We Don't Want to Lose
Did This Maine Dem Rep Just Endorse...Susan Collins?
Ilhan Omar Responds to Nancy Mace' Bill Banning Foreigners From Holding Office
NJ Governor Complains After ICE Stops Her From Entering ICE Facility
Former Trump Advisor Says He Wants Peace Talks With Iran to Fail
Are Wisconsin Democrats Trying to Torpedo Francesca Hong's Gubernatorial Run?
Another Hollywood Actress Is Lecturing Us on the First Amendment and Democracy
Hasan Piker Sure Sounds Worried About That Subpoena
Guess Who Is Paying for 'Gender-Affirming Care' in Colorado
Crime Is Caused by Moral Bankruptcy, Not Poverty
Trump and Iran: The Most Critical Juncture
Lefties No Longer Trying to Hide How They Want You Disarmed
Zohran Mamdani Took a Swing at Margaret Thatcher. Now It's Coming Back to...
This Is What Spencer Pratt Plans to Do With LA's Homeless
Trump Chooses Symbolic Location for Next Cabinet Meeting
Tipsheet

Sowell: Inequality is Driven By Failed Government Policies, Not the "Legacy of Slavery"

Sowell: Inequality is Driven By Failed Government Policies, Not the "Legacy of Slavery"

In a recent interview with "Uncommon Knowledge" host Peter Robinson, famed economist and syndicated columnist Thomas Sowell expanded on a favorite research topic of his: Namely, race in America.

Advertisement

Last November, for example, he wrote this:

New York Times writer Nicholas Kristof asserts that there is "overwhelming evidence that centuries of racial subjugation still shape inequity in the 21st century" and he mentions "the lingering effects of slavery." But before we become overwhelmed, that evidence should be checked out. [I]f we wanted to be serious about evidence, we might compare where blacks stood a hundred years after the end of slavery with where they stood after 30 years of the liberal welfare state.”

And in that interview with Brooks, Dr. Sowell attempted to do just that.

He explained that contrary to the unsubstantiated and fact-free theories of revisionists, blacks were generally better off before LBJ’s ‘Great Society’ programs were rolled out and adopted.

He gave several statistical examples to defend his contention.

“In 1960, which would be almost a hundred years after the end of slavery, 22 percent of black kids grew up in homes with only one parent,” he said. “Thirty years later, after the liberal welfare state, that number had more than tripled.”

“We can speculate on how much that 22 percent was due to the legacy of slavery,” he conceded. “But we know that that tripling was not due to the legacy of slavery; it was due to the legacy of a whole different set of policies.”

Advertisement

Related:

INEQUALITY

What's more, he also gave two educational examples to prove his point.

“Stuyvesant High School in New York, as you know, you get into it by only passing a very tough exam,” he said. “In 2012, the percentage of black students who had gotten into Stuyvesant High School was less than one-tenth of the percentage of black students who had gotten into Stuyvesant High School 33 years earlier.”

But Stuyvesant was by no means an outlier, he pointed out.

“Dunbar High School in Washington [was] an elite black high school for a very long time,” he added. “In 1993, the number of kids out of Dunbar High School who went on to college was less than it was 60 years earlier, which would have been in the depth of the Great Depression.”

Translation: Failed government policies are (mostly) to blame for, as Kristof put it, “inequity in the 21st century." Slavery, according to Sowell, is a much smaller factor.

Watch the full clip below, courtesy of the WSJ:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement