Conservatism Without Bigotry
The Atlantic|December 2017

Republicans must reckon with their policies’ racial effects. That would be more likely if liberals stopped carelessly crying racist.

Peter Beinart
Conservatism Without Bigotry

IS AMERICAN CONSERVATISM inherently bigoted? Many conservatives would be enraged by the question. Many liberals suspect the answer is yes. ¶ These different reactions stem, in part, from different definitions of bigotry. Conservatives tend to define it in terms of intention: You’re guilty of bigotry if you’re trying to harm people because of their race, gender, or the like. Liberals are more likely to define it in terms of impact: You’re guilty if your actions disadvantage an already disadvantaged group, irrespective of your motives. You may genuinely believe that Georgia can’t afford to expand Medicaid. But given that the Georgians affected by this decision are disproportionately poor people of color—and that they lack coverage in large measure because they are poor people of color—your opposition to expanding Medicaid perpetuates a history of state-sponsored bigotry. As a conservative, you may feel an impulse to conserve the past. In a country whose history is marked by the subordination of blacks, women, and LGBT people, however, many liberals believe that conserving the past maintains that subordination.

This story is from the December 2017 edition of The Atlantic.

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This story is from the December 2017 edition of The Atlantic.

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