Spectator has a policy of refusing to deal with corporates who indulge in such cancel culture. Its a firm principle of ours, but not one I expected to apply to the Co-op which is one of the few outfits to have explicitly stated its commitment to diversity of opinion.

I emailed the Co-op to ask what on earth had happened, and tried (unsuccessfully) to convey how serious this was. As I suspected they had been targeted by a troll farm called Stop Funding Hate which goes after corporates who advertise in publications with which they disagree. The idea is to find 30 or 40 activists sometimes far fewer to target the corporations Twitter account and persuade the social media manager that theres some kind of a national uproar. If this trick works, the terrified social media team cave to their demands and offer some kind of apology for advertising in the target without realising what they have just dragged their company into. In this case, a Twitter account called 'Lisa Fajita' had complained and 'Alice' from the Co-op social media team replied with news of the ban.

The theory behind Stop Funding Hate is that publications get most of their money from advertisers, not readers so pressure exerted via advertisers can work. If you get trolls to pose as customers, you can say"I was a happy customer, but dismayed to see you advertise with the hateful Daily Bugle with all of its hate -I won't buy anymore! Boycott!". And then, with any luck, you get the corporations to panic. If you threaten the revenue, the managers will clip journalists wings. This theory doesnt quite work at The Spectator where advertising revenue is dwarfed by support from readers (we now outsell the weekday Guardian and theFT)and the company is run by oneAndrew Neil. When the Co-op tweeted that theyd binned us, he reacted in a way that I doubt they expected - andimmediately announced that they were banned as an advertiser.

I suspect this was not quite the response that"Alice" had expected - and none of usexpected what happened next. The row went viral -but translated into a flood of new subscriptions to The Spectator. People, it seems, have had their fill of cancel culture and were pleased to see a publication standing up to it.We took more new subscribers that day than any day in our recorded history, endingup with over 1,000 subs:our own Co-op dividend. Then(something we didn't intend) it all started to backfire on the Co-op, withall kinds of people threatening not to shop there. At one stage, Iain Martin said he was cancelling his wine order from the Co-op as anyone who knows Iain and his love of good wine, thiswould represent quite a financial hit. An analysis for PR Week found that this debacle overshadowed any other Co-op social media activity hitherto.Indulging in cancel culture turned out to be a branding disaster.

Only then did this affair reach the top of the Co-op. As I suspected all along, its chief executive had no knowledge of what his underlings had been up to. He emailed us to explain that the social media team had misspoken: the advertising agency had not been instructed to dump The Spectator. More junior marketing types had beensuckered by Stop Funding Hateinto a breach of Co-op policy.The Spectator's policy of a lifetime ban is to make it clear to corporates that they cannot coming crawling back once the Twitterstorm is over and make a private apology to a publication it publicly condemns. But with the Co-op, we have accepted that this was genuinely a mistake.

So we have made up. We have an advert from them appearing next month. And we ordered some of their own-brand champagne to the office and tried it after an episode of Spectator TV: it won a blind-tasting challenge with Moet, Veuve Clicquot and Bollinger. (It didnt beat Pol Roger, but nothing does.)

Three takeaways from this wee drama:-

1. Cancel culture is now rebounding on corporates who engage with it. The joke go woke, go broke contains much truth. Companies wisely stay out of party political battles, so why enter the culture wars and disparage a chunk of their customers? Virgin Rail found this out when they were tricked by Stop Funding Hate into dumping the Daily Mail from its carriages: Richard Branson ended up overruling his marketing department and publishing a personal apology.

2. There is a risk in asking a junior social media person to speak for the whole company. "Alice" is not to blame: I suspect none of Co-op's social team were given training in how to respond to a Stop FundingHate-style troll farm attack. Thesocial media person is asked to respond sympathetically to complaints on Twitter: was your delivery late? A fly in your soup? Please accept our apologies etc. It's not hard to trick them into going one step further:seen an advert in publication you dislike?Okay, sorry, we'll review our advertising policy.Please say you like us again!"So with one Tweet, a firm can end up taking a public and official position - andalign itself with cancel culture.

3. Publications ought to get together, and stand firm on advertisers who engage in cancel culture. I could be wrong, but I think this is the first time a publication has gone public and banned an advertiser who behaves in this way. The Spectator'sexperience is thatdoing so focuses minds at the top of the company, attracts (strong) support from existing readers- and, importantly,recruits new readers. As an industry, I'm not sure what we have to lose by taking a robust - if necessary, a collective - stance to defend ourindependence. This is not a left vs right battle. One of the trolls complaints for us, this time around, was that we ran a piece by Suzanne Moore of the Guardian. A while ago, one of The Spectators bigger advertisers had a problem with comments made by Matthew Parris. Lets just say that theyre not a big advertiser now.

The Spectator is very lucky: were family-owned by proprietors who have no patience with the woke warriors andwould rather lose money than gave an inch to advertisers who threaten editorial independence. Keeping faith with readers serving them original and provocative opinions by brilliant writers as we have been doing since 1828 pays off. Andrew Neil ended up joking that he hopes 'there are other woke advertisers ready to follow Co-ops example.' At least, I think he was joking.

A final word about the Co-op. The irony here is that it has already faced down the cancel culture brigade within its own ranks. It respectfully heard their case, but replies that it has a duty to 'recognise the diversity of our members and customers, that dont suppress the freedom of the press, which is a fundamental part of a democracy.' It adopted the following policy: 'We will not seek to affect the editorial independence of publications or channels. We will not undermine the commercial value of our society for our members. We will ensure our values and principles are clear and undiminished regardless of surrounding content.'

So what happened between us was genuinely a misunderstanding. The Co-op is one of a handful of companies (Vodafone, Virgin) that do have an explicit policy of rejecting cancel culture. Were proud to run an advert from them in a forthcomingissue, and are pleased to put this farrago behind us.

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The Spectator, the Co-op and cancel culture a cautionary tale - Spectator.co.uk

The Transformation of Diplomacy – Foreign Affairs Magazine

We joined the U.S. Foreign Service nearly 40 years ago in the same entering class, but we took very different paths to get there. One of us grew up amid hardship and segregation in the Deep South, the first in her family to graduate from high school, a Black woman joining a profession that was still very male and very pale. The other was the product of an itinerant military childhood that took his family from one end of the United States to the other, with a dozen moves and three high schools by the time he was 17.

There were 32 of us in the Foreign Services class of January 1982. It was an eclectic group that included former Peace Corps volunteers, military veterans, a failed rock musician, and an exCatholic priest. None of us retained much from the procession of enervating speakers describing their particular islands in the great archipelago of U.S. foreign policy. What we did learn early on, and what stayed true throughout our careers, is that smart and sustained investment in people is the key to good diplomacy. Well-intentioned reform efforts over the years were crippled by faddishness, budgetary pressures, the over-militarization of foreign policy, the State Departments lumbering bureaucracy, a fixation on structure, andmost of allinattention to people.

The Trump administration also learned early on that people matter, and so it made them the primary target of what the White House aide Steve Bannon termed the deconstruction of the administrative state. That is what has made the administrations demolition of the State Department and so many other government institutions so effective and ruinous. Tapping into popular distrust of expertise and public institutions, President Donald Trump has made career public servantsgovernment meteorologists, public health specialists, law enforcement professionals, career diplomatsconvenient targets in the culture wars. Taking aim at an imaginary deep state, he has instead created a weak state, an existential threat to the countrys democracy and the interests of its citizens.

The wreckage at the State Department runs deep. Career diplomats have been systematically sidelined and excluded from senior Washington jobs on an unprecedented scale. The picture overseas is just as grim, with the record quantity of political appointees serving as ambassadors matched by their often dismal quality. The most recent ambassador in Berlin, Richard Grenell, seemed intent on antagonizing as many Germans as he couldnot only with ornery lectures but also through his support for far-right political parties. The ambassador in Budapest, David Cornstein, has developed a terminal case of clientitis, calling Hungarys authoritarian, civil-liberties-bashing leader the perfect partner. And the U.S. ambassador to Iceland, Jeffrey Ross Gunter, has churned through career deputies at a stunning pace, going through no fewer than seven in less than two years at his post.

In Washington, career public servants who worked on controversial issues during the Obama administration, such as the Iran nuclear negotiations, have been smeared and attacked, their careers derailed. Colleagues who upheld their constitutional oaths during the Ukraine impeachment saga were maligned and abandoned by their own leadership. In May, the State Departments independent inspector general, Steve Linick, was fired after doing what his job required him to do: opening an investigation into Secretary of State Mike Pompeos alleged personal use of government resources. Battered and belittled, too many career officials have been tempted to go along to get along. That undercuts not only morale but also a policy process that depends on apolitical experts airing contrary views, however inconvenient they may be to the politically appointed leadership.

Pompeo in Washington, D.C., December 2019

Not surprisingly, the Foreign Service has experienced the biggest drop in applications in more than a decade. Painfully slow progress on recruiting a more diverse workforce has slid into reverse. It is a depressing fact that today only four of the 189 U.S. ambassadors abroad are Blackhardly a convincing recruiting pitch for woefully underrepresented communities.

No amount of empty rhetoric about ethos and swagger can conceal the institutional damage. After four years of relentless attacks by the Trump administration and decades of neglect, political paralysis, and organizational drift, U.S. diplomacy is badly broken. But it is not beyond repair, at least not yet. What is needed now is a great renewal of diplomatic capacity, an effort that balances ambition with the limits of the possible at a moment of growing difficulties at home and abroad. The aim should be not to restore the power and purpose of U.S. diplomacy as it once was but to reinvent it for a new era. Accomplishing that transformation demands a focused, disciplined reform effortone that is rooted in the people who animate U.S. diplomacy.

The State Department is capable of reform. The challenge has always been to link that reform to wise statecraft and adequate funding. After 9/11, with uncommon speed and few additional resources, the department managed to retrofit itself to help prosecute the war on terrorism and take on the new imperatives of stabilization and reconstruction in Afghanistan and Iraq, along with smaller but still complex missions from sub-Saharan Africa to Southeast Asia. New training and incentives were put into play, and a generation of career Foreign Service officers was shaped by tours in conflict zones. Diplomats quickly became secondary players to the military, preoccupied with the kind of nation-building activities that were beyond the capacity of Americans to accomplish. It was easy to lose sight of the distinctive role of the U.S. Foreign Servicethe classic, head-banging work of persuading senior national leaders to bridge sectarian divides and pursue a more inclusive political order while standing up for human rights.

Although the transformation of the State Department into a more expeditionary and agile institution was healthy in many respects, it was also distorting. It was tethered to a fundamentally flawed strategyone that was too narrowly focused on terrorism and too wrapped up in magical thinking about the United States supposed power to transform regions and societies. It paid too little attention to a rapidly changing international landscape in which geopolitical competition with a rising China and a resurgent Russia was accelerating and mammoth global challenges, such as climate change, were looming. It also neglected what was happening at homethe powerful storms of globalization that had left many communities and parts of the economy underwater and would soon overwhelm the United States political levees.

The contours of a new agenda for diplomatic reform have to flow from a sensible reinvention of the United States role in the world. The restoration of American hegemony is not in the cards, given Chinas rise and the diffusion of global power. Retrenchment is similarly illusory, since the United States cannot insulate itself from outside challenges that matter enormously to its domestic health and security.

Instead, U.S. diplomacy has to accept the countrys diminished, but still pivotal, role in global affairs. It has to apply greater restraint and discipline; it must develop a greater awareness of the United States position and more humility about the wilting power of the American example. It has to reflect the overriding priority of accelerating domestic renewal and strengthening the American middle class, at a time of heightened focus on racial injustice and economic inequality. And it has to take aim at other crucial priorities. One is to mobilize coalitions to deal with transnational challenges and ensure greater resilience in American society to the inevitable shocks of climate change, cyberthreats, and pandemics. Another is to organize wisely for geopolitical competition with China.

The ultimate measure of any reform effort is whether it attracts, unlocks, retains, and invests in talent. The last thing the State Department needs is another armada of consultants descending on Foggy Bottom with fancy slide decks full of new ideas about how the department should look. Its time to focus onand listen tothe people who drive U.S. diplomacy: the Foreign Service professionals who rotate through posts around the world, the civil service employees whose expertise anchors the department at home, and the foreign-national staff who drive so much of the work of U.S. embassies and consulates.

To start, the United States needs a top-to-bottom diplomatic surge. The Trump administrations unilateral diplomatic disarmament is a reminder that it is much easier to break than to build. The country doesnt have the luxury of waiting for a generational replenishment, marking time as new recruits slowly work their way up the ranks. Since 2017, nearly a quarter of the senior Foreign Service has left. That includes the departure of 60 percent of career ambassadors, the equivalent of four-star generals in the military. In the junior and midcareer ranks, the picture is also bleak. According to the Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey, as many as a third of current employees in some parts of the State Department are considering leavingmore than double the share in 2016.

A diplomatic surge will have to incorporate ideas that in the past have seemed heretical to the department and its career staff but that today are inescapable. These include bringing back select personnel with critical expertise who were forced out over the past four years; creating midcareer pathways into the Foreign Service, including lateral entry from the civil service; and offering opportunities for Americans with unique skills (in new technologies or global health, for example) to serve their country through fixed-term appointments. Another useful initiative would be to create a diplomatic reserve corps made up of former Foreign Service and civil service midlevel officers and spouses with professional experience who could take on shorter or fixed-term assignments abroad and in Washington. Still another idea would be to create an ROTC-like program for college students, an initiative that would broaden understanding of the diplomatic profession across society and provide financial support to those preparing for diplomatic careers.

All these ideas would have landed in the too hard pile when we were serving. But the reality today is that the State Department simply cannot afford to continue its bad habits of offering inflexible career tracks, imposing self-defeating hiring constraints, and encouraging tribal inbreeding among its cloistered ranks.

Another major priority is the need to treat the lack of diversity in the diplomatic corps as a national security crisis. It not only undermines the power of the United States example; it also suffocates the potential of the countrys diplomacy. Study after study has shown that more diverse organizations are more effective and innovative organizations. At the very moment when American diplomacy could benefit most from fresh perspectives and a closer connection to the American people, the diplomatic corps is becoming increasingly homogeneous and detached, undercutting the promotion of American interests and values.

The top four ranks of the Foreign Service are whiter today than they were two decades ago; only ten percent are people of color. Just seven percent of the overall Foreign Service is made up of Black people, and just seven percent are Hispanicwell below each groups representation in the U.S. labor force. Meanwhile, the Trump administration has reversed a more than quarter-century-long push to appoint more female ambassadors. Overall female representation in the Foreign Service remains roughly the same today as it was in 2000still 25 percent below female representation in the wider U.S. labor force. These trends have effectively undone much of the progress made following the settlement of two class-action discrimination suits shortly after we entered the Foreign Service.

The State Department should make an unambiguous commitment that by 2030, Americas diplomats will, at long last, resemble the country they represent. Achieving this goal will require making diversity a key feature of the diplomatic surge at every point along the career pipeline. It will demand an unshakable commitment to diverse candidates and gender parity in senior appointments. And it will require the State Departments leadership to hold itself accountable by not only getting departmental data in order and making the information accessible to the public but acting on it, as well, with clear annual benchmarks for progress. Lower promotion rates for racial and ethnic minorities and the precipitous drop-off in the number of women and minorities in the senior ranks are flashing red warning lights of structural discrimination.

The State Department ought to invest much more in mentorship, coaching, and diversity and inclusion training. It has to make its career track more responsive to the expectations of todays workforce for a work-life balance rather than perpetuate the imbalance that has prevented too many talented Americansdisproportionally those from underrepresented groupsfrom serving their country. The department has to pay more attention to the particular hazards facing minorities serving overseas, including LGBTQ employees. And it has to revise its promotion criteria to require personnel to foster diverse, inclusive, and equitable workplaces.

To succeed in both a serious diplomatic surge and a historic new campaign for diversity and inclusion, the department must commit to winning the war for talent. The entrance exams to the Foreign Service are designed to weed out candidates rather than recruit the most talented ones. Too much of a premium is placed on written and oral examinations and too little on a candidates rsum, academic performance, skills, expertise, and life experiences. The whole process can seem interminabletaking as long as two years from start to finish and inadvertently benefiting candidates who have the means to hold out. After hiring their diplomats, the most effective diplomatic services spend up to three years training them. The Foreign Service Institute still spends only six weeks testing the mettle of its recruits; the only real difference from our experience many years ago is that the tedious lectures now feature PowerPoint presentations.

Once on assignment, there is no rigorous, doctrinal approach to the art of diplomacy and no system for after-action reviews. The personnel evaluation process consumes three months of an officers time, with no commensurate accountability for, let alone improvement in, individual or collective performance. Opportunities for midcareer graduate or professional education are scarce and carry little weight with promotion panels. The effect is often to penalize employees who receive extra training or undertake assignments to other agencies or to Congress. They should be rewarded instead.

Senior leadership positions are increasingly out of reach for career personnel. Over the past few decades, the proportion of political appointees to career appointees at the State Department, reaching down to the deputy assistant secretary level, has grown far higher than at any other national security agency. That worrisome trendlike so many others during the Trump erahas worsened dramatically. Today, only one of the 28 positions at the assistant secretary level at the State Department is filled by an active-duty career officer confirmed by the U.S. Senatethe lowest number ever. A record share of ambassadors are also political appointees as opposed to professional diplomats, a significant blow to morale and to diplomatic effectiveness. In a reformed State Department, at least half the assistant secretary jobs and three-quarters of the ambassadorial appointments should be held by well-qualified career officers. The remaining political appointments should be driven by substantive qualifications and diversity considerations, not campaign donations.

To unlock its potential, the State Department must increase its staffing pipelines to deepen its officers command of core diplomatic skills and fluency in areas of growing importance, such as climate change, technology, public health, and humanitarian diplomacy. In the traditional area of economics, the State Department must strengthen its capabilities significantlyworking closely with the Commerce and Treasury Departmentsand promote the interests of American workers with the same zeal with which it has promoted the interests of corporate America.

The State Department also needs to rethink how and where it invests in language studies. One out of every four positions designated as requiring foreign-language skills is filled by an officer who does not in fact meet the minimum language requirements. The State Department trains nearly twice as many Portuguese speakers as it does Arabic or Chinese speakers. It should expand opportunities for midcareer graduate studies and incentivize continuous learning as a requirement for promotion. It should also streamline the evaluation process by determining personnel assignments on the basis of performance, expertise, and leadership development rather than through a process of competitive, careerist bidding built on connections and corridor, or word-of-mouth, reputations.

Part of investing in people means investing in the technology that allows them to realize their full potential. A more digital, agile, collaborative, and data-centric diplomatic corps depends on more robust and secure communications tools. Today, too many diplomats lack access to classified systems and technology, especially on the road. That leaves them more vulnerable to foreign intelligence and unable to keep up with other U.S. national security agencies. The COVID-19 pandemic has thrown into sharp relief the need to reimagine how to conduct diplomacy remotely or virtually.

Technology can no longer be seen as a luxury good for diplomacy. The last big technological push at the State Department came during Colin Powells tenure as secretary of state, nearly two decades ago, when the department began to set aside its mini-fridge-sized desktop computers and move cautiously into the modern age. It is long past time for another major effort. To enhance the departments technological platforms, the State Department should appoint a chief technology officer reporting directly to the secretary of state. That official should work with the U.S. Digital Servicean information technology consulting group within the executive branch that was created in 2014to make internal systems, foreign aid, and public diplomacy more effective. Just as the departments chief economist helps diplomats understand the impact of global economic trends on U.S. interests, the chief technology officer should help diplomats grapple with disruptive technologies and leverage private-sector talent.

But technology is not the onlyor the most importantaspect of the State Departments culture that must change. A systemic reluctance to tolerate physical risk has led to the proliferation of fortress-style embassies that can trap personnel behind chancery walls and isolate them from the people they should be meeting, not only foreign officials but also members of civil society. This has also led to an ever-growing number of posts where officers cant be joined by family members, shorter tours, misaligned assignment incentives, lower morale, and less effective diplomacy.

A torpid bureaucratic culture is no less significant. Policy information and recommendations often amass 15 or more sign-offs before reaching the secretary of states office, suffocating initiative and stifling debate. Unstaffed Foreign Service positions create an imbalance between Washington and the field that prevents decentralized decision-making. And a rigid promotion structure incentivizes careerism over political or moral bravery.

A seismic cultural shift is needed to create a more upstanding, courageous, and agile institution, with greater tolerance for risk and a simplified, decentralized decision-making process. The State Department must get out of its own waydelegating responsibility downward in Washington and outward to qualified chiefs of mission overseas and reducing the number of undersecretaries and top-level staff members to avoid duplicative authority and inefficiencies. Initiative should be prized, and the passive-aggressive habit of waiting for guidance from above should be discouraged.

The department ought to discard the current cumbersome process for clearing papers and policy recommendations and start from scratch. A new, more flexible framework would allow expertise in Washington and in the field to be quickly distilled into cogent policy proposals and would grant embassies in the field more autonomy to implement the resulting decisions. The State Departments leaders must also offer political top cover for constructive dissent, supplanting the corrosive keep your head down culture with an I have your back mentalityin other words, the exact opposite of how the State Department treated its diplomats during the 2019 impeachment hearings.

Any effort to reform the State Department should start from within. It should focus in the first year of a new administration or a new term on what can be accomplished under existing authorities and without significant new appropriations. That is the moment of greatest opportunity to set a new directionand the moment of greatest vulnerability to the habitual traps of bureaucratic inertia, overly elaborate and time-consuming restructuring plans, partisan bickering, and distracting forays into the capillaries of reform rather than its arteries.

If the department can take the initiative and demonstrate progress on its own, that would be the best advertisement for sustained congressional support and White House backing for a new emphasis on diplomacy. It would be the best way to show that U.S. diplomats are ready to earn their way back to a more central role. It could help generate momentum for a rebalancing of national security budget priorities at a moment when U.S. rivals are not standing still; in recent years, the Chinese have doubled their spending on diplomacy and greatly expanded their presence overseas.

With a sturdy foundation of reforms laid, the next step would be to codify them in the first major congressional legislation on U.S. diplomacy in 40 years. The last Foreign Service Act, passed in 1980, modernized the mission and structure of the State Department, building on acts from 1924 and 1946. A new act would be crucial to making reforms durable. It would also help shape a style of diplomacy that is fit for an increasingly competitive international landscape and better equipped to serve the priority of domestic renewal. Serious, lasting transformation of U.S. diplomacy will be very hard. But it matters enormously to the future of American democracy in an unforgiving world.

We both bear the professional scars, and have enjoyed the rewards, of many eventful years as career diplomats. We saw plenty of examples of skill and bravery among our colleagues in hard situations around the worldfrom the horrific genocidal violence of Rwanda and the epic turmoil of post-Soviet Russia in the 1990s to the later challenges of ambassadorial postings in Liberia after its civil war and in Jordan in the midst of a once-in-a-half-century royal succession. We saw how U.S. diplomats can produce tangible results, whether by holding secret talks with adversaries, mobilizing other countries to ease the plight of refugees, or promoting American jobs and economic opportunities.

Through it all, however, we still remember vividly the sense of possibility and shared commitment to public service that drew the two of us and 30 other proud Americans to our Foreign Service entering class all those years ago. Today, there is a new generation of diplomats capable of taking up that challengeif only they are given a State Department and a mission worthy of their ambitions and of the country they will represent.

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The Transformation of Diplomacy - Foreign Affairs Magazine

The New York Times and Nikole Hannah-Jones abandon key claims of the 1619 Project – WSWS

By Tom Mackaman and David North 22 September 2020

The New York Times, without announcement or explanation, has abandoned the central claim of the 1619 Project: that 1619, the year the first slaves were brought to Colonial Virginiaand not 1776was the true founding of the United States.

The initial introduction to the Project, when it was rolled out in August 2019, stated that

The 1619 Project is a major initiative from the New York Times observing the 400th anniversary of the beginning of American slavery. It aims to reframe the countrys history, understanding 1619 as our true founding, and placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of black Americans at the very center of the story we tell ourselves about who we are.

The revised text now reads:

The 1619 Project is an ongoing initiative from The New York Times Magazine that began in August 2019, the 400th anniversary of the beginning of American slavery. It aims to reframe the countrys history by placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of black Americans at the very center of our national narrative.

A similar change was made from the print version of the 1619 Project, which has been sent out to millions of school children in all 50 states. The original version read:

In August of 1619, a ship appeared on this horizon, near Point Comfort, a coastal port in the British colony of Virginia. It carried more than 20 enslaved Africans, who were sold to the colonists. America was not yet America, but this was the moment it began. No aspect of the country that would be formed here has been untouched by the 250 years of slavery that followed.

The website version has deleted the key claim. It now reads:

In August of 1619, a ship appeared on this horizon, near Point Comfort, a coastal port in the English colony of Virginia. It carried more than 20 enslaved Africans, who were sold to the colonists. No aspect of the country that would be formed here has been untouched by the years of slavery that followed.

It is not entirely clear when the Times deleted its true founding claim, but an examination of old cached versions of the 1619 Project text indicates that it probably took place on December 18, 2019.

These deletions are not mere wording changes. The true founding claim was the core element of the Projects assertion that all of American history is rooted in and defined by white racial hatred of blacks. According to this narrative, trumpeted by Project creator Nikole Hannah-Jones, the American Revolution was a preemptive racial counterrevolution waged by white people in North America to defend slavery against British plans to abolish it. The fact that there is no historical evidence to support this claim did not deter the Times and Hannah-Jones from declaring that the historical identification of 1776 with the creation of a new nation is a myth, as is the claim that the Civil War was a progressive struggle aimed at the destruction of slavery. According to the New York Times and Hannah-Jones, the fight against slavery and all forms of oppression were struggles that black Americans always waged alone.

The Times disappearing, with a few secret keystrokes, of its central argument, without any explanation or announcement, is a stunning act of intellectual dishonesty and outright fraud. When it launched the 1619 Project in August 2019, the Times proclaimed that its aim was to radically change what and how students were taught about American history. With the aim of creating a new syllabus based on the 1619 Project, hundreds of thousands of copies of the original version of the narrative, as published in the New York Times Magazine, were printed and distributed to schools, museums and libraries all across the United States. A very large number of schools declared that they would align their curricula in accordance with the narrative supplied by the Times.

The deletion of the claim that 1619 was the true founding came to light this past Friday, September 18. Ms. Hannah-Jones was interviewed on CNN and asked to respond to Donald Trumps denunciation, from the standpoint of a fascist, of the 1619 Project. Hannah-Jones declared that the true founding contention was of course not true. She went further, making the astonishing, and demonstrably false, claim that the Times had never made such an argument.

The exchange went as follows:

CNN: Trumps Executive order speaks to a misconception that I know that you have tried to address about what the 1619 Project is, that it is not an effort to rewrite history about when this nation was founded.

Hannah-Jones: Of course, we know that 1776 was the founding of this country. The Project does not argue that 1776 was not the founding of the country.

This is, of course, an outright lie. Hannah-Jones has repeatedly made the true founding claim in innumerable Tweets, interviews and lectures. These are attested to in news articles and video clips readily available on the Internet. Her own Twitter account included her image against a backdrop consisting of the year 1619, with the year 1776 crossed out next to it.

Ms. Hannah-Jones, caught in one lie, doubles down with new and even bigger lies. The Times journalist-celebrity not only denies her projects central argument. In self-contradictory fashion, she also says that the true founding claim was just a bit of a rhetorical flourish. She told CNN that the 1619 Project was merely an effort to move the study of slavery to the forefront of American history.

If, as Hannah-Jones now claims, all the Times had sought to do was draw more attention to the history of chattel slavery in the years it existed in British North America (1619-1776) and the United States (1776-1865), there would never have been a controversy. Neither the World Socialist Web Site, nor the scholars it interviewedJames McPherson, Gordon Wood, Victoria Bynum, James Oakes, Clayborne Carson, Richard Carwardine, Dolores Janiewski, and Adolph Reed, Jr.ever disputed the importance of slavery in the historical development of the United States. Tens of thousands of books and scholarly articles have been devoted to the study of slavery and its impact on the historical development of the United States.

In its initial reply to the 1619 Project, published in early September 2019, the WSWS explained:

American slavery is a monumental subject with vast and enduring historical and political significance. The events of 1619 are part of that history. But what occurred at Port Comfort is one episode in the global history of slavery, which extends back into the ancient world, and of the origins and development of the world capitalist system.

The WSWS rebuttal of the Times provided an account of the emergence of chattel slavery in the Western Hemisphere, its central role in the formation of capitalism, and its revolutionary destruction in the Civil War. Hannah-Jones responded to the WSWS intervention by denouncing its writers as anti-black racists on Twitter.

When Wood, McPherson, Bynum, and Oakes, joined by Sean Wilentz of Princeton, wrote an open letter to the Times last December requesting specific corrections to clear errors of fact, they stressed that their objection was not over whether or not slavery was important. The five historians expressed their dismay at some of the factual errors in the project and the closed process behind it.

New York Times Magazine Editor Jake Silverstein published a haughty and dismissive reply, in which he flatly rejected their criticisms:

Though we respect the work of the signatories, appreciate that they are motivated by scholarly concern and applaud the efforts they have made in their own writings to illuminate the nations past, we disagree with their claim that our project contains significant factual errors and is driven by ideology rather than historical understanding. While we welcome criticism, we dont believe that the request for corrections to The 1619 Project is warranted.

Silversteins disgraceful letter appeared on December 20. At that point, he knew that the Times 1619 Project was fatally flawed and that the newspaper had surreptitiously made a fundamental change in the online text of the article to which the distinguished historians had objected. Silversteins behavior demonstrated a complete lack of professional ethics and intellectual integrity.

The Times is now obligated to issue a public statement acknowledging its distortion of history and the dishonest attempt to cover up its error. It should issue a public apology to Professors Gordon Woods, James McPherson, Sean Wilentz, Victoria Bynum, James Oakes and all other scholars it sought to discredit for having criticized the 1619 Project. To be perfectly blunt, Mr. Silverstein and his confederates in the editorial board of the Times should be dismissed from their posts.

Furthermore, the Pulitzer Prize given to Hannah-Jones this spring in the field of commentary for her lead essay, in which the false claims about the true founding and the American Revolution were made, should be rescinded.

The 1619 Project was never about historical clarification. As the WSWS warned in September 2019, the 1619 Project is one component of a deliberate effort to inject racial politics into the heart of the 2020 elections and foment divisions among the working class. As revealed in a leaked meeting with Times staff, Executive Editor Dean Baquet believed that it would be helpful to the Democratic Party to shift focus after the failed anti-Russia campaign. Baquet said:

[R]ace and understanding of race should be a part of how we cover the American story one reason we all signed off on the 1619 Project and made it so ambitious and expansive was to teach our readers to think a little bit more like that. Race in the next yearand I think this is, to be frank, what I would hope you come away from this discussion withrace in the next year is going to be a huge part of the American story.

The fraud perpetrated by the Times has already had serious political consequences. As the WSWS warned, the 1619 Project has been an enormous gift to Donald Trump. On September 17, Constitution Day, Trump delivered a speech at the National Archives Museum in which he obscenely postured as a defender of the Declaration of Independence and Constitution against the radical left, specifically naming the 1619 Project. In his typically menacing fashion, Trump warned that he would restore patriotic education and that our youth will be taught to love America.

It was in response to Trumps attacks that Hannah-Jones appeared on CNN. She noted that Trump is trying to bring the 1619 Project into the culture wars. She went on, He clearly is running on a nationalistic campaign thats trying to stoke racial divisions, and he sees it as a tool in that arsenal.

True enough. But Hannah-Jones is one of the key stokers of racial divisions; and it was the New York Times that brought the 1619 Project into the culture wars, viciously attacking all critics of a historical narrative that makes racial hatred the driving force of American history.

The falsification of history always serves the interests of reactionary political forces. By repudiating and denigrating the American Revolution and Civil War, the New York Times has provided an opportunity for Trump to fraudulently posture as a defender of the great democratic legacy of Americas revolutions in the interests of his neo-fascist politics.

The author also recommends:

The New York Timess 1619 Project: A racialist falsification of American and world history [6 September 2019]

The cancellation of professor Adolph Reed, Jr.s speech and the DSAs promotion of race politics [18 August 2020]

A reply to the American Historical Reviews defense of the 1619 Project [31 January 2020]

The 1619 Project and the falsification of history: An analysis of the New York Times reply to five historians [28 December 2019]

The two American Revolutions in world history [4 July 2020]

Originally posted here:
The New York Times and Nikole Hannah-Jones abandon key claims of the 1619 Project - WSWS