Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Frank Bruni, Charlottesville, and the retreat from reason
Frank Bruni, Charlottesville, and the retreat from reason
Mar 21, 2025 3:08 PM

On Saturday, New York Times columnist Frank Bruni wrote a column that appeared to promote the same kind of identity politics that exploded in violence one day earlier in Charlottesville. He began:

I’m a white man, so you should listen to absolutely nothing I say, at least on matters of social justice. I have no standing. No way to relate. My color and gender nullify me, and it gets worse: I grew up in the suburbs. Dad made six figures. We had a backyard pool. From the 10th through 12th grades, I attended private school. So the only proper way for me to check my privilege is to realize that it blinds me to others’ struggles and should gag me during discussions about the right responses to them.

mentator would sincerely encourage his readers to disregard his work, so Bruni pivoted by claiming his own victim status as a homosexual. “What does that make me? Oppressor or oppressed?” he asked, before proceeding to argue that the veracity of one’s arguments should not be determined by external factors.

While this may have been a clever gambit a few years ago, his attempt to hoist the modern zeitgeist upon its own petard falls short. Progressives have dealt with such cognitive dissonance by embracing the theory of intersectionality. The theory attempts to navigate overlapping narratives of oppression and victimology by assigning a rotating value based on each concrete situation. Thus, a black heterosexual male may oppress a white lesbian in some cases and be the oppressed party in others. As a tidy way of assigning relative worth in every situation, intersectionality has swept through left-leaning intellectual circles and, as Andrew Sullivan wrote in The Atlantic, has taken on all the trappings of the regnant religion of academia.

The correct response to the miasma of identity politics cannot be an invitation to more identity politics. Instead, the proper way to assure academic and political freedom e from reasserting the West’s traditional values of human dignity, liberty, and the power of reason.

The idea that insight and cognition are uniquely different for ethnic or social classes is not a new one. Ludwig von Mises summarized the teaching, in his critique of Marxism, in Human Action:

The logical structure of mind is different with various social classes. There is no such thing as a universally valid logic. What mind produces can never be anything but “ideology,” that is, in the Marxian terminology, a set of ideas disguising the selfish interests of the thinker’s own social class.

He likewise described the racialist viewpoint that disagreements between members of different “races” must be considered “arbitrary,” because “those other races have a different structure of mind.”

These twin conceptions of human cognition as a function of status or DNA create strange bedfellows. Although speaking of long-dead Marxists and Nazis, Mises’ descriptions apply equally to the shared views of the intersectional Left and the teachings of modern-day “race realists.”

Both groups divide the world into rigid and impermeable factions, each tethered to its own unique reality. When one self-identifies with a different faction, as e.g, the transgender movement, that creates yet another division. In his Theory and History, Mises calls the exponents of these theories “anti-harmonists” whose ideology proclaims an endless and “irreconcilable antagonism prevailing among various groups.”

This retreat from reason has made dialogue impossible. “Where are the bridges?” Bruni asked. Since there is no overarching notion of truth, or universal standard of rational discourse, the public square has degenerated from petition of ideas to a fight-or-flight situation. Isaiah’s prophetic invitation to “let us reason together” has been replaced with a stern admonition to “check your privilege.”

The government and economic policy created by such a view are suffused with conflict and resultant top-down intervention. Those who deny human equality on the grounds of racial or identity politics may begin by denying others the right to free speech in some contexts. But they inevitably proceed to strip others of their right to private property, restrict access to education and employment opportunities, and lay excessive tax or regulatory burdens upon members of a given ethnic or religious group. (Compare the Jim Crow laws of the United States and with the economic code of apartheid developed by Hendrik Verwoerd. Similar burdens have been placed upon Christians and other dissidents by the modern munist regime.)

All exponents of identity politics – whether campus radicals or their mirror image in the Alt-Right – are, at best emphasizing mistaken identities; at worst, they are engaging in idolatry. They assert that a person’s primary identity is his or her race, class, sex, sexual preference, gender identity, or socioeconomic status.

The traditional view of the West, inspired by Christianity, holds that a person’s primary identity is as a child of God. His defining attribute is his immortal soul which, through the illumination of the Holy Spirit and leading a moral life, can elevate anyone of any background to the heights of blessedness and contemplation. Rather than genetics, the Venerable Bede wrote, “Love alone, therefore, distinguishes between the children of God and the children of the devil.”

From the first, Christianity was multiethnic, from the first Ethiopian convert (Acts 8) to the bustling African churches that have remained in an unbroken succession to this day. In the fourth century, St. Ephrem the Syrian wrote:

Very glistening are the pearls of Ethiopia. … He that gave light to the Gentiles, both to the Ethiopians and unto the Indians did His bright beams reach. … The dark Ethiopic women became pearls for the Son; He offered them up to the Father, as a glistening crown from the Ethiopians.

Among other things, this should also dispel the conceit that Christianity is a slavemaster’s religion, and Islam the peculiar emancipator of Africans.

As Roger Scruton wrote in his newest book On Human Nature, this religious view became synthetized with philosophical concepts to define each individual as a person capable of rational thought and, thus, requiring an I-Thou relationship. Human dignity and reason demanded that public philosophy be carefully developed through rational arguments to which all were invited, heard out, and engaged.

The system of government this produces is limited, participatory, and harmonious. A limited government must respect people’s rights and conscience, allowing maximum freedom to live this out in the economic realm. The nature of Western government may be best described in an extract from a profound run-on sentence in John Locke’s Second Treatise on Government: “Reason, which is [natural] law, teaches all mankind, who will but consult it, that being all equal and independent, no one ought to harm another in his life, health, liberty, or possessions.” Since all are “furnished with like faculties … there cannot be supposed any such subordination among us, that may authorize us to destroy one another, as if we were made for one another’s uses.”

It is precisely this conception of government that hangs in the balance. Traditional Western views of human dignity and universally binding norms of reason tore down the barriers, created mutual respect, and developed a culture of free dialogue, economic freedom, and ordered liberty. Identity politics paves the road to irrationality and a thousand more tragedies like Charlottesville. Only jettisoning it and embracing dignity and reason can restore the respect missing from our brittle debate.

David’s “The Death of Socrates,” which hangs in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Public domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Falling Support for Climate Resolutions
All eyes seem to be directed toward Rome last week as the Pope weighed in on climate change. As anticipated, there has already been a lot of spinning by the whirling dervishes of the zealous variety– doubling down on their over-the-top, pre-release spin. Yes, it’s a given both sides of the climate-change debate are spinning, but as your writer is on the skeptical end of the spectrum it seems the other end is receiving the majority of media coverage. Skeptics?...
Encyclical Understands Man, but not Economics and Politics
Doug Bandow, advisory board member of the Acton Institute, praises the new encyclical for its understanding of man and religion, but criticizes it for its lack of knowledge of economics and politics in an article for The American Spectator. Despite mitment to ecological values, the Holy Father acknowledges that “a return to nature cannot be at the expense of freedom and the responsibility of the human being, that is the part of the world tasked with cultivating its ability to...
La encíclica es una caricatura del capitalismo
Francis X. Rocca’s Wall Street Journal article about Laudato Si’ has been translated into Spanish. Featured in Tuesday’s EcoLinks, this piece addresses many topics surrounding the new ecological encyclical, including the pope’s seeming condemnation of capitalism. Rocca quotes Acton’s Director of Research, Samuel Gregg who argues that the system the pope condemns is not actually free market capitalism: El pontífice argentino, el primero en la historia en provenir del hemisferio Sur, escribe sobre la “deuda ecológica” del Norte global con...
Audio: Jordan Ballor on Laudato Si’
Jordan Ballor, editor of the Journal of Markets and Morality, joinedhost Austin Hill on Faith Radio’s Austin Hill in the Morning show on Friday morning to discuss Pope Francis’ new encyclical,Laudato Si’, and its impact in the broader Christian world beyond the Roman Catholic Church. You can listen to the interview via the audio player below. ...
Pope Francis’ Incoherent Economics
Peter Johnson, external relations officer for the Acton Institute, discusses the muddled economic message in the recent encyclical for The Federalist: While I don’t doubt for a moment that Pope Francis sincerely wants to help the poor, I think it would be difficult for even the most erudite Catholic scholars to find a coherent message in a passage like this. For example, he praises business as a “noble vocation” while summarily disparaging “economies of scale.” While he recognizes that poor...
Dear Patriarch And Archbishop: When You Preach, You Should Sound Like Christians
Dylan Pahman has a bit of an issue with Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby. It seems the two have written an op-ed for the New York Times in response to Pope Francis’ encyclical Laudato Si’. The only problem is, according to Pahman, the two don’t sound like Christians. The Patriarch and Archbishop’s op-ed could have been written by a deist like Thomas Jefferson, or a UN bureaucrat versed in God-talk. Sure, they vaguely mention God and...
Laudato Si’: ‘Opening Doors and Hearts to the Fullness of Creation’
The mon question surrounding the new encyclical from Pope Francis is some variation of: Why is a Church leader talking about politics, economics, and science? Many argue that this encyclical is merely trying to encourage conversation on how best to be stewards of creation. In the past, papal encyclicals have created controversy, but have helped to further debate and discussion and have informed consciences. Kathryn Jean Lopez, of the National Review, argues that this encyclical on ecology, “presents a fuller...
A Healthy Dose Of Skepticism For Scientific Consensus
My husband and I had a conversation about science on the way home from church yesterday. Since he is a scientist, it drives him a little buggy when people talk about “consensus” as a way e to a scientific conclusion, or that scientific facts can be “bent” to uphold a particular opinion or viewpoint. As he said, science is about discovery and fact, not about agreement. One hundred people can agree that grass is, in fact, a mammal, but that...
Why Harriet Tubman Will Be on the $10 Bill
Last week the U.S. Treasury announced the $10 bill is next paper currency scheduled for a major redesign, a process that takes years because of the anti-counterfeiting technology involved, and will feature a “notable woman.” The new ten will be unveiled in 2020, the 100th anniversary of the passage of the nineteenth amendment, which gave women the right to vote. As the Treasury explains, “The passage of the nineteenth amendment granted women their right to fully participate in the system...
Video: Rev. Robert A. Sirico Comments on Laudato Si’ on Fox News Channel
Acton Institute Co-Founder and President Rev. Robert A. Sirico made an appearance on America’s News Headquarters on Fox News Channel this afternoon to discuss the impact of Pope Francis’ new encyclical, and to share his thoughts as part of the discussion the Pope has called upon us all to participate in on the state of the environment. You can view his Father’s Day appearance using the video player below. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved