In Wolfe's recent Jefferson Lecture, he wrote:
Each individual adopts a set of values which, if truly absolute in the world--so ordained by some almighty force--would make not that individual but his group . . . the best of all possible groups, the best of all inner circles.
I only wish Wolfe had come up with a catchy name, which he, the coiner of "radical chic," "the Me Decade," and "the Right Stuff," is certainly capable of. A reader writes:
Tom  Wolfe's "fiction-absolute" structure of the mind has tremendous  explanatory power.
Regarding (racial) groups with significantly different innate abilities, it  would suggest that the 2 groups cannot ever live together in harmony. No group  would ever agree to take part in a society that valued traits that would ensure  that their group was valued less. Even though their group overall well being  might be materially better, and any individual might gain status and prestige  within this system, if it decreased the status potential of the group they will  rebel and create their own values.
I have been waiting my whole life for someone to systematically explain this to  me. It seemed intuitive but I wasn't smart enough to systematically understand  it.
It would also explain the phenomenon of political correctness. It never made  sense to why telling the truth was such a big deal. Maybe the liberals  understand the human mind better than I do. Maybe each particular group must  feel that they have a theoretical chance to dominate or else there will be a  psychological schism too large to bridge without overt domination of one group  over another.
A diverse society therefore has two options: living a lie that every group is  equal in ability (eventually backed by force as it fails) or a caste system  backed by force.
This would seem to argue against neoconservative color blind society that  ignores group differences. It would also argue against your citizenism  where we are all aware of our differences but get along fine and only think  about the nation as a whole.
What happens is that people  are perfectly capable of living happily in a society where their group is below  average ... until they think about it. The problem is that as time goes on,  people general get more time on their hands to think about things like this, and  more "ethnic leaders" to encourage them to dwell on the insult of it  all.
The funny thing is that your group doesn't even have to be below average for you  to be outraged. Indeed, it appears to be a general pattern that the closer your  group gets to being the top dog today, the angrier you get over slights to your  group in your great-grandfather's day, as JPod's tantrum  over immigration last Friday on NRO's "The Corner" showed.
Let me add, thought, that the point of citizenism is not that its natural or  easy but that it's necessary to head off trouble caused by natural divisiveness.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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