White Men Can’t Jump

This article will not go viral.

Guest post by Robert Gore at Straight Line Logic

Professor Charles W. Kingsfield Jr. announces his mission statement to his first-year contracts class at Harvard Law School.

You teach yourselves the law, but I train your mind. You come in here with a skull full of mush; you leave thinking like a lawyer.

Kingsfield is a fictional character, from the novel, 1973 movie, and television series The Paper Chase. John Houseman, as Kingsfield, had as memorable a voice and almost as fearsome a demeanor as Darth Vader, who would appear four years after The Paper Chase movie. Houseman won an Academy Award and became the spokesman for Smith Barney, stating its tag line with aristocratic frost: “They make money the old fashioned way…they earn it.”


Teaching his charges to think like lawyers meant developing and honing their ability to think logically, to analyze, and to present arguments and conclusions with precision and clarity. More’s the pity Kingsfield was fictional; most people would benefit from such instruction. Harvard’s fictional One L’s were a bright lot. If their skulls were full of mush, then skulls today are full of the polluted runoff from TV, internet pornography, texting, and social media.

Garbage in, garbage out, as the computer programmers say. It’s far beyond the scope of this article to examine all the garbage out there that passes as thought. We’ll look at a sliver, what can be termed group attribution. Beyond the quality that defines a large group, it is generally impossible to make a categorically true statement about all of the members of that group. Yet, the fallacy is ubiquitous across the political spectrum, from social justice warriors babbling about white privilege to alt-righters claiming that members of various races are inherently incapable of living together.

White men can’t jump. Except that most of the 16 men who have cleared the 2.4 meter mark (7 ft., 10 1/4 in.) in the high jump have been white, hailing from places like Russia, Eastern Europe, and Sweden. (The world record, 2.45 meters, is held by Javier Sotomayor, a Cuban.) The problem with group generalizations is that a counterexample invalidates them.

What difference does it make? Group generalizations are usually based on an average characteristic within the group. Let’s say the average white man can’t jump 3 feet (that may be too high, given the obesity epidemic). What’s more interesting, the mass of white men who can’t jump that height, or the exceptions who can jump over twice that height? Do you wonder why the average white guy can’t jump very high? Or how men or women of any race can learn and train themselves to jump over a foot higher than their own height? Who would you study if you were trying to improve your own jumping?

Most of our social structures are geared to the average, or worse. Students on the far right side of the intelligence bell curve (yes, there is an intelligence bell curve) are stultified in schools so oriented. Escape and refuge generally involve paying large sums of money for the comparatively few schools ostensibly devoted to educating the bright and brilliant. In higher education, a significant part of the social sciences (a misnomer) are wastelands focused on groups and averages, using that dreariest branch of mathematics, statistics.

Imagine an Olympic training facility that accepted any white male, devoting its resources to raising the average high jump from 36 to 37 inches, though its trainees would win no gold medals. Isn’t that analogous to the education system? The best universities draw applicants from around the world and accept 5 to 10 percent of them, indicating a shortage of high quality institutions relative to the demand. Meanwhile, billions are spent raising average academic performance the equivalent of 36 to 37 inches.

That’s accepting the charitable assumption that our education system accomplishes its stated goals, which it does not. These days, illiterates with no mathematical skills beyond counting on their fingers graduate from high school.

Anomalous individuals, not the average ones, propel civilization. The fixation on groups and their averages is intellectually and practically counterproductive. Even the notion of identifying the exceptional is falling into disrepute, and that has something to do with the present state of the world. Overall quality of life is a reflection of overall quality of thought: garbage in, garbage out.

Muslims are violent, bent on world domination, and are guided by the Koran, which justifies their behavior and goal. One can find that generalization in various forms all over the internet. No denying that it’s true for some Muslims. However find one peace-loving Muslim who doesn’t read or follow the Koran (Do all those who call themselves Christians read and follow the Bible?) and the generalization is invalidated.

What difference does it make? Take the generalization to its logical end, and you can justify a preemptive genocide stretching from Indonesia to Morocco. If every one of 1.3 billion Muslims is bent on ruling the world and killing you, you’d better kill them first. A “Clash of Civilizations” has been invoked to justify US military interventionism in Islamic lands. Except by the warped standards of its promoters, that effort has not gone well: a never ending war on terrorism that begets more terrorism, huge refugee flows, increasing hostility towards the US, destruction, chaos, and a massive waste of blood and treasure for all concerned. Garbage in, garbage out.

Contrast the US effort in the Middle East to Russia’s, which seems to be guided by a more precise and accurate formulation: some Muslims are violent and bent on world domination. Russia identified such a group operating in Syria and Iraq. At the invitation of the Syrian government and allied with Iranian, Iraqi, and Hezbollah militias, it has reversed ISIS’s territorial gains and is in the process of exterminating those members who have not fled. In so doing, Russia has enhanced the security of ordinary people in Syria and Iraq and raised its diplomatic status throughout the Middle East. Smart in, smart out.

One problem with logic, clarity, and precision is that like Professor Kingsfield, they’re not warm, cuddly, fuzzy, and friendly. At the end of The Paper Chase movie, after months of back and forth with Kingsfield, student James T. Hart, played by Timothy Bottoms, tries to tell the professor how much he and his class have meant to him. Kingsfield doesn’t even remember Hart’s name. He‘s so deep into the fascinating nooks, crannies, and interstices of contract law (they are fascinating) that everything else has become secondary or irrelevant.

Logic, clarity, and precision are hard work and won’t get you invited to parties. They are also the foundation of the scientific method, which deals in hypotheses and theories, but never the comforting certainties of prejudice, generalization, and belief. The scientific method can lead to self-induced cognitive dissonance for those who cannot hold in their heads inconsistent hypotheses simultaneously.

If the world appears wildly chaotic, bordering on insane, check the programming. Garbage in, garbage out. The current state of affairs reflects the predominant quantity and quality of thought. What’s true at the individual level—there is no hope of improving life without improving thought—applies to groups, including the group known as humanity.

One hypothesis can be advanced with virtual certainty: among the masses hooked into the internet, exchanging pictures of cute animals and the fascinating details of their fascinating lives, this SLL post will not go viral.

You Owe It To Yourself

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36 Comments
hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
December 3, 2017 8:27 am

“Garbage in, garbage out, as the computer programmers say.” RG

“We all buy into the saying about computers; ‘garbage in, garbage out’.” Stucky

I have heard the phrase before, years and years ago when my father was working on a computer language called COBAL. I hear it on occasion but it isn’t exactly common. It is usually referred to as GIGO, but to see two writers use it nearly simultaneously and in two completely different contexts is mildly curious, matrixy.

I think it was George Fuechse who coined it sometime in the 50’s.

Steve C.
Steve C.
  hardscrabble farmer
December 3, 2017 9:45 am

I hate to admit it, but I remember COBAL and FORTRAN too.

I miss them about as much as I miss my slide rules (which I still have).

Steve C.
Spring, Texas

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Steve C.
December 3, 2017 3:32 pm

But PL1 was a pretty nice language!

Steve C.
Steve C.
  Anonymous
December 3, 2017 3:43 pm

Yeah, I had forgotten about PL1.

Truthfully, I didn’t have to deal with it, but I remember it.

I used mostly FORTRAN as the engineering language of choice. We had to have a working knowledge of COBOL, but didn’t use it much beyond that.

I am glad they are all in the dustbin.

Thankfully technology moves on.

Learning them did teach me a lot about how to structure writing instructions, specifications, and even essays, that I have used to this day though.

Steve C.
Spring, Texas

Done in Dallas
Done in Dallas
  Steve C.
December 4, 2017 9:56 am

I had to crack open some Fortran back in July. Last time I touched it was in ’90.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Robert Gore
December 3, 2017 10:22 am

Your harkening back to a 45 year old movie isn’t exactly youthing you, either. 😉 Meanwhile, I’m dashing off to church. Hopefully it won’t be the old geezer priest who reads his old sermons from the eighties with topical references to things like the baby falling down the well. If it’s him I’m walking out.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  hardscrabble farmer
December 3, 2017 12:11 pm

It is quite common in the IT world. The language is actually COBOL – Common Business-Oriented Language. And yes, I did code in COBOL back in the day on an IBM mainframe and running the programs using JCL on a dumb terminal. Just aged myself there quite a bit.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  ILuvCO2
December 3, 2017 12:46 pm

COBOL, I stand corrected. My dad used to come home with these little yellow paper circles in his pants cuffs and stacks of punch cards. In his day debugging consisted of removing moths from the cathode tubes. ‘Tis true.

Capn Mike
Capn Mike
  ILuvCO2
December 3, 2017 1:06 pm

I understand that COBOL programmers are still in demand for legacy IT systems. If you’ve got like 3 or 4 decades of development put into a system, it makes sense.

Chubby Bubbles
Chubby Bubbles
  Capn Mike
December 3, 2017 9:55 pm

In Italy, age discrimination is a-ok, and there are gov subsidies to employers for hiring ‘youth’. So at least as recent as 5 years ago it was very common to see ads asking for COBOL programmers under the age of 30, while 50-y.o. DH who knew the language inside and out was unemployable.

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
December 3, 2017 8:56 am

My favorite line in the movie, “Never assume anything, Mr. Hart.”
I may have paraphrased it.

I have always tried to live by that rule. Every time I jump to conclusions, I get into trouble.

sionnach liath
sionnach liath
  Mary Christine
December 3, 2017 9:37 am

from Mary Christine –
“My favorite line in the movie, ‘Never assume anything, Mr. Hart.’
I may have paraphrased it.”

A long time ago, I learned this axiom – ass / u / me

Unit 472
Unit 472
December 3, 2017 9:04 am

What is it about ‘Russia’ that causes otherwise intelligent people’s minds to issue forth with stupidity on a colossal scale? Russian policy in the Islamic world is wise and based on understanding and tolerance? ROTFLOL! Does Mr. Gore have any memory of Russia’s invasion of Afghanistan ? The first and second wars in Chechnya ? Getting kicked out of Egypt by Sadat? Its involvement in the Lebanese civil war? The treatment of Muslims in Russia today ( it isn’t affirmative action or PC). Sidling up to Erdogan and Iran might be considered the enemy of my enemy is my friend but Russia’s “friends” are invariably scum like Maduro, Kim Jong Un, Ayatollahs and the other bottom feeders around the globe!

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Unit 472
December 3, 2017 12:39 pm

That was the Soviet Union . A communist cabal that murdered million s of its citizens. Russia with a small force and very light casualties has managed to save Syria from fallen to American backed jihadists, much to the chagrin of the pentagon and especially the CIA. The Chechen wars were caused by American back jihadists catching Russia at a weak time , like when again American backed Jewish mafia pilfered and stole billions ,weakening the country so it very nearly broke apart and collapsed, millions again died an early death thanks to these traitors, but a the last moment in came Putin and practically against all the odds and with many enemy’s inside and outside the country saved Russia. That is why the western media hate him . From being on its knees to again being again a world power.For good or bad billions around the world look to Russia to escape the America squid which loots and sucks the life force out of their countries,murdering anyone that gets in the its way . Not everyone in the world wants to be a godless fat transgender worshiping shopaholic .

Socratic Dog
Socratic Dog
  Unit 472
December 3, 2017 2:52 pm

I seem to recall that, just like in Syria, Russia was INVITED to Afghanistan, by the government of the day. The US then built and armed the Mujahedin, which became Al Qaeda, and the rest is history.

Offhand, I’d say Putin learned something from Afghanistan. He didn’t let himself get screwed over the same way in Syria.

A. R. Wasem
A. R. Wasem
  Unit 472
December 4, 2017 2:27 pm

Unit – You really, Really, REALLY need to stop commenting. Why? Because every time you do you demonstrate that you are a complete illiterate as far as history is concerned and, in addition, totally unable to reason logically. Do yourself a favor and stop making a complete fool of yourself.

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
  Robert Gore
December 3, 2017 9:43 am

LOL, it’s assumptionitis. It’s a disease that tends to affect us all.

Montefrío
Montefrío
December 3, 2017 10:03 am

Congrats on a very well-reasoned, well-ordered and very convincing essay! One good point after another.

Russia is not the Soviet Union any more; the US and EU are assuming that role in line with the evolution of Soviet-style communism into the Gramscian model. Russia, I believe, is fast becoming much of what the US and European nation-states once were.

rhs jr
rhs jr
December 3, 2017 10:44 am

If it’s true White men can’t jump, so is Black men can’t think. “Student Athlete” is an oxymoron. Half my FSU tuition was “student activity fees” (which I needed for food) that allowed me to attend all sports events “free” but I only attended half the home football games and only because my hometown girlfriend wanted to go. Most of my activity fee money was wasted on stupid women’s sports, basketball etc. Probably half the student body were athletes, artist, theater, music or education. I signed up for a Dept of Education Automobile Shop Maintenance Instructor Class and it was all Jocks who turned the lights out and slept; I got a “C” and complained but the professor said “You do support the team don’t you?” FSU should become two separate schools: Science/Math/Business/Law and Affirmative (f)Arts.

RiNS
RiNS
December 3, 2017 11:07 am

Robert

I really liked this piece. Concise and to the point…

Generalizations and the yearn to the mean are a plague on this world.

BB
BB
December 3, 2017 12:42 pm

Not all generalizing is wrong in fact it may save your life. Like …most black inter cities are full of Drugs ,crime and violence. Or ..most Muslims think it’s ok to kill infedels because the Koran does justify it ..so you can never trust any Muslim if you are not Muslim. …Right?

Socratic Dog
Socratic Dog
  BB
December 3, 2017 2:58 pm

That’s why we generalize. But, having a brain, we understand that, and can see past our generalizations. If we have decent judgement, we can even get it right when it’s OK to suspend action or thinking based on generalizations and prejudice. But we so at our peril.

i forget
i forget
December 3, 2017 4:25 pm

Logic, clarity & precision would be served by accurately prioritizing the threats. But threats generate sooo much patronage. And “everybody” loves “their” founding patrones. It’s like a tequila addiction. Or a rifle cartridge compulsion.

Henley, paraphrasing Shakespeare: the more I think about it ol’ Billy was right – let’s kill all the lawyers, kill ‘em tonite. Mad muslims ain’t even a distant 2nd to the lawked (&loaded) ness monsters…& the locked-down haggises who love them.

Generalizing\standardizing to lowest common denominator’s not smart. But setting bar to highest lowest common terminator’s even more destructive. But the former follow the latter & the beatings go on. Coloring law books are kiddie’s bibles. And they will not be denied…their denials.

Standards, ideally, should emerge – & always be subject to submerge, extinction – not imposed. But tenured serfs gotta have House(man)s of authoritarian worship. & vice versa.

Pragmatism (ends justifies means) & krav magatism (kill ‘em all, let the deity du jour sort it out) – not idealism – are the pitches that sell. Mostly.

As for jumpers, & Shakespeare, & raging motivations for objections to the reality machine:

Uncola
Uncola
December 3, 2017 5:09 pm

Enjoyed this Robert. Also just saw it on ZH. Congrats.

I’m wondering now if another way to state garbage in, garbage out could be information forms perception, perception initiates action / outcomes. But then I want to question how cognitive preference (bias?) originates and affects the process.

Thank you for the thought-provoking essay.

Overthecliff
Overthecliff
December 3, 2017 5:27 pm

Yeah, there are niggers and Mohammedans on the right hand side of the bell curve. That just makes them more dangerous. They not only do not share white values they do not value whites. Any white person ignores that to their peril.

james the deplorable wanderer
james the deplorable wanderer
December 3, 2017 6:48 pm

FORTRAN is not dead – it’s just that the script kiddies messarounds and anDROID phones don’t run on it, so it’s less evident than before. But you can still get FORTRAN compilers if you search hard enough, and things like MATLAB are essentially using FORTRAN in the programming window, so it’s not entirely gone.
Other languages may compile faster, be more elegant (my IT friend’s girlfriend once tried to convince me that PASCAL is more “elegant” than FORTRAN, but I did not have eyes to see) and generally better known, but if you look for people who need something that WORKS you can still find FORTRAN.
Does anyone here still program in PASCAL?

Pepin the Short
Pepin the Short
December 4, 2017 8:15 am

Using the example of the track and field high jump to disprove the axiom that white men can’t jump is misleading the term “white men can’t jump” originated in reference to basketball where the “jump” being referred to was the vertical leap. There is ample data confirming that black do in indeed outperform whites in the vertical leap (see https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5260564/ as just one of many possible examples). High jump is not the same as vertical leap in that, particularly since the advent of the Fosbury Flop, there is a fair of skill and technique involved. Vertical leap –all athleticism, zero skill. Track and field high jump, mixture athleticism and skill/technique. When examining black performance in sports, it is noteworthy that there does appear to be a correlation between the athleticism /skill mixture of the sport and black dominance. More athleticism and less skill tends to mean increased black performance; less athleticism and more skill tends to mean decreased black dominance.

KeyserSusie
KeyserSusie
  Pepin the Short
December 4, 2017 11:22 am

?More athleticism and less skill tends to mean increased black performance; less athleticism and more skill tends to mean decreased black dominance.”

I spent 7th grade in Denver. I had never been exposed to track and field. I learned techniques for high jumping. I won ribbons, as I did in discus, shot put and long jump. It was mostly good coaching that enabled some of my abilities and my predominately fast twitch muscles to excel. Same for winning the city championship for 7th grade wrestling. I am lousy at distance running which requires predominant slow twitch muscle fibers. My second wife could not beat a 5 year old in a sprint but she won medals in ultra-marathons.

I would say East Africans, Kenyans and Ethiopians in particular, excel in distance running largely because of the long time effects of evolution. It has been reported that most West Africans are predominantly fast twitch and predominate sports where explosive athleticism is valued. And there is the usual back lash of countervailing opinions.

My high school basketball coach played for Adolph Rupp. He was going to be Rupp’s white wonder on his all white basketball team at UK. Sadly he blew out his knee his sophomore year. And not so sadly Rupp gave in to recruiting black athletes.

I think of Oscar Roberson to Steven Curry as evidence of skill and athleticism conjoined in black athletes. I think of my relative Shaun Livingston as a mixed race example of skill and athleticism. I remember when Bear Bryant recruited his first black athletes. I remember when there were no black quarterbacks. I once asked a black social worker, if all men are equal why it there such a predominance of blacks in the NBA? He was flummoxed by the question. I will not repeat the insightful observations of James Carville and Charles Barkley on basketball players and race.

There are exceptions to every rule and they only reinforce the rule; and do not invalidate the rule. And rules change over time, usually for the better but not always.

I am hearkened by mostly white guys forming the offensive lines in pro football (which I no longer watch). More so with white kickers.

It is always good to challenge assumptions with unemotional candor. And we cannot ignore sentience either.

Great post Mr. Gore!

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Pepin the Short
December 4, 2017 12:04 pm

My understanding of this piece involves perception. The view that white men can’t jump is so pervasive they actually made a movie about it starring Wesley Snipes and Woody Harrelson. Before reading I never knew that “… most of the 16 men who have cleared the 2.4 meter mark (7 ft., 10 1/4 in.) in the high jump have been white, hailing from places like Russia, Eastern Europe, and Sweden. ” Did you? This was the point. A garbage slogan made me believe a garbage concept that wasn’t true. The vertical leap or high jump is irrelevant. The point was the perception, Pepin.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
December 4, 2017 12:04 pm

Anonymous above was me.

Andrea Iravani
Andrea Iravani
December 4, 2017 3:02 pm

The Oil and Vinegar Foreign Policy of the U.S. and The Rockefeller Foundation – Andrea Iravani

The Oil and Vinegar Foreign Policy of the U.S. and The Rockefeller Foundation

GaryD
GaryD
December 4, 2017 7:44 pm

A White Man perfected “the jump”…