POLITICS NOVEMBER 15, 2011
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If Newt Gingrich's career in public service proves anything, it is that he will never be caught saying “Oops.” Gingrich is currently rising to frontrunner status in the Republican presidential primary largely because he's willing to talk about any subject at any time, is ready to do so with some measure of linguistic facility, and has sufficient self-regard to exploit every opportunity to demonstrate his rhetorical command. He has managed to leverage the televised debates to his benefit by acting like a professor before an unprepared lecture hall of students, condescending to the moderators by treating every question as a logic exercise. And so, however improbably, his Ph.D in history has earned the status of an important credential to the Republican Party.
But if Gingrich has amply proven his academic talents, he has also demonstrated their limitations. The Republican Party should not mistake his communication skills with evidence of real knowledge, or even of good reasoning. Gingrich may be a master of academic exercises—his ability to make bookish references and formulate long sentences demonstrate as much—but that does not mean he knows what he is talking about.
Gingrich's patterns of speech are largely analytically acute, and sometimes aesthetically interesting, but substantively, they are very often lacking. Language is supposed to be a package that carries substance, but Gingrich is sometimes so pleased with his uninterrupted stream of words, that he mistakes it for an actual flow of ideas. This, sadly, is an affliction endemic in academia, where too many spend too long trying to score points in petty intellectual fights; the further the substance of the debate recedes, the faster the self-satisfaction of the participants grows.
Linguists have long known not to be distracted by the decorative aspects of language, and that profound substance can often be found in unexpected packages; indeed, they are trained to find it there. A classic study, performed by the University of Pennsylvania’s William Labov back in the 1960s, shows that to be the case. Labov showed that in Philadelphia’s inner city, those speaking the roughest “Ebonics” were often reasoning more deeply than more educated, middle-class black neighbors. (This was just before middle class blacks started moving to the suburbs in the wake of the Fair Housing Act.)
Here’s a male teenager asked whether he believes in heaven:
Like some people say if you’re good an’ shit, your spirit goin’ t’heaven ... ‘n’ if you bad, your spirit goin’ to hell. Well, bullshit! Your spirit goin’ to hell anyway, good or bad. ‘Cause, you see, doesn’ nobody really know that it’s a God, y’know, ‘cause I mean I have seen black gods, pink gods, white gods, all color gods, and don’t nobody know it’s really a God. An’ when they be sayin’ if you good, you goin’ t’heaven, tha’s bullshit, ‘cause you ain’t goin’ to no heaven -- ‘cause it ain’t no heaven for you to go to!
On the surface that hardly sounds like what we call sober reasoning. However, Labov laid out the clear formal lines of logic expressed in this slangy, nonstandard vehicle of speech:
1. Everyone has a different idea of what God is like.
2. Therefore nobody knows that God really exists.
3. If there is heaven, it was made by God.
4. If God doesn’t exist, he couldn’t have made heaven.
5. Therefore heaven does not exist.
6. Therefore you can’t go to heaven.
Compare this to the more bourgeois person asked whether there is such a thing as witchcraft:
I do feel that in certain cultures there is such a thing as witchcraft, or some sort of science of witchcraft; I don’t think that it’s just a matter of believing hard enough that there is such a thing as witchcraft. I do believe that there is such a thing that a person can put himself in a state of mind, or that something could be given to them to intoxicate them in a certain – to a certain frame of mind – that – that could actually be considered witchcraft.
A teacher would have no problem with the phraseology; we all see the basic confidence in self-expression. In a television debate, this may not have even been considered a gaffe. But technically this guy didn’t say a thing of use. Is there witchcraft or not? What is it that “could be considered witchcraft”? Smooth talking and smooth thinking reveal themselves to be hardly the same thing.
So it is with Gingrich. Take a close look at what he's saying, and you'll find that he's using artfully constructed rhetoric to cloak ideas that are simply wrong. A favorite of mine was a few years ago when he opined that bilingual education fosters the language of the “ghetto.” He apologized for the “ghetto” part, appropriately enough. However, he was never forced to confront the fact that his whole statement was patently ridiculous. What evidence is there of burgeoning communities in the United States of people who grow up speaking only Spanish, or do not speak English well enough to function beyond asking someone to fill it up with regular?
The evidence shows instead that there are many communities of people who speak both Spanish and English, and, by all lights, they should be seen as a benefit, not a hindrance. Gingrich was arguing in part against bilingual education, but research has shown quite conclusively that children get a leg up in early learning when taught first in their primary language. Bilingual ed programs in the United States have not always been good, but Gingrich wasn't offering criticism—he was conducting a smear in the language of high-minded objectivity.
For someone with vaunted academic credentials, this is an embarrassment. If Professor Gingrich is intent on brandishing his Ph.D, might not he be expected to have done some basic research—or at least show basic respect for research—on the subjects he talks about? But there is a basic misunderstanding at work here: Scholarship is not about the production of words, but about the search for knowledge on the basis of evidence. Gingrich seems to have interpreted his academic training rather as a way primarily to burnish his own ego—to confuse supporters into following him, rather than to clarify matters of importance.
He is obviously well-practiced at this sort of scholarly and linguistic malpractice. So as Gingrich’s poll numbers go up this week, we should keep in mind that sometimes the pomp and circumstance of scholarly language is little more than a cynical game of bait and switch.
John McWhorter is a contributing editor for The New Republic.
23 comments
"...What evidence is there of burgeoning communities in the United States of people who grow up speaking only Spanish, or do not speak English well enough to function beyond asking someone to fill it up with regular?..." Happy to drop you off in a few neighborhoods in The Bronx, and have fun finding someone who can understand you, McWhorter. Where I buy my produce on Jerome Ave near Gun Hill, not ONE of the employees speaks or understands English although the lady from Lebanon tries. What a drive-by multi-cultural whack job by an elitist who would never deign to step foot in one of these neighborhoods, let alone live there. I grew up in what became Little Havana, and was the sole Anglo in my 12th grade government class in 1968, but all those Freedom Flight Cubans ONLY wanted to learn English, and most did so in part by asking me to talk with them. Academic education theories are why we seem to have more failing students than we ever did in those bad old racist days.
- K2K
November 15, 2011 at 2:00am
Here is another Gingrich example:
Gingrich creates a straw man. Where is the evidence that the occupy Wall Street crowd advocates no profits for business? Is he saying that OWS is directed at employers across the nation paying higher wages that eliminate profits? And if the profits are diminished by higher taxes, what does that mean about payment for the park?- Nusholtz
November 15, 2011 at 6:46am
JMcW, In a roundabout manner, you arrived at the conclusion that Gingrich has a long history of nonsense and demagoguery. A sort of mutant version of Professor Irwin Corey and Joe McCarthy, with apologies to Professor Corey. Dan
- dbuck1
November 15, 2011 at 6:51am
Finding absurd quotes by The Newt is like finding children who prefer ice cream to brocoli. Google Newt Gingrich quotes and be dazzled. My fondest memory of The Newt is watching those taped "seminars" on American history and other topics (including his musings about technology and the future) shown on television years ago that were nothing more than a gimmick to avoid limits on campaign contributions and to support his lifestyle. American history presented as infomercials. I recommend Michael Kazin's TNR essay "Newt Gingrich, America's Worst Historian", published this past July, for a critical assessment of Gingrich's reputation as an "ideas man".
- rayward
November 15, 2011 at 7:08am
Thank you, Nusholtz. I was about to track down that debate quote that stuck in my head and mention it here, but you did the work for me. When I was 12 one of my friends said to me, "Life's too short to waste it all in one day." Sure sounded profound -- for about ten seconds. I use that line often.
- Mikelawyr22
November 15, 2011 at 7:40am
The best comment on Gingrich's pseudo-intellectualism was published in none other than this magazine some years ago: http://www.tnr.com/article/politics/79050/greek-him (Requires subscription)
- timteeter
November 15, 2011 at 8:04am
There is absolutely no way in hell Newt garners enough delegates to get the nom, which means his only chance is a knock-down drag-out fight at the convention. And if that happens, Newt's public pronouncement on what he really thought about Paul Ryan's Roadmap is going to be repeated so often and so loudly among conservatives at the convention that many Tampa babies' first words will be "right wing social engineering".
- Tristan
November 15, 2011 at 9:49am
You could substitute the name Obama for Gingrich in this article and it sounds just as persuasive.
- NHRDS
November 15, 2011 at 9:57am
dbuck1, Professor Irwin Corey comes to mind when I, too, think of Gingrich--a con man who challenges us to find an idea-pea under a word-shell. And, like McWhorter says, even when Newt does manage to produce an idea, it's almost always wrong. As a politicized "historian," he is intent on manipulating evidence to "prove" his theses. Or, as they used to say in the "ghetto" that Gingrich referred to, "that ofay be shuckin' and jivin'."
- magboy47.
November 15, 2011 at 10:00am
Excellent take-down of Newt, the Glib Phony.
- JackR
November 15, 2011 at 10:40am
Nice work Dr. McWhorter. I suppose it is redundant to say "well said" to a linguist. I further agree with malahat that the bestowing of a PhD in and of itself doesn't provide one with a unified field theory (unless your PhD is in theoretical physics). Newt reminds me of the old Dr. Science routine on NPR.
- Lundell
November 15, 2011 at 11:30am
I went to college and to graduate school. Some of my professors were excellent, both as people and in their intellectual abilities. Some of them were jerks: unpleasant and nasty as persons; clotted and full of constipated useless information as scholars. Doctoral programs (at least then), were not set up to filter for decency or usefulness; weeds and useful plants thrived alike.
- skahn
November 15, 2011 at 12:16pm
"You could substitute the name Obama for Gingrich in this article and it sounds just as persuasive." I find it difficult to imagine Obama coming out and asserting that knowing two languages is a major disability in life.
- ironyroad
November 15, 2011 at 12:16pm
Gingrich is winning the newest #1 GOP criteria: being able to debate Obama in eleven months. Wait two or three more weeks for the next #1 GOP criteria. I have no idea what it will be. Cain will not survive the Nov. 22 AEI debate on foreign policy. Newt could still win the "looks most like Santa Claus" vote...(I loved Jon Stewart's Pillsbury doughboy satire)
- K2K
November 15, 2011 at 12:21pm
Where did this canard start that Obama doesn't know how to debate? I keep seeing tea party types on other blogs salivating at the idea of Newt debating Obama, and I am baffled. This is has nothing to do with my political leanings ... any half witted person could watch Obama's past debates and know that he's a formidable opponent, but it feels like the TP has become unhinged from reality (completely, I mean).
- NR409654
November 15, 2011 at 12:49pm
If Gingrich were ever actually to debate Obama (most unlikely), the real fun wouldn't be the debate. It would be the journalistic demolition of Gingrich in the immediate aftermath. When it comes to debates and words, the really smooth operator has proven to be, time and again, Mitt Romney.
- timteeter
November 15, 2011 at 1:29pm
K2K: I've been in many parts of L.A. (The "Capital of the Third World") and I've never yet encountered something like being in Montreal, for example, where it often seems hard to find people who speak English. Language-balkanization paranoids like Gingrich just don't have a lot of credibility to me. I think a lot of Gingrich's intellectual bona fides collapsed with the rise of the Internet, giving the average person a much more ready arsenal with which to challenge his intellectual-sounding ideas.
- gmck1948
November 15, 2011 at 1:44pm
timteeter: Thanks for the reminder of that Peter Green piece, which I had forgotten; it's majestic.
- frippo
November 15, 2011 at 4:14pm
gmck1948, I am not sure Montreal is a city where anyone should expect it easy to find people who are willing to acknowledge that they can speak English. My experience with the Quebecois is they insist on speaking French, even when they are completely bilingual. English is the only cultural characteristic that Americans have in common.
- K2K
November 15, 2011 at 6:40pm
I've always had a problem with wordiness, as it were. Being young enough to pull it off, It's always fun to use awful, coarse vernacular along slang, abbreviations, etc. when in a debate with educated people, waiting to see how quickly they dismiss cogent reasoning and evidence if you don't sound like Cicero.
- SarabandeG
November 15, 2011 at 8:45pm
A terrific piece by McWhorter on the difference between high sounding talk and intellectual substance and how Gingrich suffers from high falutin talkitis. I've always felt that about Gingrich but McWhorter says well what I've felt and why I've felt it. One small sidebar thing though that I didn't follow in the explication of the kid's case against heaven and getting there: the explication has it that the conclusion is that there is no God and therefore there can't be a heaven to go to: ...4. If God doesn’t exist, he couldn’t have made heaven. 5. Therefore heaven does not exist. 6. Therefore you can’t go to heaven... But I read the kid to be saying that since, or perhaps just while, there's no heaven to go to, we all, therefore, go to hell: ...Well, bullshit! Your spirit goin’ to hell anyway, good or bad.. Why is there any kind of laudable logic in these overall comments? How does it follow from anything the kid says that our spirits invariably go to hell? And why doesn't that assertion contradict the logic of why, according to the kid, our spirits aren't going to heaven? So contra Labov and McWhorter I don't really see "clear formal lines of logic" in the kid's comments as a whole.
- basman
November 16, 2011 at 1:36am
"Gingrich seems to have interpreted his academic training rather as a way primarily to burnish his own ego—to confuse supporters into following him, rather than to clarify matters of importance." Yup ...
- jmarshall
November 16, 2011 at 1:37am
It's also a version of the Cain phenomenon, except it's education rather than race that's the problem. Republican voters are tired of being told that their party is anti-intellectual and opposed to formal academic knowledge production, even though it is, and they are pretty much OK with that most of the time. But just sometimes, they wish they had a snooty professor type of their own to stick it to the journalists/liberals/other snooty academics who get on their nerves, and Newt fits that role snugly (and smugly).
- ironyroad
November 16, 2011 at 12:57pm