Media

‘Systemic Paternalism’ column banned by VT Digger

Editor says column on systemic racism didn’t meet ‘good faith’ standard

by Guy Page

July 24, 2020 – VT Digger, Vermont’s most-read source of online news and commentary, on Tuesday removed a post by conservative Vermont pundit Carol Frenier that called into question ‘systemic racism.’ 

The post had run on VT Digger for about a week before being withdrawn. According to an email exchange provided by author Frenier of Chelsea, VT Digger removed Frenier’s July 12 opinion piece entitled “Systemic Paternalism” because “the column did not meet VTDigger’s standards for publication, providing insufficient or misleading context for its core arguments.”

Managing Editor Colin Meyn added in his email to Frenier, “VTDigger welcomes commentaries that present a good-faith exploration of topics of high interest to Vermonters. In this instance, that standard was not met.”

Frenier vigorously denied the ‘good-faith’ accusation, retorting to Meyn: “If you—or someone else at Digger—just doesn’t agree with it, then be honest enough to say so.”

Frenier and husband Bob Frenier –  a former Vermont State Representative for Chelsea and producer/host of the online TV program “Real Vermont News” – are a “power couple” among Vermont conservative journalists, admittedly a small group. Carol Frenier’s columns are regularly published in Digger, the Caledonian-Record, True North Reports, and other Vermont media. 

Also this week, VT Digger published an opinion piece by WDEV radio host and former State House AP reporter Dave Gram questioning the credentials of conservative Vermont journalists, saying: “This phenomenon of conservatives dressing up (they actually need to dress down) as journalists is quite a thing in Vermont lately, manifesting itself in the Vermont Daily, True North Reports, News Done Right and other such organs.”

Both the Frenier column and the column to which Gram objected critiqued the perspective of Black Lives Matter. In historically free-thinking Vermont, suppression of speech seems to follow criticism or even questioning of BLM. Windsor School Principal Tiffany Riley was canned for expressing doubts on Facebook. State of Vermont highway workers have been directed to erase anti-BLM graffiti but allow pro-BLM graffiti to remain. The Frenier column banned by VT Digger appears below and at Vermont Daily, where Ms.Frenier’s contributions are welcome. Readers may judge for themselves if she provided “insufficient or misleading context” – a charge that was not explained by Meyn in follow-up emails, despite Frenier’s request. 

It should be noted that publishers are neither legally obliged to print contributed content, nor obliged to explain why it’s not printed. However, most responsible media outlets – especially those required by their 501C-3 not-for-profit status to be educational and not political – generally attempt to allow all thoughtful points of view.

The Frenier/Meyn email thread appears below. 

On Jul 21 at 8:05 PM, Meyn wrote:

Hi Carol – I hope you’re well. I am writing to let you know that VTDigger’s editor’s have decided to remove your recently submitted commentary on systemic racism from our website. We will be inserting the following explanation on the page where it was published. 

Best, Colin

———-

VTDigger editors have decided to remove from the news site a commentary by Carol Frenier published on July 16 titled “Something systemic is wrong, but is it systemic racism?”

On closer examination, it was determined the column did not meet VTDigger’s standards for publication, providing insufficient or misleading context for its core arguments.

VTDigger welcomes commentaries that present a good-faith exploration of topics of high interest to Vermonters. In this instance, that standard was not met. 

It is also clear that pre-publication review of the column required a more deliberative process.

Colin Meyn

Managing Editor, VTDigger.org

In response, Frenier wrote on Wednesday, Jul 22 at 8:47 AM:

Hi, Colin – Please remove your post in place of my article. It damages my professional reputation as a writer, not to mention my integrity. And please explain what you mean:

What “insufficient or misleading context” are you referring to?

Where do you see bad-faith in my exploration of the topic?

Thank you, Carol 

Meyn answered on July 22 at 10:55 AM:

Hi Carol,  We have removed your name from the post. 

Thanks, Colin

A few minutes later, at July 22 at 11:11:39 AM, Frenier wrote:

Hi, Colin – That doesn’t answer my questions, nor does it change much because people know I wrote this article. Plus I am not ashamed of it and don’t wish to have my name disconnected from it. You accepted the article, and now it’s your responsibility to admit to and justify the reason that you are removing it from public view. If you—or someone else at Digger—just doesn’t agree with it, then be honest enough to say so.

Carol

* * * * *

Frenier’s original column appears on Vermont Daily Chronicle and below: 

Systemic Paternalism

Carol Frenier

June 12, 2020

Over half a century of serious effort to equalize opportunity for Blacks and Whites has failed in our inner cities. Many well-intentioned, politically conservative Whites are confused by this because we have voted for 50 years to spend untold billions of government dollars in a “war on poverty” and we’ve even given our consent to affirmative action programs that disadvantage our own children. We have also spent hours criticizing ourselves for our alleged unconscious racism with no discernible impact. Certainly something systemic is wrong. But is it systemic racism

The existence of systemic racism in the USA prior to the 1960s Civil Rights Movement is undeniable. Jim Crow laws prohibited Blacks from eating in the same restaurant as Whites, using the same restroom, or traveling in the same bus. Blacks were closed out of schools and jobs. Entire neighborhoods were off limits to them and social conventions imposed taboos on interracial dating or marriage.

But where do we see these kinds of barriers today? Many liberals say our criminal justice system continues to discriminate against Blacks. They cite the number of Blacks incarcerated and the number of Blacks killed by police officers. But those figures only accurately reflect Black involvement in crime; they tell us nothing about why such disproportionate criminal involvement exists.

A compelling case can be made that the real culprit is systemic paternalism: “the policy or practice of people in positions of authority of restricting the freedom and responsibilities of those subordinate to them in the subordinates supposed best interest.” According to this view, the proliferation of government programs that are intended to “take care of” the disadvantaged can “interfere” with and control their lives in ways that are more damaging than racism. 

Over the past 50 years systemic changes have occurred in two areas of American life that have had huge negative consequences for Blacks, even as the structures that enforced racism were steadily demolished by affirmative action and equal opportunity legislation. These areas are 1) the breakdown of the family and 2) the decline of effective education.  This is not new information, but these changes need to be analyzed systemically in order to understand the full impact of what we are facing.

Breakdown of the American Family.

Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s landmark study of welfare in the 1960s pointed out the unintended consequences of a government program called Aid to Dependent Children. Benefits were available to women with children who were not living with a male, so many men who did not have the means to support a family left their homes. At a time of lingering racial discrimination in employment, this welfare system had a disproportionate—and, “yes” systemic—impact on poor Blacks. Today 70% of Black children are born to and raised by single mothers, a significant portion of which live in a culture of permanent dependence on the government. Thus the high incarceration rates for young Black males and their more frequent encounters with police could arguably be attributed more to systemic paternalism that deprived them of a man in the house than to law enforcement racism. 

Adding to the problem of ungrounded youth, and expanding it into the larger society, the Sexual Revolution of the 1960s demanded legitimacy for all kinds of sexual self-expression—without commitment. The shame attached to bearing a child “out of wedlock” 50 years ago is long gone. Instead we have regulations, executive orders and school curricula throughout the system intended to shame us into accepting unrestricted sexual behavior and lifestyles under the umbrella of “tolerance”—what once would have been labeled promiscuity.

The impact of this change has been the reduction of security for children. Mary Eberstadt’s Primal Screams gives a sobering account of the unintended consequences for young people who have been deprived of a stable mother-father family unit. Serial divorce, or simply changing partners without marriage in the first place, results in ever changing adults in a child’s household. Eberstadt argues that youth involvement in activism has less to do with ideology than with a compensatory desire to belong. 

The Decline of Effective Education

A parallel development in the last 50 years is the decline of effective education. Many schools in poor areas are a disaster, no matter how much money the government spends on them. They are controlled by bureaucracies—state departments of education, school administrators and teachers’ unions—that resist Charter schools and school choice programs in the paternalistic belief that education professionals know better than parents what children need. School choice initiatives also empower parents to decide which schools their children attend, thus loosening the dependence that many government school bureaucracies impose on parents. 

The same systemic paternalism keeps parents powerless to prevent the ideological indoctrination of their children. Liberal teachers have free rein to convince Black children that White racism will limit their opportunities and White industrialization will destroy the planet. Parents who want academic achievement, good discipline, and character development for their children, not social activism and precocious sexuality, have little influence. 

Furthermore, even after 50 years of declining test scores, the systemic paternalism of the education establishment prevents parents from discarding the failed progressive model of education. Hours are spent on “process” learning (how to look something up, for example) over transmitting actual knowledge/facts from teacher to student. But credible educational professionals such as E.D. Hirsch (Why Knowledge Matters) argue that acquiring real knowledge in the early grades is essential to later success; at this stage children are adding words to their vocabularies by the thousands.  School is the primary place where children from less educated families can catch up with their peers. By being systematically deprived of a knowledge-based curriculum, they keep falling behind.

Systemic paternalism, not systemic racism, is the thread that links dissolution of the American family and the decline in effective education with the failure of poor Blacks to achieve the economic progress available to every American. Our country’s future depends on how accurately we analyze the systemic elements of our culture that are causing our problems. Focusing on systemic racism is leading us nowhere.

PHOTO: Carol Frenier, from her Facebook page

Categories: Media

1 reply »

  1. As a long time listener to WDEV.,and the Dave Gram show, I was totally disgusted with Dave Gram’s commentary in Vt .Digger. Vt.Digger no longer allows comments so I could not critique his commentary. Apparently Dave Gram feels threatened by journalists that present unbiased facts. I realize that as a talk show host Dave Gram is only giving his opinion which is no more valuable than my opinion and he is not acting as a journalist. I really like reading TNR. I trust what I read is fair and accurate. I can’t say the same for VtDigger,