When I was growing up my best friend was named Brad. His father was a Nissei (a second generation American
of Japanese descent) and his mother was from Japan itself. So racially Brad was 100% Japanese. But not
once did it occur to me to think of him as anything other than an American
because that is what he was culturally. He
was just another kid on the street who loved baseball, rock music,
skateboarding, and all the other activities American kids enjoyed at the
time.
True, there were some Japanese influences but they were never
strong enough to overcome the environmental influences of being born and raised
in America. The result is that although
he could physically blend in on any street in Japan, he would be the proverbial
fish out of water culturally. This was
clearly demonstrated when, in university, he minored in Japanese and
failed. Of course, he had no problem in
the English-based classes and graduated with high honors.
Through this and similar experiences I learned that there is a
huge difference between one’s race and one’s culture. That one is a product of nature while the
other is the result of nurture. Furthermore,
at an early age, I understood that there is no inherent connection between the
two. This is clearly shown in the definition
of the words. As Webster’s College
Dictionary defines them:
Race refers to a group of persons
related by common
descent or heredity
Culture is the sum total of ways of
living built up by a group of human beings and transmitted from one generation
to another [Author’s note: usually through language]
From these definitions it is clear that neither one has
anything to do with the other. So you
can imagine my surprise (make that shock) when I see people use the words as if
they have the same meaning. For example,
when the French interior minister, Claude Gueant, recently declared some “civilizations
superior” to others he was called a “cultural racist” by some political groups. The racist label is also applied to anyone
who opposes multiculturalism or supports an English-only agenda.
I myself have been called a racist because I believe that there
is a distinct American culture that needs to be cherished and protected. I take this view because I understand that America
was never based on race but on ideas and culture is what holds it all together. Remember that culture is the “sum ways of
living” and “transmitted from one generation to another” and language is the primary
method of transmission. Without a common
culture and common language to transmit the culture there is no America, just
pockets of distinct and separate groups trying to get along with each
other. (This is the destructiveness of
multiculturalism and I hope I am not around to see the end result of such
nonsense bred out of ignorance.)
Of course, it is not uncommon for those with political
agendas to manipulate words in order to gain support from those who do not know
any better. But recently I have been
seeing this misuse of the words 'culture' and 'race' from people who should know
better.
I am currently reading Why
Nations Fail by two very highly educated and knowledgeable men. Daron Acemoglu is a Professor of Economics
at MIT, while James Robinson is a Professor of Government at Harvard. Clearly, these men should know the
definitions of words like race and culture.
Yet, they confuse the two. In
chapter 2 they discuss the Culture Hypothesis on why there is economic inequality
in the world. They use several examples
to illustrate that this hypothesis does not work. One example is the fact that people of
Mexican descent live and dominate both the Mexican and American sides of
Nogales, a city which straddles the border.
Yet, the Mexican side is impoverished while the American side is relatively
prosperous. From this they conclude that
culture plays no role in the development (or lack of development) of either
side.
By using this logic, my friend Brad should have traditional
Japanese values, attitudes, and behavior.
Yet, as I explained above, since he was raised and educated in the
United States—and not Japan-- he was and is culturally American. This is the same for most of those living in the
American side of Nogales. They may look
like and share many cultural similarities with their neighbors to the south but
they are not the same. Their upbringing
in the United States altered them culturally, even though they may remain
racially intact.
In another example, the authors use the degree that Latin
American countries still have indigenous populations (race) to discredit the
Cultural Hypothesis. They highlight the
fact that Colombia has a small indigenous population relative to those of Bolivia
and Ecuador, yet all have about the same per capita income level. Therefore, they claim, culture cannot be a factor. This argument is so faulty that I do not know
where to begin. It completely ignores
the fact that, since all three were Spanish colonies, they all now have similar
cultures. The only other way this
argument can work is if we assume that the indigenous population has remained
unchanged by those colonial experiences.
But to accept this argument is to go to a place like central Mexico and
expect the people there to be dressed in Aztec garb, waving obsidian swords,
and making human sacrifices to the gods.
I have been there and this does not happen, except in the shows for
tourists. The cold truth is that, while
many are racially indigenous, the indigenous culture has been completely eradicated
and replaced (or modified) by the Spanish culture.
The inability to distinguish culture from race is very
dangerous and it is disturbing that academics fail to recognize the differences. On a macro level it destroys the bonds that
hold the modern nation-state together.
On a micro level it is racism in its purist form since it forces us to
see race as a determinant of behavior.
This misunderstanding has led to some very dark moments in history. A victim of one of those moments was Brad’s
dad. He was forced to spend several
years of his childhood in an internment camp because people could not discern
between being racially Japanese and culturally American. It is shocking and sad that over 60 years
later we still suffer from the same ignorance.
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