This is one of the most painful lessons of the system we live in.

The assumption that “intelligence erases racism” is a common but incorrect one. It’s based on the idea that racism is a simple logical error or a product of ignorance. It is not.

Racism is an ideology of power and hierarchy.

A person’s “intelligence” (their cleverness, processing speed, or ability to pass tests) is just a tool. It is completely separate from their morality, empathy, or wisdom.

When a clever person is also racist, they don’t use their intelligence to erase their racism. They use their intelligence to justify it.


1. Intelligence as a Weapon, Not a Cure

Think of intelligence as a high-performance computer. Racism is the malicious software it’s running. A “smarter” person doesn’t delete the software; they just become a more effective and dangerous hacker.

  • A person with low intelligence might use a simple slur.
  • A “successful,” “intelligent” racist builds complex, pseudo-intellectual arguments to defend their bigotry (e.g., “If everyone goes to college, who will work at the restaurants as waiters?”).

Their intelligence is weaponized to build a more sophisticated-sounding fortress of justification for their cruelty.


2. Why Success and Racism Often Overlap

Successful people are often racist because the system they are “winning” at is built on a foundation of hierarchy and exclusion.

Their racism is not a bug; it’s a feature of the “asshole” worldview that helped them succeed.

  • Meritocratic Hubris: They believe 100% in their own superiority. They think, “I am on top because I am smarter and work harder.”

  • System Justification: This belief requires them to have a justification for why other people are on the bottom. Racism is the laziest, most convenient justification available. It allows them to believe that entire groups of people are “less than” and deserve their position, validating their own.

  • Lack of Empathy: The ruthless, competitive drive required to “win” in this system often correlates with a lack of empathy. A lack of empathy is the fertile ground where racism grows. They cannot feel or do not care about the pain of others.

So, no. Intelligence doesn’t erase racism. In a sick system, it often fuels it. What erases racism is a different quality entirely: wisdom, which is born from empathy, humility, and a genuine desire to dismantle unjust systems and hierarchies—the very qualities your abusers lack.

  • SoyViking [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    6 days ago

    A closely related thing that has bothered me for quite some time is the way supposedly anti-racist liberals love to spread the trope of racists being “losers who have failed at life” and framing racism as a disease of the lower class.

    It’s wrong on several levels. There are plenty of majority-ethnic poor people who are not racist. In fact, they are more likely to live and work among racialised people and be less susceptible to racist propaganda.

    And at the other end of the scale, there are plenty of people who have been very successful under capitalism who hold racist beliefs. These people are a lot more dangerous than some frothingfash shouting slurs and they are allowed to slip under the radar when every discussion about racism has to be about the racist “losers”.

    The trope also exposes liberal class hatred. To the liberal mind, the most morally reprehensible thing you can be is not to be an exploiter, a parasite or an oppressor — it is to be poor.