2020年6月2日 星期二

The legacy of our original sin

Racism endangers all that’s good in America.
Demonstrators protest the death of George Floyd on Sunday, May 31, near the White House in Washington.Alex Brandon/Associated Press
Author Headshot

By Paul Krugman

Opinion Columnist

These are times of grief for those of us who love America and its promise; I know people who have been spontaneously breaking into tears, and the rest of us are walking around in a kind of stupor.

Every day, it seems, brings another indicator of our decline: the can-do nation has become a land that can’t deal with a pandemic, the leader of the free world has become a destroyer of international institutions, the birthplace of modern democracy is ruled by would-be authoritarians. How can everything be going so wrong, so fast?

Well, we know the answer. As Joe Biden put it, “the original sin of slavery stains our country today.”

Non-American friends sometimes ask me why the world’s richest major nation doesn’t have universal health care. The answer is race: we almost got universal coverage in 1947, but segregationists blocked it out of fear that it would lead to integrated hospitals (which Medicare actually did do in the 1960s.) Most of the states that have refused to expand Medicaid coverage under the Affordable Care Act, even though the federal government would bear the great bulk of the cost, are former slave states.

The Italian-American economist Alberto Alesina suddenly died on March 23; among his best work was a joint paper that examined the reasons America doesn’t have a European-style welfare state. The answer, documented at length, was racial division: in America, too many of us think of the beneficiaries of support as Those People, not like us.

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Now, America is actually a far less racist society than it used to be. In 1969 only 17 percent of white Americans approved of black-white marriage. Even during Ronald Reagan’s first term that number was only up to 38 percent. As of 2013 it was 84 percent. (As it happens, my wife is African-American.)

But as George Floyd could tell you, if he were still alive, racism is far from gone. And while Americans are increasingly tolerant as individuals, racial tensions continue to be exacerbated by cynical politicians, who exploit white racism to sell policies that actually hurt workers, whatever their skin color.

And racial antagonism is, of course, what made it possible for Donald Trump to become president. It’s hard to imagine someone less suited for the job, intellectually and morally. But he’s a very good hater, who has conjured up many demons — there are far more anti-Semitic insults and threats in my inbox than ever before. And his appeal to prejudice has given him a devoted base.

So now we’re at a moment of crisis, when all the good things America stands for are endangered by the poisonous legacy of our original sin. Will we make it through? Honestly, I’m not at all sure that we will.

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Quick Hits

Racism has poisoned America.

The Trump base is white non-college men. Everyone else disapproves.

Be careful about your historical analogies.

Spain may have beaten the coronavirus. America, not so much.

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Facing the Music

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2020年6月1日 星期一

On Tech: The power of bearing witness

Connecting the world feels essential in moments of history. Is it a package deal with all the rest?

The power of bearing witness

Matt Chase

Can we have this heartfelt exchange about intergenerational anger and sadness be viewed by 21 million people, without having the conspiracy video “Plandemic” likewise go viral?

Can we witness a police officer consoling a crying protester, and not have a terrorist broadcast mass murder in New Zealand?

Can we have citizens documenting acts of property destruction and heavy-handed law enforcement tactics, without having a world leader threaten his own people with violence in the middle of the night?

Days of fury over the killing of George Floyd last week in Minneapolis, strangely, is showing the best of technology that gives nearly everyone a megaphone to show and tell the world what they’re feeling, doing and witnessing.

But the same technology also enables the spread of dangerous misinformation and can be used to incite violence and empower genocidal mobs.

Can these two sides be separated? Can we have one without the other, or is it a package deal?

I spent a good chunk of the weekend on Twitter, which, like other internet hangouts, felt like a place to bear witness to the raw, beautiful and terrible moments of an important point in U.S. history.

I will never forget the video of two men and a teenager talking about how powerless they feel. I watched online this moment of silence, a woman angry at people tagging graffiti on a store, fury directed at a police car in my city and another police vehicle appearing to ram through a crowd also in New York City. I needed to see all of this. We needed to see all of this.

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News outlets are publishing articles and videos on the protests, but social media brings the reporting to an even wider audience.

And journalists can’t be everywhere and see everything. Smartphones let people at every protest in every city capture what they see and tell their own stories. Otherwise we’d have a flatter view of what’s happening. Watching, listening and witnessing don’t on their own fix social inequalities, but they’re necessary steps.

There are days I wonder if the last decade of the internet was all a horrible mistake. Maybe it was a terrible idea to let people broadcast whatever they wanted to potentially billions of people without a moment’s hesitation or oversight, and to let a handful of corporations turn the dials that determine how prominently those messages got circulated.

This has empowered and encouraged drug dealers, lynch mobs, child sex abusers and backers of dangerous health information to run wild until — maybe — one of those dial-twisting companies noticed and — again, maybe — stopped them.

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And then there are moments when I can’t imagine not putting the power to broadcast in the hands of billions.

I want to have the good, the bad and the in-between of bearing witness to moments of history without everything else.

Facebook is making a choice, too

My least favorite words in the English language are “Facebook shouldn’t be the arbiter of truth” of what people say online.

Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s founder and chief executive, said those words (again) last week in response to questions about why the company, unlike Twitter, let stand without comment or action posts from President Trump that falsely claimed that mail-in voting ballots would mean the November presidential election was “rigged.”

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It’s completely fair to say that words of powerful people like the American president should stand on their own no matter what. There is inherent value in seeing the unvarnished comments of world leaders and being able to debate whether those words are right or wrong.

But Zuckerberg didn’t stop at that sentiment. He reiterated a big, bold statement that Facebook doesn’t want to be the arbiter of truth. Guess what? It is, and Zuckerberg knows it.

Facebook, like those other dial-twisting companies I wrote about above, is not a zone of complete free expression.

Tens of millions of times each month, people who work on Facebook’s behalf — or computer systems for which Facebook writes the rules — enforce the company’s policies that prohibit calling for violence against a person or a group of people, discussions about suicide or self-harm, or posting sexually explicit material about a child. Facebook likewise determines what counts as bullying on its online hangouts and what is spam to be blocked or deleted.

Facebook does not stand back and simply let anything happen inside its digital walls. And I don’t think we want it to. Everything that we see on Facebook is because Facebook actively chose to do something, or actively chose not to do something. Facebook is not neutral.

I have to assume that Zuckerberg saying that Facebook shouldn’t be the arbiter of truth is either a stunningly simplistic comment from one of the world’s most powerful people, or a blatant attempt to win over politicians and political conservatives who have proposed regulatory crackdowns. Either way, it’s not good.

Before we go …

  • Be careful about claims regarding “outside” agitators: Some federal and local officials have said anti-government extremists organized online to incite violent confrontations or property damage at the protests sparked by the death of George Floyd. These claims are often made without evidence and may be inflating the role of far-left or far-right “outsiders” at protests, NBC News reported.
  • Inside the messy policymaking at Facebook and Twitter: My colleague Kate Conger has a back story on how Twitter executives, in a late-night virtual conference last week, debated and decided to add a warning label to Mr. Trump’s tweet appearing to threaten military violence against protesters who looted.At Facebook, there are clusters of unrest among some employees unhappy with how the company has handled inflammatory posts from the president, the Times tech reporters Sheera Frenkel and Mike Isaac write. Dozens of these employees are staging a virtual “walkout” on Monday, in what my colleagues said was rare public criticism of their own company.
  • Real retail therapy: In response to rising anxiety over the coronavirus and everything else, the online shoe retailer Zappos revamped its customer service hotline to let people call and talk about anything — their future travel plans, help with homework or whatever is on their minds, my colleague Jenny Gross writes.

Hugs to this

A bird, a basketball and play time. (Thanks to my colleague Michael de la Merced for this necessary moment of levity.)

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