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Right Co-opts Language Of Grievance

By Leonard Pitts Jr.|June 09, 2009

So Newt Gingrich now says Sonia Sotomayor is not a "racist" after all. She must be trembling with relief.

Mr. Gingrich's backpedaling came last week in an article on HumanEvents.com. It leaves just two high-profile Republicans, former Rep. Tom Tancredo and radio blowhard Rush Limbaugh, still clinging to that absurd allegation.

As you know unless you are just back from Antarctica, this sudden spasm of righteous Republican rage is due to a speech Judge Sotomayor gave in 2001 about the role gender, ethnicity and other characteristics play in a judge's judgment. "I would hope," she said, "that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn't lived that life."


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It is, yes, a wince-inducing statement. You might even call it a tone deaf and culturally chauvinistic one. But does it support comparisons to the Ku Klux Klan such as Mr. Tancredo and Mr. Gingrich have made? Not in a million years.

The attempt to paint Ms. Sotomayor as such represents more than political overreach. No, this is part and parcel of a campaign by conservatives to arrogate unto themselves and/or neutralize the language of social grievance. We've seen this before. They sullied the word "feminist" so thoroughly, even feminists disdain it. They made "liberal" such a vulgarity you'd never know liberals fought to ban child labor, end Jim Crow or win women the right to vote.

Having no record of their own of responding compassionately to social grievance (ask them what they did during the civil rights movement and they grow very quiet), conservatives have chosen instead to co-opt the language of that grievance.

There is something surreal about hearing those who have historically been the enemies of racial progress define racial progress as looking out for the poor white brother.

And whatever comes beyond surreal is what describes these three men in particular, none of whom has ever been distinguished by his previous tender concern for racial minorities - lied upon, denied upon and systematically cheated of their square of the American Dream - telling us "racism" is what happens when a Hispanic woman says something dumb about white men. We are, after all, talking about a man (Mr. Tancredo) who once called majority-Hispanic Miami "a third world" country, and another man (Mr. Limbaugh) who advised a black caller to "take that bone out of your nose."

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