A Blueprint for Reparations

geechiedan

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
WHO HAS SAID YOU DON'T!!! The whole fucking point is that you PUT PRESSURE ON A POLITICAL PARTY!!!
I have said that myself..i disagree with the tactics YOU GUYS propose...which is ineffectual and moronic to boot. Those grassroots org are working with the only party thats even marginally receptive to reparations not some dont vote at the top of the ticket bullshit YOU promoted or some get rid of capitalism and the fed reserve wetdream xfactors talking about.. and soul on ice just a keyboard activist who talks shit. :rolleyes2: :rolleyes2: :rolleyes2:


"Kept it up for the last 30 years...." With what results? I mean, you say the Democratic Party is actively pushing this, right?
so far as I can see BOTH the party and the grassroots have done nothing more than make reports and studies with a promise of action in the future.


"Rolled out piecemeal..." :D Show me something being enacted, not a plan. The irony is that the link you posted DOESN'T EVEN WORK!!
could say the same thing for the grassroots orgs...:rolleyes2:




General sentiment according to who? And "they would give money to overseas countries or shit on their own people before they would ever give to us."

Isn't this what your boy Biden is doing right now?
take a poll on bgol and see how many people believe reparations on a national level will happen in their lifetime?


No it hasn't been. If so, quote it. And while you're at it, find the reparations clause in the Michigan Democratic platform. You told Soul On Ice they should be credited for it.
YOUR QUESTION WAS:
Then why isn't it popping in EVERY Blue state and Blue city where Democrats are the majority? If, after all, the Dems are leading the charge. Shouldn't we be seeing at least 25 of these initiatives right now?

my answer was:
And at the end of the day on a national level its going to require a bi-partisan effort and we're back to square one on getting a decent number of righwing cacs to sign off... and even with a supermajority you STILL have to deal with conservative democrats! what don't YOU get about that??

blue dog dems wont sign off on shit that benefit WHITE people...or do you really expect people like manchin and sinema are going to sign off on reparations for african americans??



I figure he’s just trolling at this point. Kind of like a neo-Blunt. He falls back for a while after you expose his fallacious arguments, only to rear his head again with the same fallacies in other thread.
same for you dude... :rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes: you guys talk so much shit your eyes are brown:hmm:
 
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geechiedan

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
California to unveil groundbreaking slave reparations report

AN FRANCISCO (AP) — California’s first-in-the-nation task force on reparations for African Americans will release a report Wednesday documenting in detail the harms perpetuated by the state and recommending steps to address those wrongs, including expanded voter registration, making it easier to hold violent police accountable and improving Black neighborhoods.

It also recommends the creation of a special office that would, in part, help African Americans descended from free or enslaved Black people in the country at the end of the 19th century document their eligibility for financial restitution.

The report, which runs 500 pages, will be the first government-commissioned study on harms against the African American community since the 1968 Kerner Commission report ordered by then-President Lyndon Johnson, task force Chair Kamilah Moore said.

“I hope that this report is used not only as an educational tool, but an organizing tool for people not only in California but across the U.S. to educate their communities,” she said, adding that the report also highlights “contributions of the African American community and how they made the United States what it is despite ongoing oppression and degradation.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislation creating the task force in 2020, making California the only state to move ahead with a study and plan. Cities and universities are taking up the cause with the Chicago suburb of Evanston, Illinois, becoming the first U.S. city to make reparations available to Black residents last year.

The task force voted in March to limit reparations to descendants, overruling reparations advocates who want to expand compensation to all Black people in the U.S.

The report, to be released by the state Department of Justice, marks the halfway point for the two-year task force's work. The draft report does not provide a comprehensive reparations plan, which is due to lawmakers next year.

The report is expected to lay out how California supported slavery before it was technically abolished and oppressed Black residents through discriminatory laws and practices in education, home ownership, employment and the courts.

African Americans make up nearly 6% of California's population yet they are overrepresented in jails and prisons. They were nearly 9% of people living below the poverty level and made up 30% of people experiencing homelessness in 2019, according to state figures.

Despite it being a “free” state, an estimated 1,500 enslaved African Americans lived in California in 1852, according to the draft report. The Ku Klux Klan flourished in California with members holding positions in law enforcement and city government. African American families were forced to live in segregated neighborhoods that were more likely to be polluted.

Moore said that a state Office of African American or American Freedmen Affairs could help African American residents file claims and trace their lineage to prove eligibility for individual restitution.

The task force in its draft report also recommends compensating people who were forced out of their homes for construction projects such as parks and highways and general renewal, as happened to San Francisco's historically Black and once-thriving Fillmore neighborhood.

“Other groups that have suffered exclusion, oppression, and downright destruction of human existence have received reparations, and we should have no less," said the Rev. Amos Brown, the committee's vice chair and pastor of Third Baptist Church in the Fillmore District.

California to unveil groundbreaking slave reparations report (msn.com)
 

VAiz4hustlaz

Proud ADOS and not afraid to step to da mic!
BGOL Investor
California Reparations Task Force Releases Interim Report Detailing Harms of Slavery and Systemic Discrimination on African Americans

Wednesday, June 1, 2022

Contact: (916) 210-6000, agpressoffice@doj.ca.gov

SACRAMENTO – As part of California’s historic Assembly Bill 3121 (AB 3121), the California Task Force to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African Americans (Reparations Task Force) today released an interim report providing an in-depth overview of the harms inflicted on African Americans in California and across the nation due to the ongoing legacy of slavery and systemic discrimination. The interim report includes a preliminary set of recommendations to the California Legislature and a final report is expected to be issued in 2023. The Reparations Task Force is a first-in-the-nation effort by a state government to study slavery, its effects throughout American history, and the compounding harms that the United States and Californian governments have inflicted upon African Americans.

“Without accountability, there is no justice. For too long, our nation has ignored the harms that have been — and continue to be — inflicted on African Americans in California and across the country,” said California Attorney General Rob Bonta. “California was not a passive actor in perpetuating these harms. We must double down on our efforts to address discrimination in our state and nation and take a hard look at our own history, including at the California Department of Justice. This interim report is a historic step by the State of California to acknowledge the insidious effects of slavery and ongoing systemic discrimination, recognize the state's failings, and move toward rectifying the harm. I commend the Reparations Task Force for their commitment to this effort and for being a model for partners across the nation. I urge every American to read the task force’s report and join with us in recommitting ourselves to justice.”

“It has been an honor and a privilege to supervise the release of this monumental interim report,” said Task Force Chair Kamilah Moore. “A year-long effort, this 500+ page report chronicles the harms against the African American community, starting with the transatlantic slave trade, the institution of U.S. chattel slavery, Emancipation and the broken promise of Reconstruction, genocidal Jim Crow, to contemporary harms; it is the most extensive government-issued report on the African American community since the Kerner Commission in 1968. Thus, it is my hope that people in California and across the United States utilize this report as an educational and organizing tool, as this interim report exceeds expectations in substantiating the claim for reparations for the African American/American Freedmen community on the municipal, state and federal level."
“It is a privilege to sit on a task force that has the moral obligation of fulfilling the task of developing measures that will right the wrongs which were collectively perpetuated against the African American community solely on the basis of the color of our skin,” said Task Force Vice Chair Dr. Amos C. Brown. "Other groups that have suffered exclusion, oppression, and downright destruction of human existence have received reparations, and we should have no less."

The institution of slavery is inextricably woven into the establishment, history, and prosperity of the United States. Constitutionally and statutorily sanctioned from 1619 to 1865, slavery deprived more than four million Africans and their descendants of life, liberty, citizenship, cultural heritage, and economic opportunity. Following the abolition of slavery, government entities at the federal, state, and local levels continued to perpetuate, condone, and often profit from practices that brutalized African Americans and excluded them from meaningful participation in society. This legacy of slavery and racial discrimination has resulted in debilitating economic, educational, and health hardships that are uniquely experienced by African Americans.

AB 3121 charges the Reparations Task Force with studying the institution of slavery and its lingering negative effects on living African Americans, including descendants of persons enslaved in the United States and on society. The legislation, enacted on September 30, 2020, requires the task force to also recommend appropriate remedies of compensation, rehabilitation, and restitution for African Americans, with a special consideration for descendants of persons enslaved in the United States. The Reparations Task Force’s work is ongoing and the interim report primarily focuses on identifying and summarizing the myriad badges and incidents of slavery. The interim report builds on months of public hearings, hours of expert, public, and witness testimony, and numerous records submitted to the task force.

In the interim report released today, the Reparations Task Force — over the course of 13 chapters — provides an accounting of many of the harms of slavery and systemic discrimination in California and across the nation. The interim report offers a synthesis of many of the relevant issues, ranging from enslavement and government sanctioned residential segregation to environmental injustice and political disenfranchisement. Some of the key findings noted in the interim report include:
  • In order to maintain slavery, colonial and American governments adopted white supremacy beliefs and passed laws in order to maintain a system that stole the labor and intellect of people of African descent;
  • In California, racial violence against African Americans began during slavery, continued through the 1920s, as groups like the Ku Klux Klan permeated local governments and police departments, and peaked after World War II, as African Americans attempted to move into white neighborhoods;
  • Due to residential segregation and compared to white Americans, African Americans are more likely to live in worse quality housing and in neighborhoods that are polluted, with inadequate infrastructure;
  • American government at all levels, including in California, has historically criminalized African Americans for the purposes of social control, and to maintain an economy based on exploited Black labor; and
  • Government laws and policies perpetuating badges of slavery have helped white Americans accumulate wealth, while erecting barriers which prevented African Americans from doing the same. These harms compounded over generations, resulting in an enormous gap in wealth between white and African Americans today in the nation and in California.
Additional information about the work of the Reparations Task Force and the ongoing public hearing process is available here: oag.ca.gov/ab3121.
A copy of the interim report is available here.

 

Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
XV. Preliminary Recommendations for Future Deliberation

Enslavemen
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• End legal slavery in California by doing the following:
» Deleting language from the California Constitution that permits involuntary servitude as punishment for crime by passing ACA 3 (Kamlager).
» Repealing Penal Code Section 2700, which states that the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) “shall require of every able-bodied prisoner imprisoned in any state prison as many hours of faithful labor in each day and every day during his or her term of imprisonment as shall be prescribed by the rules and regulations of the director of Corrections.”
» Pass legislation that makes education, substance use and mental health treatment, and rehabilitative programs the first priority for incarcerated people. In addition, allow incarcerated people to make decisions regarding how they will spend their time and which programs and jobs they will do while incarcerated. » Require that incarcerated people who are working in prison or jail be paid a fair market rate for their labor.
» Prohibit for-profit prison companies from operating within the system (i.e. companies that control phone calls, emails, and other communications). » Require that any goods or services available for purchase by incarcerated people and their families be provided at the same cost as those goods and services outside of prison.
» Allow people who are incarcerated to continue to exercise their right to vote.

• Implement a comprehensive reparations scheme, as will be detailed in the Task Force’s Final Report. • Transmit the Task Force's Final Report and findings to the President and the Congress with a recommendation that the federal government create a Reparations Commission for African Americans/ American Freedmen through statute or executive action.

• Request that the State of California and the U. S. federal government facilitate data disaggregation for Black/African racial groups.

Racial Terror

• Make it easier to hold law enforcement officers (including correctional officers) and their employing agencies accountable for unlawful harassment and violence, including
1) a provision overruling the extratextual “specific intent” requirement that California courts have read into the Bane Act; 2) a provision eliminating state law immunities that shield officer misconduct, and explicitly rejecting protections analogous to qualified immunity under federal law; and 3) a provision for additional special damages when the unlawful conduct is shown to be racially motivated.

• Create forms of expression, acknowledgment, and remembrance of the trauma of state-sanctioned white supremacist terror, possibly including memorials, and funding a long-term truth and reconciliation commission.

• Estimate the value of Black-owned businesses and property in California stolen or destroyed through acts of racial terror, distribute this amount back to Black Californians, and make housing grants, zero-interest business and housing loans and grants available to Black Californians.

Political Disenfranchisement

• Create forms of acknowledgment and apology for acts of political disenfranchisement. • Pass legislation that is in alignment of the objectives stated in AB 2576 (Aguiar-Curry) and establish separate funding:
» for voter education and outreach
» to provide state funding and charge the Secretary of State office with making grants to county registrars for programs that integrate voter registration and preregistration with civic education for programs that increase voter registration within the county’s underrepresented communities and high school students.

• Consider legislation to prevent dilution of the Black vote through redistricting.

• Require legislative policy committees to conduct racial impact analyses of all proposed legislation and require the Administration to include a comprehensive racial impact analysis for all budget proposals and proposed regulations.

• Allow individuals with felony convictions to serve on juries and prohibit judges and attorneys from excluding jurors solely for having a criminal record.

Housing Segregation

• Identify and eliminate anti-Black housing discrimination policies practices.

• Compensate individuals forcibly removed from their homes due to state action, including but not limited to park construction, highway construction, and urban renewal.

• Prevent current banking and mortgage related discrimination, including but not limited to discriminatory actions as a result of artificial intelligence and automated data analytics.

• Repeal Article 34 of the California Constitution.

• Repeal or counteract the effects of crime-free housing policies that disproportionately limit Black residents’ access to housing.

• Establish a state-subsidized mortgage system that guarantees low interest rates for qualified California Black mortgage applicants.

• Identify previous, and eliminate current, policies and practices that overwhelmingly contribute to the vast overrepresentation of African Americans among the unhoused population.

• Identify and eliminate any policies with blatant anti-black residency requirements or preferences; invalidate and deem unlawful, any contract with anti-Black racial covenants.

• Provide clean and secure public housing for vulnerable populations including those persons who are formerly incarcerated, in the foster care system, and unhoused individuals.

• Provide development incentives for businesses that provide healthy foods, specifically grocery stores, in predominantly-Black neighborhoods to address increasingly prevalent food swamps.

Separate and Unequal Education

• Add Black students to the existing three student groups listed in the Supplemental Grants provisions of the Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF). Methodically guide this funding to provide instructional supports, enrichment, and counseling to Black students.

• Identify and eliminate racial bias and discriminatory practices in standardized testing, inclusive of statewide K-12 proficiency assessments, undergraduate and postgraduate eligibility assessments, and professional career exams (ex. STAR, ACT, SAT, LSAT, GRE, MCAT, State Bar Exam).

• Provide funding for free tuition to California colleges and universities.

• Provide funding for African American/American Freedmen owned and controlled K-12 schools, colleges and universities, trade and professional schools.

• Adopt mandatory curriculum for teacher credentialing that includes culturally responsive pedagogy, anti-bias training, and restorative practices and develop strategies to proactively recruit African American teachers to teach in K-12 public schools.

• Reduce arbitrary segregation within California public schools and the resulting harms to Black students at majority-nonwhite under-resourced schools, by creating porous school district boundaries that allow students from neighboring districts to attend.

• Increase the availability of inter-district transfers to increase the critical mass of diverse students at each school so that students are assigned, or able to attend, public schools based on factors independent of their parents’ income level and ability to afford housing in a particular neighborhood or city.

• Provide scholarships for Black high school graduates to cover four years of undergraduate education (similar to the G.I. Bill model) to address specific and ongoing discrimination faced in California schools.

• Implement systematic review of public and private school disciplinary records to determine levels of racial bias and require all schools to implement racially equitable disciplinary practices.

• Require that curriculum at all levels and in all subjects be inclusive, free of bias, and honor the contributions and experiences of all peoples regardless of ethnicity, race, gender, or sexual orientation.

• Advance the timeline for ethnic studies classes in public and private high schools

• Adopt a K-12 Black Studies curriculum that introduces students to concepts of race and racial identity; accurately depicts historic racial inequities and systemic racism; honors Black lives, fully represents contributions of Black people in society, and advances the ideology of Black liberation.

• Encourage identification and support of teachers who give culturally nurturing instructions and adopt new models for teacher development to improve teacher habits in the classroom.

• Improve funding and access for educational opportunities for all incarcerated people in both juvenile and adult correctional facilities.
 

Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Racism in Environment and Infrastructure

• Identify and address the impact of environmental racism on predominantly Black communities including, but not limited to, unequal exposure to pollutants associated with roadway and heavy truck traffic, oil drilling, drinking water contamination, and current or former heavily-industrial and other potential pollutants in Black neighborhoods.

• Require and fund the statewide planting of trees to create shade equity and minimize heat islands in Black neighborhoods. • Ensure that state and local allocation of resources to public transit systems is equitable on a per-rider basis for methods of transit that are disproportionately utilized by low-income, urban, and Black residents.

• Support development of policies and practices that limit the unequal citing of vice retail businesses (e.g., liquor stores, tobacco retail) in Black neighborhoods.

• Support Black neighborhoods to develop policies and practices that promote locating healthy retailers (e.g., grocery stores, farmers markets) within Black neighborhoods.

• Support the work of community-based organizations in identifying Black resident interests and needs within neighborhoods (e.g., farmers markets, public transportation).

• Support the work of community-based organizations to ensure safe access to neighborhood-level physical activity spaces (e.g., public parks).

• Reduce the density of food swamps (i.e., high densities of fast-food restaurants) in Black neighborhoods.

• Introduce climate change mitigation and adaptive capacity strategies and measures (e.g., cooling centers, increasing greenspaces that reduce urban heat island effects and air pollutant concentrations).

• Equalize community benefit infrastructure funding among Black and white neighborhoods (i.e. bike trails, drinking water pipes, sidewalks, etc.)

Pathologizing Black Families

• Compensate families who were denied familial inheritances by way of racist anti-miscegenation statutes, laws, or precedents, that denied Black heirs resources they would have received had they been white.

• Realign federal Temporary Assistance to Needy Families funding devoted to direct assistance to impoverished families in order to provide greater funding to poor Black families that have historically been denied equal welfare benefits pursuant to a variety of subversive racist policies and practices.

• Address the severely disparate involvement of Black families within the child welfare and foster care systems.

• Review and adopt policies that caregivers in the child welfare system are allowed to meet the requirements and have access to resources to care for family members.

• Ensure that Black men and women have access to effective, high quality, trauma-informed, culturally competent intimate partner and/or guardian violence treatment and services outside of the criminal legal system.

• Eliminate past-due child support owed to the government for non-custodial parents.

• Eliminate the collection of child support as a means to reimburse the state for current or past government assistance.

• Ensure that all child support payments are provided directly to the custodial parent and the child.

• Eliminate the annual interest charged for past due child support.

• Allow incarcerated parents, when appropriate, to strengthen and maintain their relationships with their children by doing the following:
» Provide on-going wrap around family reunification and maintenance services to incarcerated people and their families.
» Provide mental health support designed specifically to heal trauma and strengthen family ties, including both individual and family treatment when needed.
» Develop spaces and programs for incarcerated people to spend time with their children in non-institutional, non-punitive settings when appropriate.
» Prohibit the state prison system and local jails from cancelling family visits as a form of punishment.
» Require that all visitation policies be culturally competent, trauma-informed, and non-threatening for the family members.
» Allow free telephone and video calls to allow incarcerated parents to maintain connections to their children and other family members, for cases not involving domestic or familial abuse.
» Accommodate telephone and video meetings between incarcerated parents and their children’s caregivers, physicians, and teachers to allow parents to participate in decision making regarding their children’s care, needs, and education.

Control Over Creative Cultural and Intellectual Life

• Identify and eliminate anti-Black discrimination policies in the areas of artistic, cultural, creative, athletic, and intellectual life.

• Provide financial restitution and compensation to athletes or their heirs for injuries sustained in their work if those injuries can be linked to anti-Black discrimination policies.

• Compensate individuals who have been deprived of rightful profits for their artistic, creative, athletic, and intellectual work.

• Identify and eliminate discrimination in the industries of art, culture, invention, sports, leisure, and business, including but not limited to: ensuring access to patents and royalties for cultural, intellectual, and artistic production; prohibiting discrimination and glass ceilings that harm Black artists and entrepreneurs; removing anti-Black memorials and monuments; placing clear restrictions on the use of artistic works in disciplinary or law enforcement actions; and providing a pathway to compensation for student athletes.

Stolen Labor and Hindered Opportunity

• Identify and eliminate racial bias in employment and advancement, especially for Black Californians seeking public employment or promotion to higher-paying positions in government. Pass legislation to advance pay equity.

• Adopt a clean slate policy for both young people and adults to ensure that eligible criminal record expungements are done quickly and equitably.

• Remove unnecessary barriers to employment for individuals with criminal records.

• Raise the minimum wage and require scaling-up of the minimum wage for more experienced workers, require provision of health benefits and paid time off, and provide other missing protections for workers in food and hospitality services, agricultural, food processing, and domestic worker industries.

• Require or incentivize private and public employers to undergo training regarding bias in employment practices and measures to address bias in hiring, promotion, pay, and workplace practices.

• Create a fund to support the development and sustainment of Black-owned businesses and eliminate barriers to licensure that are not strictly necessary and that harm Black workers.

• Create and fund intensive training programs that enable Black Californians to access employment opportunities from which they have been excluded.

• Ban employment practices that lock in and perpetuate historic and continuing discrimination and should make eligibility for public contracts contingent on elimination of employment practices that disproportionately harm Black workers.

• Address disparities in transportation that limit access to jobs.

• Increase funding to the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing and other relevant state agencies to effectively enforce civil rights laws and regulations.
 

Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
An Unjust Legal System

• Eliminate discriminatory policing and particularly killings, use of force, and racial profiling of African Americans.

• Eliminate and reverse the effects of discrimination within the criminal justice system including, reviewing the cases of incarcerated African Americans in order to determine whether they have been wrongfully convicted or have received longer or harsher sentences than white people convicted of the same or similar crimes.

• Review the security level determinations made by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation in order to eliminate and reverse anti-Black discriminatory policies and decisions that have resulted in a disproportionate number of Black incarcerated people being identified as members of security threat groups, held in segregated housing, or housed in higher security levels than their white peers.

• Prevent discrimination by algorithms in new policing technologies.

• Eliminate the racial disparities in police stops.

• Eliminate the racial disparities in criminal sentencing and the over incarceration of African Americans.

• Eliminate the over-policing of predominantly Black communities.

• Eliminate the racial disparities and discrimination against African Americans in the parole hearing process (including in the criminal risk assessments used to determine suitability for parole).

• Eliminate both implicit and explicit bias in the criminal justice system, including implementing training and accountability for prosecutors, judges, parole commissioners, and parole and probation officers.

• Reduce the scope of law enforcement jurisdiction within the public safety system and shift more funding for prevention and mental health care.

• Invest in institutions that reduce the likelihood of criminal activity such as care based services, youth development, job training and increasing the minimum wage.

• Require the Board of State and Community Corrections (BSCC), CDCR, the Judicial Council and the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training, and the Board of Parole Hearings to work with the Attorney General to collect comprehensive data on policing, convictions, sentencing, and incarceration, including the use of less lethal weapons by law enforcement and demographic characteristics on a regular (monthly, quarterly, annual) basis. As part of the data collection, mandate that law enforcement (at all levels) report the data accurately and in a timely manner. In addition, require that the data be made available through an open data system that can be accessed and downloaded by researchers, advocates, policy makers and the public.

Mental & Physical Harm and Neglect

• Eliminate anti-Black healthcare laws and policies and anti-Black discrimination in healthcare.

• Compensate, both financially and with cost-free high quality comprehensive services and supports, individuals whose mental and physical health has been permanently damaged by anti-Black healthcare system policies and treatment, including, but not limited to, those subjected to forced sterilization, medical experimentation, racist sentencing disparities, police violence, environmental racism, and psychological harm from race-related stress.

• Identify and eliminate discrimination and systemic racism, including but not limited to, discrimination by healthcare providers; inequity in access to healthcare; inaccessibility of health insurance; funding needs of health-focused community organizations; the dearth of clinical research on health conditions that affect African Americans; the underrepresentation of African Americans among medical and mental health providers; and the lack of race-conscious public health policy.

• Create free healthcare programs.

• Provide ongoing medical education, particularly on illnesses and other issues that historically impact health of African Americans; provide medical clinics.

• Implement Medi-Cal reforms to increase flexibility for the use of community evidence practices designed, tested and implemented by the Black community and reduce the tendency to use culturally bankrupt evidence based practices that are not field tested.

• Identify and eliminate the biases and discriminatory policies that lead to the higher rate of maternal injury and death among Black women.

• Ensure that Black women have access to competent, trained medical staff and services for all of their lifetime reproductive healthcare needs including birth control, prenatal and postnatal care, labor and delivery, abortion services, and perimenopause, menopause and post-menopause care.

The Wealth Gap

• Implement a detailed program of reparations for African Americans.

• Develop and implement other policies, programs, and measures to close the racial wealth gap in California.

• Provide funding and technical assistance to Black-led and Black community-based land trusts to support wealth building and affordable housing.

The California African American Freedmen Affairs Agency

• Establish a cabinet-level secretary position over an African American/Freedmen Affairs Agency tasked with implementing the recommendations of this task force. The role of the agency is to identify past harms, prevent future harm, work with other state agencies and branches of California’s government to mitigate harms, suggest policies to the Governor and the Legislature designed to compensate for the harms caused by the legacy of anti-Black discrimination, and work to eliminate systemic racism that has developed as a result of the enslavement of African Americans in the United States.

• The Agency should include the following: » A branch to process claims with the state and assist claimants in filing for eligibility.
» A genealogy branch in order to support potential claimants with genealogical research and to confirm eligibility.
» A reparations tribunal in order to adjudicate substantive claims for past harms
» An office of immediate relief to expedite claims.
» A civic engagement branch to support ongoing political education on African American history and to support civic engagement among African American youth.
» A freedmen education branch to offer free education and to facilitate the free tuition initiative between claimants and California schools.
» A social services and family affairs branch to identify and mitigate the ways that current and previous policies have damaged and destabilized Black families. Services might include treatment for trauma and family healing services to strengthen the family unit, stress resiliency services, financial planning services, career planning, civil and family court services.
» A cultural affairs branch to restore African American cultural/historical sites; establish monuments; advocate for removal of racist relics; support knowledge production and archival research; and to provide support for African Americans in the entertainment industry, including identifying and removing barriers to advancement into leadership and decision-making positions in the arts, entertainment, and sports industries.
» A legal affairs office to coordinate a range of free legal services, including criminal defense attorneys for criminal trials and parole hearings; free arbitration and mediation services; and to advocate for civil and criminal justice reforms.
» A division of medical services for public and environmental health.
» A business affairs office to provide ongoing education related to entrepreneurialism and financial literacy; to provide business grants; and to establish public-private reparative justice-oriented partnerships.
 

VAiz4hustlaz

Proud ADOS and not afraid to step to da mic!
BGOL Investor
A group of lawyers has a plan for how to pay reparations for slavery to Black Americans, and it could finally close the racial wealth gap
  • Estate and trust lawyers propose using the federal estate tax to pay reparations for slavery.
  • The tax generated $17.6 billion in 2020. Redirecting it could begin to close the racial wealth gap.
  • They also propose creating a new class of nonprofit organizations that undertake reparative activities.
In America, there's a chasm between the wealth of white and Black families. It didn't happen by mistake.

A combination of societal discrimination, government programs that benefited white families and excluded Black Americans, and outright theft of property in places like Tulsa has made it hard for Black families to move up the economic ladder and amass the real estate, cash, investment accounts, and other assets that make up the wealth of white families.

A spotlight on this disparity has led to a growing movement to close the racial wealth gap. And one group of lawyers has a proposal to do just that: Use the tax code to generate funds for reparations and pay back the government's debt to its Black citizens.

3 lawyers see a path to start closing the racial wealth gap

Sarah Moore Johnson, an estate planning lawyer who works with ultra high net worth individuals and a founding partner at Birchstone Moore in Washington DC, became president of the Washington, DC Estate Planning Council three weeks after George Floyd was murdered in 2020.
Moore, who is white, wanted to do something to increase diversity in her profession. So, she joined the diversity committee of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel (ACTEC). Then, during a meeting that was, she says, "getting kind of raw and very emotional," she had an idea: Use the federal estate tax proceeds ($17.6 billion in 2020) to pay reparations to Black Americans.

Moore soon connected with Ray Odom, a Chicago estate and tax planning attorney who works at Northern Trust and is an ACTEC fellow. Odom, who is Black, had been researching reparations.

"My major opposition to the concept of reparations was never its legitimacy or necessity," he says. "My objection was, they haven't made that much money yet." It's an objection that others have raised: Where will the US Treasury find enough money to repay the enormous debt owed to the descendants of formerly enslaved people and those affected by institutional discrimination in the years since?

Odom brought Phyllis Taite, another ACTEC fellow and a law professor at Oklahoma City University, into the conversation. Taite, who is Black, has studied the foundations of the racial wealth gap enshrined in the US tax code.

40 acres and a mule: How the racial wealth gap was built
At the end of the Civil War, the US government promised formerly enslaved people 40 acres and a mule to give them a foundation for starting life as free people. But this became the first in a long line of broken promises to African Americans. Though some of the parcels were given out, Andrew Johnson rescinded the order granting this restitution after Abraham Lincoln's assassination and took back the land.

Since that time, Taite notes, the government has written laws that have kept the gap between the wealth held by Black and white families wide. For example, the mortgage interest deduction is a government expenditure where the government willingly gives up revenue to subsidize homeownership. Yet, she says, "The people who benefit the most are the ones who need the least amount of assistance."

A 2021 report by the National Low Income Housing Coalition estimated that the equitable share of this benefit that should flow to Black households based on population proportion is 12.5%, but the actual proportion is less than two thirds of that — just 7.7%.

And a 2020 Federal Reserve study found that the difference between the median wealth of white households ($188,200) and Black households ($24,100) was $164,100. The same study found that Black families had the lowest rate of homeownership of any racial or ethnic group in the US, at least partly due to a history of government redlining. That means capital gains exemptions for the sale of a home and property tax deductions are other tax benefits designed primarily to benefit wealthier, white Americans and exclude Black Americans.

Plus, the legacy of housing discrimination continues: A 2018 Brookings study found that homes in Black neighborhoods were undervalued by an average of $48,000 compared to similar homes in majority-white areas, reducing the value of what is most families' largest asset. ("The Case for Reparations," Ta-Nehesi Coates' 2014 Atlantic article, is essential reading for a a moving and detailed examination of the effects of housing discrimination and other obstacles to wealth creation on Black families.)

Tax breaks on housing aren't the only benefits where Black families are shut out. For example, Social Security was created to deliberately exclude most Black workers from the system.

"There's a government responsibility to make this right because the government has played a role in creating this problem," Taite says, adding that she is investigating "all the different ways in which the government has systematically kept Black wealth from generating while facilitating white wealth."
How changing the tax code could help close the racial wealth gap
The proposal from Odom, Johnson, and Taite would add several elements to the tax code to generate funding for reparations.

First, they would dedicate the proceeds of the estate and gift tax to reparations. Odom points out that the estate tax was created during the Gilded Age to prevent the accumulation of wealth in a few families. "In free market capitalism, you need to have wealth flowing based on efficiencies, talent, and work," he says. "You can't have wealth that flows and gets aggregated in family lines but never reenters the broader market or society."

The estate tax has been altered and amended over time, undermining its original purpose of preventing the concentration of wealth. In 2001, the amount someone could pass to their heirs before the 40% estate tax kicked in was $675,000 (a bit over $1 million in today's dollars). Today, the first $12.06 million passes untaxed (though Johnson notes that this exemption will be cut in half in 2026 when tax cuts passed in 2017 expire).

Still, the origin of the estate tax as a way to redistribute wealth makes it an ideal vehicle to fund reparations. Though the total proceeds of $17.6 billion (for tax year 2020) are likely a tiny fraction of the amount needed to repair the harms done to Black Americans, Odom and Johnson feel it's an excellent place to start. (Taite supports the idea but objects to tying the estate tax directly to reparations because, she says, "The next thing you'll see Congress do will be to abolish the estate tax.")

But the group's proposals don't end with the estate tax. They envision a new type of charitable organization: a 501(c)40 (a nod to the promised 40 acres). Nonprofits established under the new code section would take on various reparative activities, including direct payments, scholarships, and other programs. To incentivize these donations, they propose that the government increase the percentage of income someone can donate tax-free from 60% to 100%.

Johnson explains the reasoning behind this incentive: "It's not exactly a charitable contribution — it's paying down a government obligation." Therefore, she says, it makes sense for the government to give up extra revenue in exchange for these donations.

Another part of the proposal would grant wealthy people another dollar to pass to their heirs without estate or gift tax for every dollar donated to a 501(c)40 organization.

And individuals could set up untaxed 501(c)40 accounts similar to the 529 plans used to save for college. Johnson envisions private citizens using these accounts to transfer up to $160,000 — the amount of the racial wealth gap — to people harmed by American slavery and its aftereffects. For example, if someone discovered that their ancestors had owned humans, they could use this type of account to transfer money to descendants of those enslaved people.
Next steps for reparation and reparations
Odom, Taite, and Johnson are all careful to point out that their proposal is solely to change the tax code to facilitate reparations payments. They do not weigh in on who should qualify for reparations (i.e., only people who can prove they descended from enslaved Africans, or all Black Americans) or the form or amount to be distributed.

Odom notes that monetary restitution is only one element of reparations. "Reparation literally means to repair," he says. "What needs to happen is bigger than getting a dollar value." He points to HR 40, a bill that would establish a federal commission to study the issue and make recommendations. The bill has been introduced in every Congress for decades.

The current version of HR 40, sponsored by Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee of Texas, may pass the House but is unlikely to make it through the Senate. But Americans aren't waiting for Congress to act. States, cities, and private individuals are taking reparations into their own hands.
Last year, California returned a parcel of property, once the first west coast resort that welcomed Black people, to the descendants of the former owners. The State of California has established a Reparations Task Force. Georgetown and Harvard are among the universities committed to making reparations for their institutions' ties to slavery. And Berkeleyside recently detailed how a $25,000 grant from a private reparations nonprofit helped a Detroit woman make the life-changing move from being a renter to owning a home. These are just a few examples from a movement that's gaining momentum.

The next step for the tax proposals is this summer's meeting of ACTEC's Tax Policy Committee. If the group doesn't want to draft language for a reparations tax code section, Johnson will approach other lobbyists and work to get the changes before Congress and added to the tax code. "We predict a new cottage industry of estate and tax planning" around these new charitable donations, "and we'd be happy to be part of it," she says.

 

Soul On Ice

Democrat 1st!
Certified Pussy Poster
wait....what political party does that governor belong to???? was that an independant gov?? a republican gov??? a green party gov??


naw..you can't be dancing for a democrat?
Should I post the head of the party stance or other high ranking members who have vocally shitted on my peoples reparations to get your shill ass to shut the fuck up or naw?
 

JungleBros

Rising Star
Registered
US Conference of Mayors supports commission to study giving reparations to African-Americans
The call for reparations from some Democrats has intensified amid racial injustice protests across the country


The U.S. Conference of Mayors is expressing support for Democratic-proposed legislation introduced by Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas, and Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., to commission a study on reparations to African-Americans.

“We recognize and support your legislation as a concrete first step to guide the actions of both federal and local leaders who have promised to do better by our Black residents,” Greg Fischer, mayor of Louisville and president of the Conference of Mayors, wrote in a letter dated July 10. The conference represents more than 1,400 U.S. cities with populations of greater than 30,000.

The call for reparations to the nation’s 41 million Black Americans has renewed amid racial injustice protests across the country. Presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden has not fully committed reparations but has expressed support for a study on the matter.
Robert Johnson, the founder of Black Entertainment Television, recently told Fox News he supported the idea of paying $14 trillion in reparations to African-Americans.

"Nobody talks about cash, but Black people understand cash," Johnson told Fox News.

Under his proposal, an estimated 40 million African-Americans would get $350,000 in direct cash payments over 30 years (costing the average taxpayer roughly $2,900 a year, according to his office). The $350,000 would signify the wealth disparity between African-Americans and white Americans.

The idea is deeply controversial. Some Democratic lawmakers have warmed to the discussion, but often in the form of commissions and other partial measures. A Fox News poll last year found most Americans are opposed to cash reparations. And with the government already spending trillions on coronavirus relief and the national debt pushing past $26 trillion, concerns about the country's fiscal stability would pose an obvious hurdle.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., last year said of the idea: "I think we're always a work in progress in this country, but no one currently alive was responsible for that, and I don't think we should be trying to figure out how to compensate for it."
Another study from three college professors on the extreme end of estimates has put the price tag of adequate reparations at $6.2 quadrillion, a payment of $151 million to every Black American.

The study, "Wealth Implications of Slavery and Racial Discrimination for African American Descendants of the Enslaved,” determined the price tag essentially by calculating the unpaid hours that slaves worked and the cost of discrimination the descendants of slaves faced and adds interest.

When Booker announced his bill last year to study the possibility of reparations he said it was “a way of addressing head-on the persistence of racism, white supremacy, and implicit racial bias in our country. It will bring together the best minds to study the issue and propose solutions that will finally begin to right the economic scales of past harms and make sure we are a country where all dignity and humanity is affirmed.”
Jackson Lee introduced a companion bill in the House, which if passed into law would set up a commission to study the impact of slavery and continued discrimination against black Americans and make recommendations on reparation proposals for the descendants of slaves.

We ain't trying to hear about no study. Reparations are due and they will pay
:yes:
 

VAiz4hustlaz

Proud ADOS and not afraid to step to da mic!
BGOL Investor
California reparations task force starts to dig in on specifics

Kamilah Moore, chair of the California Reparations Task Force, speaks Friday at a Los Angeles meeting seeking public input on the work of compensating Black residents whose families suffered from slavery.

(Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times)

BY KEVIN RECTORSTAFF WRITER

SEPT. 25, 2022 5 AM PT

If California is to make reparations to Black residents whose families have been harmed by slavery and its ongoing economic repercussions, how should the program be structured?

Should reparations be given as cash payments to individuals? Or should they come in other forms of government assistance in Black communities? What legal challenges exist?

These and many other questions were the subject of a two-day hearing by California’s Reparations Task Force, a first-in-the-nation panel established in 2020 to develop proposals for potential reparations for Black families — who have been harmed for generations by enslavement, segregation, redlining and other racist state policies and laws.

Many questions over the logistics of a state reparations program remain unanswered.

But the panel discussions Friday and Saturday at the California Science Center in South Los Angeles drew into clearer focus the heavy task of the nine-member panel: to create a program that could greatly impact the lives and socioeconomic fortunes of hundreds of thousands of people, if not more.


Amos Brown, the panel’s vice chair and a longtime civil rights leader, said the process came down to three “A’s” — admitting the problems of the past; atoning for them by identifying appropriate reparations; and acting on that information in a unified way to make sure state legislators, who would finalize a program, follow through and get the work done.

“That means getting all the sectors of the African American community and our allies to start respectfully, peaceably, sensibly, factually asking them to support reparations in this state,” Brown said.

By the end of Saturday’s meeting, the panel decided upon specific factors in the lives of Black residents that could warrant monetary compensation.


Such factors include the government’s unjust taking of property through eminent domain; the devaluation of Black businesses; disproportionate incarceration and over-policing in Black communities; and discrimination in housing, healthcare and education.

In each of those areas, the panel found that it needs to make additional decisions about the timeframe within which such harms should be considered, and whom should be compensated — including whether recipients should be limited to California residents.

The panel also identified factors for which monetary compensation may not be possible to calculate, but that still need to be addressed, including political disenfranchisement; the pathologizing of Black families by authorities; the wresting of control over creative, cultural and intellectual Black life by others in society; and the wealth gap between Black people and others.

The panel said it would also have to decide how the state should apologize.

The discussions follow a report in June in which the panel defined what it found to be harms against African Americans from the time of slavery through the present day, and outlined preliminary recommendations for providing reparations.

The panel is working on a second report, due in June, in which it is expected to provide a detailed plan to the state Legislature.

The task force heard from experts on other reparations movements throughout history, including those for Holocaust victims in Germany, apartheid victims in South Africa, and Japanese American victims in the U.S. whose families were stripped of their assets and incarcerated in prison camps during World War II.

The panel also heard from members of the public — including some who criticized the task force’s decision in March to limit its focus to reparations for descendants of enslaved African Americans and free Black people who were living in the country before the end of the 19th century.

Those critics argued that all Black Californians, including more recent immigrants, have been impacted by the legacy of slavery and other racist policies, and deserve reparations, too.

Others defended the limits, saying descendants of the enslaved have suffered in specific ways that other Black Americans, including recent immigrants and their children, have not.

Several panelists said they hoped that, in future meetings, the panel would be able to hear more from the public — including personal stories from individuals and families.

The panel’s next meetings are scheduled for Dec. 14 and15.


 

Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor


Interview highlights


On why the question of reparations feels more prominent lately

I think it's fair to say that in the wake of the Second World War, when Germany made an effort to come to terms with its own recent history and agreed to pay some reparations to some Jewish families after the Holocaust, the idea sort of moved into the mainstream and became something that people were willing to take seriously and not to regard as an eccentric or crackpot notion.

And it's been on again, off again since then. Many serious people have made the case for reparations, and many others have made arguments against them. We're at a particularly lively moment right now, thanks largely to a passionate essay by Ta-Nehisi Coates published almost a decade ago. So the reparations debate is heating up, and I think it's a very important one for us to have as a nation.

On why he believes everyone has a responsibility to help with reparations, even though they did not create the system

If we allow ourselves to be thoughtful, I think we all understand this instinctively. I mean, no one should be blamed for the sins of the fathers, as the scripture puts it. And yet we live in a world that has been damaged by history. And we have a responsibility, I think, to do what we can to repair the world.

So it's a paradoxical problem that on the one hand, the past is past and should have nothing to do with us in the present as individual moral actors. But on the other hand, we live in the world that we've inherited, and so do people who've been injured by history. So it's a difficult moral problem. It's a problem that writers and philosophers have wrestled with for centuries. And we're never going to arrive at a clean, clear answer to it. But the very fact that we're talking about it, I think, is a positive sign for where we could go as a society.

On the more modern facets of reparation that he believes should be addressed

Well, we're inclined to go first to the things we can measure, and the fact that African Americans lived for 200 years with no property, including themselves.

Slavery, meant by definition, that they could not even own themselves is the starting point for this whole discussion. But as you say, that was a long time ago. And one argument against the reparations impulse is to say, you know, that's ancient history. There's been plenty of time, water under the bridge, et cetera.

The fact is that the measurable deprivations continued long after slavery, well into the 20th century, when Black Americans were excluded, not necessarily with racist intent, but as a matter of practice. They were excluded from the Social Security Act, which left out domestic and agricultural workers who were overwhelmingly Black, especially in the South. And even from the G.I. Bill, which was theoretically open to everyone, including to women, but that very few Black people could take advantage of because most colleges wouldn't admit them.

And when it came to the federally guaranteed mortgages, we all know that banks were drawing red lines around neighborhoods and saying, no Black people welcome. So that series of measurable larcenies, as I guess I call it, is pretty easy to wrap the mind around it. It's not easy to comprehend. But we can list them and we can understand them.

On the impacts that cannot be measured

The less measurable injuries, which we associate with the term Jim Crow, remain mind-boggling to me when we read about them in history books or in novels or in memoirs. I mean, Black people being pushed off the sidewalk, especially Black males being pushed off the sidewalk if a white woman walked by.

Children, as Dr. King wrote about so movingly, being told that they can't go to the local water park, or the swimming pool, or the beach, because the color of their skin was offensive to other people who were going to be on that beach.
Not to mention the persistence of random beatings and lynchings that were an ever present danger for Black Americans through well into the 20th century.

It's impossible to measure the impact that that had.

On putting a monetary value on many of these intangible concepts

I don't think we can. Some people have tried and we've seen numbers from the thousands to the millions to the billions and trillions proposed, and different programs for distributing financial benefits to all persons who are regarded as Black, according to some pundits.

Others say, "No, it should be restricted to only those who can prove they had an enslaved ancestor."

I don't think that's the right path to travel on, and I recognize that this is a point of view that will anger and upset many, and that should be part of the discussion. For me, the more sensible and the more plausible — in the sense that something might actually come of it — approach to this is to recognize that many Americans have been injured by history, notably Black Americans who have a good case to make that they're at the head of that line. But there are many others who can point to disadvantages that were visited on their families or on themselves for reasons of racial prejudice and for other reasons, as well.

What we need to do, and I take my cue here from a great person, from the past, that is Dr. King, and from a young scholar, Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò, who teaches at Georgetown University, who speaks of reparations not as a process of payback, or settling scores, or getting even, but as what Professor Táíwò calls, "A construction project," a future-oriented reconstruction of our society to make it a fairer place. To ensure that the kinds of depredations that Black people and many others have had to deal with over the decades and centuries will be mitigated in the future.

And you can imagine the sorts of policies that someone who takes this point of view would have in mind, providing wraparound services for schoolchildren of the sort that affluent families take for granted. Providing better access to quality health care to try to close those shocking gaps in infant mortality, maternal deaths and childhood, and many others in childbirth. And many other measures on which Black Americans still lag behind, providing better educational opportunities beyond those early years.
 

Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
ASHEVILLE, N.C. – In an extraordinary move, the Asheville City Council has apologized for the North Carolina city's historic role in slavery, discrimination and denial of basic liberties to Black residents and voted to provide reparations to them and their descendants.


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The 7-0 vote came the night of July 14.

"Hundreds of years of Black blood spilled that basically fills the cup we drink from today," said Councilman Keith Young, one of two African American members of the body and the measure's chief proponent.

"It is simply not enough to remove statutes. Black people in this country are dealing with issues that are systemic in nature."

The unanimously passed resolution does not mandate direct payments. Instead, it will make investments in areas where Black residents face disparities.


REPARATIONS: How much would the US owe descendants of enslaved people?

"The resulting budgetary and programmatic priorities may include but not be limited to increasing minority home ownership and access to other affordable housing, increasing minority business ownership and career opportunities, strategies to grow equity and generational wealth, closing the gaps in health care, education, employment and pay, neighborhood safety and fairness within criminal justice," the resolution reads.

What is systemic racism? Here's what it means and how you can help dismantle it

Increasing generational wealth should be the focus, supporter says
The resolution calls on the city to create the Community Reparations Commission, inviting community groups and other local governments to join. It will be the commission's job to make concrete recommendations for programs and resources to be used.

Councilwoman Sheneika Smith, who is Black, said the council had gotten emails from those "asking, 'Why should we pay for what happened during slavery?'"

"(Slavery) is this institution that serves as the starting point for the building of the strong economic floor for white America, while attempting to keep Blacks subordinate forever to its progress," Smith said.


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Councilman Vijay Kapoor, who has often split with Young and Smith on police and budget issues, said he supported the measure for moral reasons. But he said skeptics could look to the "practical reason": data showing showing large disparities between African Americans and other Asheville residents.

"We don't want to be held back by these gaps," Kapoor said. "We want everyone to be successful."

The council allowed an hour of public comment on the measure. Many who were not able to speak before the vote waited for another hourlong comment period afterward, pushing the meeting late into the night. Most were in support.

Rob Thomas, community liaison for the Racial Justice Coalition, which led the push for reparations, thanked the council.



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"This is a really, really good gesture as far as the foundation of what we can build," Thomas said. "The potential of what can come out of this document is amazing."

Increasing generational wealth — something African Americans were deprived of through economic and regulatory discrimination — should be the focus, he said.

It was also important that the county's government join, Thomas said, to ensure issues weren't lost between the county and city.

The Buncombe County's Board of Commissioners is not clearly behind the reparations measure, though it has a 4-3 Democratic majority.



 

VAiz4hustlaz

Proud ADOS and not afraid to step to da mic!
BGOL Investor
LMAO, I understand. First and last time I will do such a thing in this thread...

No disrespect. Feel free to make a separate thread about it. But it's just hustling-ass scamming bullshit to me and shouldn't be in here. Mofo is already selling $35 t-shirts! :smh:
 

pimp1101

Rising Star
Registered


Interview highlights


On why the question of reparations feels more prominent lately

I think it's fair to say that in the wake of the Second World War, when Germany made an effort to come to terms with its own recent history and agreed to pay some reparations to some Jewish families after the Holocaust, the idea sort of moved into the mainstream and became something that people were willing to take seriously and not to regard as an eccentric or crackpot notion.

And it's been on again, off again since then. Many serious people have made the case for reparations, and many others have made arguments against them. We're at a particularly lively moment right now, thanks largely to a passionate essay by Ta-Nehisi Coates published almost a decade ago. So the reparations debate is heating up, and I think it's a very important one for us to have as a nation.

On why he believes everyone has a responsibility to help with reparations, even though they did not create the system

If we allow ourselves to be thoughtful, I think we all understand this instinctively. I mean, no one should be blamed for the sins of the fathers, as the scripture puts it. And yet we live in a world that has been damaged by history. And we have a responsibility, I think, to do what we can to repair the world.

So it's a paradoxical problem that on the one hand, the past is past and should have nothing to do with us in the present as individual moral actors. But on the other hand, we live in the world that we've inherited, and so do people who've been injured by history. So it's a difficult moral problem. It's a problem that writers and philosophers have wrestled with for centuries. And we're never going to arrive at a clean, clear answer to it. But the very fact that we're talking about it, I think, is a positive sign for where we could go as a society.

On the more modern facets of reparation that he believes should be addressed

Well, we're inclined to go first to the things we can measure, and the fact that African Americans lived for 200 years with no property, including themselves.

Slavery, meant by definition, that they could not even own themselves is the starting point for this whole discussion. But as you say, that was a long time ago. And one argument against the reparations impulse is to say, you know, that's ancient history. There's been plenty of time, water under the bridge, et cetera.

The fact is that the measurable deprivations continued long after slavery, well into the 20th century, when Black Americans were excluded, not necessarily with racist intent, but as a matter of practice. They were excluded from the Social Security Act, which left out domestic and agricultural workers who were overwhelmingly Black, especially in the South. And even from the G.I. Bill, which was theoretically open to everyone, including to women, but that very few Black people could take advantage of because most colleges wouldn't admit them.

And when it came to the federally guaranteed mortgages, we all know that banks were drawing red lines around neighborhoods and saying, no Black people welcome. So that series of measurable larcenies, as I guess I call it, is pretty easy to wrap the mind around it. It's not easy to comprehend. But we can list them and we can understand them.

On the impacts that cannot be measured

The less measurable injuries, which we associate with the term Jim Crow, remain mind-boggling to me when we read about them in history books or in novels or in memoirs. I mean, Black people being pushed off the sidewalk, especially Black males being pushed off the sidewalk if a white woman walked by.

Children, as Dr. King wrote about so movingly, being told that they can't go to the local water park, or the swimming pool, or the beach, because the color of their skin was offensive to other people who were going to be on that beach.
Not to mention the persistence of random beatings and lynchings that were an ever present danger for Black Americans through well into the 20th century.

It's impossible to measure the impact that that had.

On putting a monetary value on many of these intangible concepts

I don't think we can. Some people have tried and we've seen numbers from the thousands to the millions to the billions and trillions proposed, and different programs for distributing financial benefits to all persons who are regarded as Black, according to some pundits.

Others say, "No, it should be restricted to only those who can prove they had an enslaved ancestor."

I don't think that's the right path to travel on, and I recognize that this is a point of view that will anger and upset many, and that should be part of the discussion. For me, the more sensible and the more plausible — in the sense that something might actually come of it — approach to this is to recognize that many Americans have been injured by history, notably Black Americans who have a good case to make that they're at the head of that line. But there are many others who can point to disadvantages that were visited on their families or on themselves for reasons of racial prejudice and for other reasons, as well.

What we need to do, and I take my cue here from a great person, from the past, that is Dr. King, and from a young scholar, Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò, who teaches at Georgetown University, who speaks of reparations not as a process of payback, or settling scores, or getting even, but as what Professor Táíwò calls, "A construction project," a future-oriented reconstruction of our society to make it a fairer place. To ensure that the kinds of depredations that Black people and many others have had to deal with over the decades and centuries will be mitigated in the future.

And you can imagine the sorts of policies that someone who takes this point of view would have in mind, providing wraparound services for schoolchildren of the sort that affluent families take for granted. Providing better access to quality health care to try to close those shocking gaps in infant mortality, maternal deaths and childhood, and many others in childbirth. And many other measures on which Black Americans still lag behind, providing better educational opportunities beyond those early years.

Pathetic
 
Top