When to Use the Word "Racist"

  • Press_Release
  • December 07, 2010

PRINCETON, NJ (December 7, 2010)—Peter Wood, president of the National Association of Scholars, has published a statement, “Racism at Wesleyan?” on the use of the term “racist” in higher education. 

The statement was prompted by a recent controversy at Wesleyan University. A student group on campus, the Cardinal Conservatives, held a satiric “affirmative action bake sale” to protest the university’s use of racial preferences in admissions. A faculty member denounced the event as “racist.” Civil rights activist Ward Connerly is scheduled to speak at Wesleyan about the controversy at 4:00 PM on December 8. 

Wood defined racism as “the belief that humans are profoundly and importantly divided into hereditary groups; that these groups are inherently unequal in talents and ability; and that their hereditary characteristics are crucial to understanding their group attitudes, mores, and ideas.” He wrote that racism is not always associated with white privilege. 

Wood argued against censoring the term “racist” but pointed out that the word can be abused as a label “to intimidate and to polarize,” as was the case at Wesleyan University. He advocated eliminating racial preferences in college admissions: 

We would as a society be better off if we jettisoned race from our consideration of how public goods such as college admissions are distributed.  Getting rid of race, like getting rid of racism, is far from easy, but that doesn’t mean we can’t take the preliminary steps.  One of those is de-institutionalizing racial categories. 

Wood’s article appeared in the Chronicle of Higher Education on December 7, 2010. 

The National Association of Scholars advocates for higher education reform. To learn more about NAS, visit www.nas.org.

 ####

CONTACT: Peter Wood, President, NAS: 609-683-7878; pwood@nas.org

  • Share

Most Commented

December 16, 2025

1.

DOJ Does Away with Disparate Impact Theory

Disparate impact theory is on the Trump administration’s chopping block, signaling a move away from discriminatory government policy practices....

March 3, 2026

2.

The Ayatollah’s Friends are on Your Campus

The U.S. strike on Iran and the foreign funding shaping how universities respond to it....

March 11, 2026

3.

Bad Faith Noncompliance: Virginia Schools Flout Supreme Court and Trump with DEI ‘Rebrand’

Trump’s EOs and the Supreme Court make DEI illegal—but colleges keep rebranding it to dodge the law....

Most Read

May 15, 2015

1.

Where Did We Get the Idea That Only White People Can Be Racist?

A look at the double standard that has arisen regarding racism, illustrated recently by the reaction to a black professor's biased comments on Twitter....

February 21, 2014

2.

Taking Care

Is art worth dying for? The Monuments Men considers the value of good art and its purpose in preserving a cultural heritage....

October 17, 2018

3.

Hamilton: An American Musical - Its National Influence as Art

William Young finds much to praise in the hit musical....