Tribalism on the Warpath

New York City is considering a law that will require “racial equity studies”—akin to environmental impact statements—for zoning changes. The law would require “a study that would analyze the area’s demographic conditions, quality of life, housing security and displacement risk index.”

One supporter of the law acknowledges that rezoning has provided great benefits, but only in certain areas of the city. He added,

In others, in communities of more color, they have helped spur gentrification and displacement. Both developers and the city have been reluctant to recognize the role of rezonings in this racial and ethnic displacement, much less take adequate action to prevent it.

If a racial equity study finds that a particular project will result in the displacement of “people of color,” it will be used as a club to beat developers into submission. Developers will be forced to abandon their project or concede to whatever demands activists and politicians can concoct.

Supporters don’t justify this law by claiming that rezoning violates anyone’s rights. Their justification is that rezoning might have results that some people don’t like, such as the displacement of “people of color.” And if “people of color” are disproportionately impacted, then rezoning is clearly wrong.

The law will extend certain political favors to the members of a particular group. Membership in that group is not determined by one’s actions, one’s character, or one’s values. Membership is determined by the color of one’s skin. Because of one’s skin color, according to this law, one should be protected from the undesirable. This is racism.

Ayn Rand noted that racism, like every form of collectivism, is a desire for the unearned. And that is precisely the goal of racial equity studies. Government officials will use these studies to extort concessions from developers in exchange for permission to proceed with a project. Those concessions will focus on minimizing or preventing the displacement of “people of color,” and most likely they will require the developer to provide subsidized housing to a substantial number of families. If the developer refuses, he will be denied permission to build his project.

The beneficiaries of these concessions will do nothing to earn whatever values come their way. Their only “claim” to those benefits is the color of their skin. Their only “claim” to those benefits is membership in the favored tribe. Sadly, New York City’s “people of color” are not the only ones seeking unearned values.

The desire for the unearned is growing in America with an increasing number of tribes seeking values that they have not earned. Low-skilled workers demand $15 an hour. College students demand free education. College graduates demand forgiveness of their student loan debt. Those on unemployment demand higher payments for a longer period of time. Each of these tribes is on the warpath, seeking to expropriate values from the producers.