Every few years, a peculiar claim bubbles up from the activist‑academic complex and spreads through the media like mould on damp plaster: “White babies are racist.”
Sometimes it’s softened to “all babies show racial bias by 6–9 months.” Sometimes it’s framed as a scientific breakthrough. Sometimes it’s used to justify ideological programmes in early childhood education.
But the core message is always the same: Racism is innate, universal, and detectable before a child can crawl.
This is not science. This is ideology looking for a laboratory coat.
Where the Claim Came From
Two types of research are usually invoked:
- Studies showing that infants look longer at faces resembling their primary caregiver
- Studies showing early in-group recognition based on exposure
The most visible populariser of this nonsense was the claim, repeated endlessly in the media, that “white babies show racial bias.” The fact that the underlying research applied to all infants was quietly ignored. “White babies” made for better headlines.
This is how science becomes propaganda.
What the Research Actually Shows
Infants show perceptual familiarity, not prejudice.
They tend to:
- Look longer at faces that resemble their mother
- Prefer familiar voices, shapes, and patterns
- Show early attachment behaviours toward their primary caregivers
- Respond more strongly to the people who feed, protect, and comfort them
A newborn’s first task is to identify:
- Who keeps me alive
- Who I belong to
- Who I can safely attach to
Why the “Racist Baby” Narrative Is Wrong
The sensational claim rests on three fundamental errors.
1. Confusing familiarity with moral judgment
A baby staring longer at a familiar face is not making a value judgment. It is recognising a pattern.
2. Ignoring exposure effects
A baby raised in a multiracial household shows multiracial familiarity. A baby raised in a monocultural household shows monocultural familiarity.
This is the environment, not ideology.
3. Projecting adult moral categories onto preverbal infants
Racism requires:
- Intent
- Belief
- Conceptual categories
- Moral agency
The Evolutionary Explanation: In-Group Preference as Survival
Infants are biologically tuned to seek:
- The mother
- The primary caregiver
- The familiar group
The most likely explanation for the observed behaviour is simple:
Babies look for their mother. They look for the people who look like their mother. They look for the people who keep them alive.
This is the opposite of racism. It is the foundation of human bonding.
And Yes—The Pushback Exists
Developmental psychologists have been quietly correcting the record for years. A clear example is UC Davis’s piece:
“No, Your Baby Is Not Racist.”
It explains that:
- Babies show familiarity preferences, not prejudice
- Exposure shapes recognition
- Racism requires cognitive abilities that infants do not possess
Why the Narrative Persisted Anyway
The idea that “babies are racist” is attractive to certain ideological frameworks because it:
- Implies racism is innate
- Implies racism is universal
- Implies racism is unavoidable
- Justifies ideological intervention from infancy
- Shifts racism from behaviour to essence
- Makes the activist indispensable
And like all bad metaphysics, it is unfalsifiable. If a baby prefers a familiar face, that’s racism. If a baby doesn’t, that’s internalised racism. Heads they win, tails you lose.
Lessons for Today: The Bureaucratic Temptation
The “racist baby” narrative is not just absurd; it is dangerous.
It encourages:
- Pathologising normal development
- Treating infants as ideological subjects
- Embedding racial essentialism into early education
- Normalising the idea that racism is biological
- Expanding bureaucratic authority into the nursery
And it is no accident that the narrative was most enthusiastically embraced by the same people who insist that racism is everywhere, in everything, at all times. If racism is innate, then their ideological project becomes permanent.
The Dustbin of Bad Ideas
The claim that “white babies are racist”, or that all babies are racist, is a textbook example of:
- Overinterpretation
- Ideological projection
- Media sensationalism
- Misuse of developmental research
Babies recognise what they see most often. They prefer the familiar. They seek safety. They are not racist.
This idea belongs in the dustbin of bad interpretations—alongside phrenology, hysteria diagnoses, and the belief that left-handed children were morally defective.......The full article is published HERE
Colinxy regularly blogs at No Minister

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