Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Racelessness is the future of justice
Racelessness is the future of justice
Dec 20, 2025 7:34 PM

What if race, or at least our concept of race, didn’t exist? What if our discussions about ongoing socio-economic problems had to take place without reference to race, relying only on the best solutions for human flourishing? Impossible? Maybe not.

Read More…

What if the answer to racial tensions in America lay in the removal of race as a necessary identifier of any human person? This question frames a new theory put forward by Sheena Mason, assistant professor of African American literature at SUNY Oneonta, in Oneonta, N.Y. According to Mason’s website, “The camouflaging of racism as race remains, in large part, why many people and institutions have failed to partially, entirely, or meaningfully address racism even when actively participating in anti-racist efforts.” Her solution is a raceless discussion about human flourishing.

For Mason, “race involves the belief that human beings are naturally born, for better or worse, into separate and distinct categories.” Over the course of human history, race has been used to create social and political hierarchies that then became the basis for tyranny and oppression. In America, this created a race hierarchy that came to justify the institutionalization of slavery, Jim Crow, and the eugenics movement. Because of this history, the definition of racism tends to focus on how white people regard nonwhite people and obscures the fact that racism can be a vice for anyone at any time in munity anywhere. It leaves us with the question, “Can nonwhite people be racist?”

Judeo-Christian anthropology exposes the absurdity of the question by recognizing the fact that all human persons are morally flawed and have the potential for great evil, but also the capacity for outstanding virtue. Race does not predetermine whose lives will be characterized by vice or virtue. This reality calls for a new paradigm, a new way of thinking. Perhaps it’s time to decentralize race as a descriptive term for how we explore relationships between human persons. Perhaps our problem is that we’re in cultural captivity to our conceptions of race. It’s not enough to say that race is a social construction. What if we agreed that race does not exist at all, at least our modern conception of it. Mason’s solution is what she calls her “Theory of Racelessness.” The best way to face racism is to liberate ourselves from racializing human relationships in the first place and de-racializing our discussions about justice and human flourishing. Mason argues that this

Theory of Racelessness … constitutes a true antirace(ism) by seeking to undo not only racism but also “race.” It holds that “race” does not exist except insofar as it is imagined to exist, and that, therefore, the sooner we stop imagining it in our language and discourse, the sooner it will vanish. In eliminating “race,” the Theory of Racelessness helps people recognize and imagine themselves outside of race(ism). It enables people to see themselves and others more clearly, without the distorting filter of “race.” In this way, the theory also helps people e more astute at recognizing and solving race(ism). Importantly, the theory’s core is bringing our shared humanity to the forefront in ways that the divisive presence or insertion of “race” ideology precludes. Together, we can do anything, including uphold race(ism). But we can also reconcile, heal, resolve, and eliminate the problem, too.

The details of this theory are outlined in her ing book, and I’m looking forward to reading it. This is a refreshingly radical proposal given our contemporary discussions about race in America. If we remove race as an explanatory tool, where does that leave us? In the personalist tradition, it leaves us with the human person. First and foremost, Mason would like for us to speak about each other on the basis of the beauty of our shared humanity rather than the expressions of phenotypes in our genes. This is where anti-racism goes wrong. It depends on the continuation of racism for anti-racism to survive. Otherwise, it has no purpose. If there’s no racism, there’s no need for anti-racism. In other words, as Mason argues, our current anti-racist efforts reifies race when, in fact, race does not exist.

University of Notre Dame sociologist Christian Smith makes the case that we will e to helpful conclusions about equality, fairness, thriving, human flourishing, and the like until we understand and explain human persons, motivations, interests, and the social life to which they give rise. That is, regarding human persons, we need to be asking:

(1) What basic motivations and interests generate and direct human action?

(2) What is by nature good for human beings—that is, what are real human goods?

(3) How should we understand and explain the lack of goodness—sometimes even literal destructiveness and evil—that is prevalent and damaging to human life?

The answers cannot be racialized. The most productive discussions about the nature of injustice transcend modern conceptions of race, and when they fail to focus on the human person these discussions usually devolve into useless grievances about power. However, if we center our discussion of injustice and human flourishing on Smith’s definition of what it means to be a person, we will make substantive progress in finding just solutions to enduring human problems.

By person I mean a conscious, self-transcending center of subjective experience, durable identity, mitment, and munication who—as the efficient cause of his or her own responsible actions and plex capacities for agency and intersubjectivity in order to develop and sustain his or her own municable self in loving relationships with other personal selves and with the nonpersonal world.

The implication here is that perhaps what will bring the most effective policies and insights for social change is to have a person-centered discussion about human flourishing rather than a race-centered discussion. Racelessness can usher in an end to the self-limitations and rhetorical traps that dominate our race-reasoning discussions today. Until then, race all too often blinds us to the best political and economic solutions that could enable us all to prosper.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
New study exposes career training cronyism
Last week the Mackinac Center — a think tank that focuses on public policy in Michigan — published a new study: “Workforce Development in Michigan.” The study, authored by Hope College economics professor, Acton research fellow, and Journal of Markets & Morality associate editor Sarah Estelle, examines the wide variety of skills-training and employment programs in the state. As the Mackinac Center put it in their press release, The government has been actively involved in job training since the 1960s,...
HBO’s ‘Chernobyl‘: A scathing rebuke of Soviet secrecy
In case you missed it, the final episode of the highly acclaimed five-part HBO miniseries “Chernobyl” aired last night. When the credits rolled, I let out a pent-up breath that I didn’t know that I was holding in and slumped back in my seat, finally able to relax. The show was over, but the weightiness of its message and atmosphere lingered on, sticking with me even as I laid down to sleep. “Chernobyl” dramatizes the events leading up to and...
When the Federal Reserve does too much
Note: This is post #123 in a weekly video series on basic economics. “If you think through all of the variables that shape a country’s economy, it’s no wonder that monetary policy is difficult,” says economist Alex Tabarrok. “It should e as no surprise that the Federal Reserve doesn’t always get it right. In fact, sometimes the Fed’s actions have made the economy worse off.” In this video by Marginal Revolution University, Tabarrok shows what happens when the Fed promotes...
How ‘conservatives’ became the war party
The only thing that can e the stupidity of modern-day progressives like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and the 24 people contending for the 2020 presidential nomination of the Democratic Party is an understanding of the price—and the consequences — of the policies that they preach. Progressive policy is expensive, very expensive, and a wise person should be extremely reluctant to spend other people’s money on utopian schemes like the Green New Deal. But people are not wise, and that is why America...
The European left and immigration
Danish elections are usually not high on the list of must-watch political contests but the ing election on June 5 is one that I think worth watching. As this Guardian article illustrates, it is distinguished by the fact that the Danish Social Democrats—the main center-left party in Denmark—have revisited and substantially changed their approach to immigration. Under the leadership of Mette Frederiksen, the Danish Social Democrats have broken with the reigning consensus on the European left, essentially adopting many of...
Capitalism and the opportunity for a more united conservative front
Last week the Heritage Foundation hosted an event featuring Samuel Gregg, the Acton Institute’s director of research, in which he highlighted the importance of providing not only an economic justification for capitalism but also a moral justification. At Juicy Ecumenism, Mia Steupert considers Gregg’s talk in light of the recent debate among conservatives: Gregg discussed this topic in the framework ofAlexis De TocquevilleandMichael mentary on the moral justifications of capitalism. Gregg mainly focused on outlining Novak’s views on the connection...
A new Member of European Parliament exposes Europe’s self-doubt
Last week’s elections for European Parliament swept a bountiful harvest of Euroskeptic thorns into the EU’s side. Among them are the Sweden Democrats; Trey Dimsdale has interviewed successful SD candidate Charlie Weimers for the Acton Line podcast, and Weimers contributes a book review of Kasja Norman’s stirring book Sweden’s Dark Soul: The Unraveling of a Utopia to Acton’s transatlantic website. The book’s evocative opening leads to probing questions of Sweden’s searing self-doubt. Weimers writes: Norman starts the book depicting hundreds...
Providence magazine reviews Kuyper’s ‘On Islam’
Last year, in collaboration with the Abraham Kuyper Translation Society, the Acton Institute and Lexham Press teamed together to publish On Islam. The latest in the 12-volume series Abraham Kuyper Collected Works in Public Theology details Kuyper’s observations while traveling in the Mediterranean. At Providence magazine, Tim Scheiderer reviews On Islam and considers Kuyper’s Christian advice for foreign policy: In the bookOn Islam, the Acton Institute has translated into English for the first time portions from Abraham Kuyper’s larger work,Om...
Stewardship as the Christian’s cultural mandate
“Economic issues entail first and foremost a stewarding of resources,” says J. Daryl Charles in this week’s Acton Commentary. “To properly understand this task, we must begin with the doctrines of creation and providence.” Our mandate, based on creation (which has not been overturned or altered), is that we co-create (with God, based on the imago Dei, his likeness); that we develop, shape, and extend what God has called into being. Therein we utilize the endless and varied resources that...
The Ahmari/French debate: A reading list
“If you printed out and stacked up every piece written about the dispute between First Things contributor Sohrab Ahmari and National Review writer David French, it wouldn’t quite go up 68,000 miles—that would be the $22 trillion national debt, stacked by ones—but it would be towering nonetheless,” says Matt Welch. For those who are late to the debate and want to catch up, I’ve collected a reading list of articles related to the controversy. I’ve included the original essay by...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved