File: powell final for Darby
792
Created on: 3/15/2009 12:55:00 PM
Last Printed: 4/3/2009 10:11:00 AM
DENVER UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW [Vol. 86.Obama
Act, often described as the quintessential universal policy, was universal,
only insofar as the universal was a white, male, able-bodied worker.29 In
its early years, the elderly were excluded since they did not have a history of paying contributions into the system.30 Under the cultural norms
of the era, men were the primary wage earners, and women typically
worked in the home. As a consequence of discriminatory patterns, they
were often kept out of most areas of the labor force. Unpaid household
labor and child rearing responsibilities are not counted toward Social
Security earnings. Even today, women who take time off to raise children or select careers with more flexible working hours will earn less, on
average, then their male counterparts, and will therefore have lower social security benefits upon retirement. And because of exclusions of
agricultural and domestic workers, exclusions built-in to appease Southern resistance to the Act, sixty-five percent of African-Americans were
denied its protections.31
The following question helps to expose the conceptual problem:
Why is it divisive to focus on race-specific programs or talk about
race?32 The stock explanation is that race does not matter. But even if
race does not matter why is such an approach seen as divisive? The very
intensity of racial feelings in our society belies the assertion that race
does not matter. The energy and need for race not to matter to whites in
and of itself suggests that race does indeed matter. There is an assumption that racially targeted programs create white resentment because
there is a sense that whites who are playing by the rules are having things
taken from them and given to undeserving non-whites who do not play
by the same rules. This resentment is, apparently, not of the Jim Crow
form. These whites are willing to accept any non-white that plays by the
rules. What they object to is helping those they perceive as rule-
(2001). If we look at not just social security itself but how it interacts with other systems, it is
clearly not universal. Even President Bush cynically noted that social security is not fair to blacks
because they die earlier than whites. Michael Kranish, Bush Argues His Social Security Plan Aids
Blacks, BOSTON GLOBE, Jan. 30, 2005, at A1.
29. Targeted policies and programs (poorhouses in the 19th Century, mother’s pensions in
1910, the War on Poverty in the 1960s) are likely to be viewed through the prism of zero-sum politics. At a time of perceived scarcity and contracting government budgets, targeted policies may be
viewed as favoring some constituent group rather than the public good. If the target group is historically disfavored or considered “undeserving,” targeted policies risk being labeled “preferences” for
“special interests.” In order to avoid alienating voters, policies are often packaged for broad appeal.
See THEDA SKOCPOL, SOCIAL POLICY IN THE UNITED STATES: FUTURE POSSIBILITIES IN
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE 250-51 (Princeton Univ. Press 1995).
30. See LIEBERMAN, supra note 28, at 34.
31. See IRA KATZNELSON, supra note 22, at 43.
32. Many liberals are concerned that any targeted or particular program will not work because
it will not maintain the necessary support. See Theda Skocpol, Targeting within Universalism:
Politically Viable Policies to Combat Poverty in the United States, in THE URBAN UNDERCLASS 411
(Christopher Jencks & Paul E. Peterson eds., 1990); WILLIAM JULIUS WILSON, THE TRULY
DISADVANTAGED (1990). They may be right to be skeptical of a targeted program, but this does not
speak to the problems of false universalisms. A number of scholars who are skeptical of targeted
programs have started to embrace a form of targeted universalism instead.