For some decades now, a popular conservative narrative of modern America has gone something like this: our centre-right nation, devout and industrious, is ruled by a politically liberal elite that disdains family, despises religion and celebrates indolence with government handouts. Many people find this story convincing. It helped fracture the postwar Democratic Party and midwifed the culture wars. Today it feeds the political frustrations of the Tea Party movement.
Charles Murray, the influential conservative scholar and provocateur, believes this story is wrong. In his new book, Coming Apart, Murray flips the script that has energised Republican politics and campaigns since Richard Nixon: the white working class, he argues, is no longer part of a virtuous silent majority. Instead, beginning in the early 1960s, it has become increasingly alienated from what Murray calls “the founding virtues” of civic life. “Our nation is coming apart at the seams”, Murray warns — “not ethnic seams, but the seams of class”.
Using a statistical construct he calls Fishtown – inspired by a white, blue-collar neighbourhood of the same name in Philadelphia – Murray sorts through demographic data to present a startling picture. Women in Fishtown now routinely have children outside of marriage. Less than a third of its children grow up in households that include both biological parents. The men claim physical disability at astounding rates and are less likely to hold down jobs than in the past. Churchgoing among the white working class has declined, eroding the social capital that organised religion once provided.
Illegitimacy, crime, joblessness — these are not merely the pathologies of a black underclass, Murray finds. They are white people problems too.
And what of the white upper class? In place of an aristocracy of inherited wealth, Murray suggests, we now have an aristocracy of inherited intelligence. Drawing liberally on his own past work, most notably The Bell Curve, a controversial 1994 study of intelligence, Murray says those with high IQs have replaced the old WASP elite in a modern economy that rewards brains over bloodlines.
High-IQ Americans have come to dominate elite colleges. They tend to marry one another and produce children statistically more likely to be smart.
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Cocooned in the same neighbourhoods, this new upper class has its own culture. Its members don’t watch game shows or go to bars with pool tables. They are skinnier. They don’t smoke. They are, Murray insists, predominantly liberal. Yet this overclass, Murray finds, is also truer to the founding American virtues than is the white working class.
Murray constructs a fictional town for this new upper class as well, which he calls Belmont. While marriage did decline among Belmont whites, the drop stabilised in the mid-1980s. In Belmont, births outside of marriage rose, but far more gradually than in Fishtown. The men – and many of the women – hold down jobs and work hard. Couples may have babies later in life, but they are meticulous about rearing them and obsessive about getting them into college.
Few people today would dismiss the idea that values, culture and intelligence play a role in economic success. But it is hard to know what to make of some of Murray’s findings. As with David Brooks’s Bobos in Paradise, Murray’s sociology depends a lot on his own, sometimes highly idiosyncratic, fieldwork. To demonstrate that the elite are more likely to drive foreign cars than domestic ones, Murray notes the makes of automobiles in a couple of mall parking lots.
One of its overriding themes is that economic insecurity doesn’t have much to do with eroding civic values, so we shouldn’t bother using government to tackle inequality. You will learn about working-class laziness, but you will find little discussion of the decline of trade unions or the rise of a service economy built on part-time work without benefits.
Though a self-described libertarian, Murray is not immune to the rage of the 99 percent. He lashes into bloated CEO pay, but chiefly as a symptom of collapsing codes of behaviour and propriety. And he is also sceptical that working-class whites are employed less because they can’t find decent jobs. How can the economy have anything to do with it, he asks, when the decades in question have included periods of rapid economic growth?
Perhaps because not everyone has shared in that growth. While Murray’s new upper class was taking home an ever greater share of national wealth, incomes for almost everyone else were stagnating.
Indeed, in comparison with the early 1960s, American workers today are less likely to have pensions, less likely to be able to support a family on a single income and, until the much-reviled ObamaCare law kicks in, less likely to be able to afford health insurance if their employer doesn’t provide it. Working-class whites are different from the cognitive elite in at least one way: they have less money.
COMING APART
The State of White America, 1960-2010
Charles Murray
Crown Forum; 407 pages; $27
©2012 The New York Times News Service