JEFF JACOBY
Sacrificing truth on the altar of diversity
By Jeff Jacoby, Globe Columnist | August 30, 2006
YOU'RE A publisher of children's textbooks, and you have a problem.
Your diversity guidelines -- quotas in all but name -- require you to
include pictures of disabled children in your elementary and high
school texts, but it isn't easy to find handicapped children who are
willing and able to pose for a photographer. Kids confined to
wheelchairs often suffer from afflictions that affect their appearance,
such as cerebral palsy or muscular dystrophy. How can you meet your
quota of disability images if you don't have disabled models who are
suitably photogenic?
Well, you can always do what Houghton Mifflin does. The well-known
textbook publisher keeps a wheelchair on hand as a prop and hires
able-bodied children from a modeling agency to pose in it. It keeps
colorful pairs of crutches on hand, too -- in case a child model turns
out to be the wrong size for the wheelchair.
Houghton Mifflin's ploy was recently described by reporter Daniel
Golden in a Wall Street Journal story on the lengths to which
publishers go to get images of minorities and the disabled into
grade-school textbooks. A Houghton Mifflin spokesman claimed that
able-bodied models are presented as handicapped only as a last resort.
But according to one of the company's regular photographers, the
deception is the norm. At least three-fourths of the children portrayed
as disabled in Houghton Mifflin textbooks actually aren't, she told
Golden. In fact, publishers have to keep track of all the models they
use for such pictures, so that a child posing as disabled in one
chapter isn't shown running or climbing a tree in another.
Faked photos of handicapped kids are just one of the ways in which
truth is sacrificed on the altar of diversity. The cofounder of
PhotoEdit Inc., a commercial archive that specializes in pictures of
what it calls ``ethnic and minority people in all walks of life,"
advises publishers that images of Chicanos can be passed off as
American Indians from the Southwest, because they ``look very similar."
Similarly, Golden notes, a textbook photographer tells clients that
since the ``facial features" of some Asians resemble Indians from
Mexico, ``there are some times where you can flip-flop."
Yet pictures of authentic Hispanics who happen to have blond hair or
blue eyes don't count toward the Hispanic quota ``because their
background would not be apparent to readers." In other words, rather
than expose schoolchildren to the fact that ``Hispanic" is an
artificial classification that encompasses people of every color,
publishers promote the fiction that all Hispanics look the same -- and
that looks, not language or lineage, are the essence of Hispanic
identity.
Some images are banned from textbooks because they are deemed stereotypical or offensive. For example, McGraw-Hill's
guidelines specify that Asians not be portrayed wearing glasses or as
intellectuals and that publishers avoid showing Mexican men in ponchos
or sombreros. ``One major publisher vetoed a photo of a barefoot child
in an African village," Golden writes, ``on the grounds that the lack
of footwear reinforced the stereotype of poverty on that continent."
Grinding poverty is in fact a daily reality for hundreds of millions of
Africans. But when reality conflicts with political correctness,
reality gets the boot.
So, on occasion, does historical perspective, as for example when a
McGraw-Hill US history text devoted a profile and photograph to Bessie
Coleman, the first African-American woman pilot -- but neglected even
to mention Wilbur and Orville Wright. ``A company spokesman," the
Journal reports dryly, ``said the brothers had been left out
inadvertently."
It isn't only when it comes to texts that diversity has led to
dishonesty, or even to the manipulation of photos. In 2000, the
University of Wisconsin at Madison featured a group of students
cheering at a football game on the cover of its admissions brochure.
One of those students was Diallo Shabazz, a black senior who hadn't
been at the game. University officials, desperately wanting the new
publication to reflect a diverse student body, had lifted Diallo's
image from somewhere else and digitally inserted it into the football
shot. ``Our intentions were good," Madison's director of university
publications said when the deception was exposed, ``but our methods
were bad."
But the ``good" intentions of the diversity crusaders cannot be
separated from bad methods they resort to, whether those methods
involve racial quotas in admissions and hiring, the assignment of
schoolchildren on the basis of color, or photographic fakery that puts
healthy kids in wheelchairs. By reducing ``diversity" to something as
shallow and meaningless as appearance, they reinforce the most
dehumanizing stereotypes of all -- those that treat people first and
foremost as members of racial, ethnic, or social groups. Far from
acknowledging the genuine complexity and variety of human life, the
diversity dogmatists deny it. Is it any wonder that their methods so
often lead to unhappy and unhealthy results?
Jeff Jacoby's e-mail address is jacoby@globe.com. 