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To: goldworldnet who wrote (488495)5/24/2012 2:06:55 PM
From: Bill3 Recommendations  Respond to of 794309
 
George Will column:
Warren strikes a
chord with liberals


BOSTON — Blond, blue-eyed Elizabeth
Warren, the Senate candidate and Harvard
professor who cites "family lore" that she is
1/32nd Cherokee, was inducted into
Oklahoma's Hall of Fame last year. Her
biography on oklahomaheritage.com says
she "can track both sides of her family in
Oklahoma long before statehood" (1907)
and "she proudly tells everyone she
encounters that she is 'an Okie to my toes."'
It does not mention any Cherokee great-
great-great-grandmother. A DVD of the
induction ceremony shows that neither
Warren nor anyone else mentioned this.

The kerfuffle that has earned Warren such
sobriquets as "Spouting Bull" and
"Fauxcahontas" began with reports that
Harvard Law School, in routine academic
preening about diversity (in everything but
thought), listed her as a minority faculty
member, as did the University of
Pennsylvania when she taught there. She
said some in her family had "high c
heekbones like all of the Indians do." The
New England Historic Genealogical Society
said a document confirmed the family lore
of Warren's Cherokee ancestry, but later
backtracked. She has said she did not
know Harvard was listing her as a minority
in the 1990s, but Harvard was echoing
her: From 1986 through 1995, starting
before she came to Harvard, a directory
published by the Association of American
Law Schools listed her as a minority and
says its listings are based on professors
claiming minority status.

So, although no evidence has been found
that Warren is part Native American, for
years two universities listed her as such.
She has identified herself as a minority, as
when, signing her name as "Elizabeth
Warren — Cherokee," she submitted a crab
recipe (Oklahoma crabs?) to a supposedly
Native American cookbook. This is a
political problem.

A poll taken before this controversy found
her Republican opponent Scott Brown
trouncing her on "likability," 57 percent to
23 percent. Even Democrats broke for
Brown 40-38. Now she is a comic figure
associated with laughable racial
preferences. She who wants Wall Street
"held accountable" is accountable for two
elite law schools advertising her minority
status. She who accuses Wall Street of
gaming the financial system at least
collaborated with, and perhaps benefited
from, the often absurd obsession with
"diversity."

How absurd? Warren says that for almost a
decade she listed herself in the AALS
directory as a Native American because
she hoped to "meet others like me." This
well-educated, highly paid, much-honored
(she was a consumer protection adviser to
President Obama) member of America's
upper 1 percent went looking for people
"who are like I am" among Native
Americans?

This makes perfect sense to a liberal
subscriber to the central superstition of the
diversity industry, which is the premise of
identity politics: Personhood is distilled not
to the content of character but only to race,
ethnicity, gender or sexual preference.

This controversy has discombobulated
liberalism's crusade to restore Democratic
possession of the Senate seat the party
won in 1952 with John Kennedy and held
until 2010, when Brown captured it after
Ted Kennedy's death. Lofty thinkers and
exasperated liberals consider the focus on
Warren's fanciful ancestry a distraction
from serious stuff. (Such as The Washington
Post's nearly 5,500-word wallow in
teenage Mitt Romney's prep school
comportment?) But Warren's adult dabbling
in identity politics is pertinent because it is,
in all its silliness, applied liberalism.

The New York Times Magazine's headline
on its profile of her — "Heaven Is a Place
Called Elizabeth Warren" — suggests the
chord she strikes with liberals. They
resonate to identity politics of the sort
Warren's campaign tried when, on the
defensive, it resorted, of course, to
claiming victimhood. Playing the gender
card, it insinuated that criticism of her
adventures as a minority amounts to a
sexist attack on an accomplished woman.
But an accomplished woman, Susan Collins
of Maine, the only Republican senator rated
more liberal than Brown (who last year
voted with his party only 54 percent of the
time on partisan issues), called this
insinuation "patently absurd."

Barack Obama, who in 2008 carried
Massachusetts by almost 800,000 votes,
will win here again, and a senior official of
Brown's campaign thinks that in order to
win Brown must run between 250,000 and
500,000 votes ahead of Romney. In the
special election in January 2010, Brown
defeated a female opponent (women are
53 percent of Massachusetts voters) by
107,317 votes. He won independents 2-1.

The turnout this November, with Obama on
the ballot, probably will be larger, less
white and more Democratic. But just 0.3
percent of Massachusetts residents are
Native Americans, even counting Warren.

George F. Will writes about foreign and
domestic politics and policy for the
Washington Post Writers Group.


greenbaypressgazette.com