Look Before You Leap:

A Thought-Experiment for Social Conservatives

James Peron
The Radical Center
6 min readOct 14, 2023

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There has been a regular stream of televisions shows about time travel such as Quantum Leap or Timeless or alternative universes such as Sliders. Often these shows had the traveller end up in time or alternative reality where he or she had no choice. They were just thrust into this other reality and had to deal with it.

From 1989 to 1993 NBC aired the sci-fi show Quantum Leap starring Scott Bakula, who played time traveler Dr. Sam Beckett. Beckett was, as seems pretty par for time travelers, lost in time. In each episode Beckett would “leap” into a new period. But, he also became someone else in each episode, though to others he would still sound and look like the character whose persona he was occupying.

This inspired a thought experiment I recommend to people. You are about to “leap.” The dynamics of the leap are such that there are certain parameters. You know that you cannot leap to a date earlier than 1760 and no later than 2010 — a period of 350 years.

The “leap” has certain geographical boundaries that are determined by the year in which you find yourself. You will only leap into American states, territories, or the original colonies and only during years when they were under American sovereignty. You would not end up in Alaska before the Seward Purchase for instance.

You have no control over the year or place. That is chosen quite randomly. Neither can you control your occupation, level of education, social position, wealth, etc. You will, in essence, leap into the life of an already existing person in that specific place, at that specific time. Unlike Quantum Leap, however, you may only leap once. You can’t move on, if you become a 1950s’ housewife that is what you remain. If you are a male hunter in rural Vermont in 1770, that is who you will remain.

Like most people, you want to optimize pleasant things in life. You would like to have a comfortable existence. You would like to have your rights respected. Yet, you have no direct control over whether those things will happen.

You can, however, control a few factors, which may help you rig the odds. Before your leap you can make three choices. You can control whether you will be male or female. If you choose male the “computer” will automatically exclude you from leaping into the lives of all females, regardless of where you go or what time period you will occupy.

A second factor is you will be free to choose your race. You can choose to be white, African-American, Native-American, whatever you wish. Finally, you can choose your sexual orientation. Race, gender and sexual orientation will not be randomly chosen by the computer, they will be entirely your own decisions.

But, you don’t know where in the country you will end up, or in what year. You could be a black straight man in rural Alabama in 1840 or a white gay male in 1960s New York.

Knowing you could end up in any era of American history or could find yourself in any part of the country, answer the following questions.

1. Do you choose to be male or female?

2. What race would you choose to be?

3. What is your sexual orientation?

Your choice controls who you will be. You can’t change the era in which you happen to find yourself. You can’t expect rights not granted at the time, or in that location. You will live out the rest of your life as a randomly selected person who fits the three characteristics you have chosen. All you can do is pick categories to optimize your well being. What did you choose and why did you choose it?

I know what I’d choose, and I think most people would choose. If I had no idea when and where in history I would end up, I’d prefer to be white to minimize the chances others would harm me. I’m not saying it ought to be that way — just this is how it was. There is a definite advantage to being white at virtually any time in American history, in almost any location.

Similarly, I would have to choose to be male or I could end up in an era when it was considered perfectly acceptable for my husband to slap me around. My labor and body might legally belong to him. I could find my life was legally controlled first by my father, then by my husband. The husband I married may be the husband I was stuck with, depending on the era.

As for sexual orientation, I’d have to choose to be heterosexual. After all, I could end up in a time and era where gay people might be arrested, or end up in a mental hospital where electroshock therapy is used to “cure” them. I would be less likely to be beaten by “fag bashers” or harassed by cops. I’d be more likely to be able to live openly and keep my job, family and friends.

The reality of history, up until today, is outcomes are skewed because of popular prejudices and attitudes. This doesn’t mean such attitudes aren’t changing. It is better to be black, female or gay today than to be in the same position 150 years ago, or only 50 years ago. But, whatever time period one randomly chooses, odds are you would be better off being white, male and heterosexual.

Am I implying those who experienced status benefits due to their gender, race or sexual orientation ought to feel guilty? Or be punished? No, I don’t hold individuals responsible for the sins of their parents or grandparents — just for their own sins.

But may Americans remain in denial and naively believe, or claim to believe, that in the last couple of decades all this was reversed — and to such an extent — that the real victims today are white, straight and male. There is a technical term for that: bullshit. While the status of women, racial minorities and gays has improved, things are not equal. Certainly the “culture war” attack on individual rights has sent women, minorities and LGBT individuals backwards in term of equal rights.

You don’t read about gangs of gay thugs hanging around straight bars and beating some poor heterosexual. Like it or not, if you want to get ahead in corporate America, in spite of diversity programs, your chances improve dramatically if you have a penis, especially a white one. You are still more likely to be hassled, or worse, by cops if you are black than white.

Centuries of prejudice and unequal legal status don’t disappear in a few short years. Slavery ended officially with the Civil War, but it continued under other names for almost another century. The Supreme Court said they can’t throw people in jail for being gay, but that doesn’t mean gay people have the same rights as heterosexuals.

When people deny various groups suffer due to unequal legal status or social prejudices, they look naïve at best, and bigoted at worst. There are none so ridiculous as those who try to pretend that the real victims are white, straight males. I doubt many such individuals would willingly give up those traits if other options were open to them.

Our objective as classical liberals is equal treatment before the law with maximum respect for individual rights. We are still a long way from that. Denying reality, in order to placate social conservatives or one’s own petty prejudices, simply discredits the greatest force for social good in human history: classical liberalism.

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James Peron
The Radical Center

James Peron is the president of the Moorfield Storey Institute, was the founding editor of Esteem a LGBT publication in South Africa under apartheid.