Glenn Loury
The Glenn Show
Whose Fourth of July?: Black Patriotism and Racial Inequality in America
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Whose Fourth of July?: Black Patriotism and Racial Inequality in America

A speech delivered at the National Conservatism Conference, October 31, 2021
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Recently, I was asked to deliver a speech at the National Conservatism Conference, which was held in Orlando, Florida. It was high-profile affair with many prominent conservative intellectuals, media figures, and politicians speaking and in attendance. And I don’t mind saying I had a prime speaking slot! I used the speech to develop some ideas I’ve aired here on TGS, and I think many of you will be gratified by the reaction they get from the crowd. But make no mistake: I’m not just telling them what they want to hear.

In the speech, I try to make the case for black patriotism, the forthright embrace of American nationalism by black people. I argue that, ultimately, most black people want the same things as most other Americans: safety, a shot at improvement, a fair and just government, and personal freedom. Black people share a common culture with the rest of the country—emphasizing racial difference obscures that essential fact. I also argue that conservatives need to go beyond making generic, color-blind claims about America and leaving it at that. Racial inequality is real, and there do need to be initiatives put it place to remedy it. I then go on to outline some “unspeakable truths” about race pertaining to four topics: racial disparity, the racialization of police violence, the threat of white backlash, and American equality. I end by engaging with Frederick Douglass, who gave a famous address about slavery and the Fourth of July. The Fourth is, indeed, “ours”—all of ours.

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0:00 “Tolstoy is mine. Dickens is mine. Newton, Maxwell, and Einstein are mine”

4:13 “Our Americanness is much more important than our blackness”

7:39 Conservatives cannot go back to "business as usual" on race

9:22 A conservative prescription for persistent racial inequality

11:38 The roots of racial disparity

17:17 Putting police killings of black Americans into perspective

23:58 From white guilt to white backlash

28:10 The “lie” that the American Dream doesn’t apply to blacks

34:47 Black people “must seize equal status”

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Glenn Loury
The Glenn Show
Race, inequality, and economics in the US and throughout the world from Glenn Loury, Professor of Economics at Brown University and Paulson Senior Fellow at the Manhattan Institute