It's (finally) time for reparations. It's time for the US to pay its debt.

Anonymous
Do the reparations ever end? Because dumping money on someone's head doesn't make them fiscally responsible. The last plan I heard called for ten years of payments. I can guarantee that would be extended again and again for various "reasons."

Second, how about details. Who is entitled? How "Black" do you need to be. Someone who recently immigrated hasn't spent decades in the system. Why would they be entitled to the same benefits as the generationally poor? Even social security doesn't work that way.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'm all for paying higher taxes to provide healthcare for all, better schools, and free college for lower-income kids.

I worked in development for 10 years and huge cash transfers aren't the way to go. Teach a man to fish and all that.


If low income students have the grades then I agree to free college tuition and I think all public schools should be on a par with private schools which would mean paying teachers as much as lawyers! I also agree with the "give vs teach a man to fish" philosophy.

Anonymous
Last month every American making less than $75k got a $1,200 check from the federal government. Does this count as reparations?
Anonymous
How about Asian people? Do I owe? What if my cousin, who is half black, half white? Does he get 50% off? What about white people who have ancestors who paid with their lives in the Union Army to end slavery? That seems like a large payment.
Anonymous
I can guarantee you that this will never happen.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I'm all for paying higher taxes to provide healthcare for all, better schools, and free college for lower-income kids.

I worked in development for 10 years and huge cash transfers aren't the way to go. Teach a man to fish and all that.


How about other forms of reparations?

Do you support the principle but not just handing out cash?


I support principles like affirmative action and preferential hiring, in addition to the equalizing economic policies I mentioned above, if that's what you mean. I don't support handing out cash.
Anonymous
Lol, it ain't happening and we ain't having that discussion before the election. Stop trolling Ivan
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I'm all for paying higher taxes to provide healthcare for all, better schools, and free college for lower-income kids.

I worked in development for 10 years and huge cash transfers aren't the way to go. Teach a man to fish and all that.


How about other forms of reparations?

Do you support the principle but not just handing out cash?

NP here. The principle is abhorrent. My parents and grandparents recieved Holocaust reparations from the German government. That was for their suffering. I would not accept reparations for me. I did not suffer anything close to what they went through.

On the other hand, I do believe society has an obligation to assist people who are poor today. Present conditions that keep them in poverty should be fixed. They are entitled to a decent life and opportunities. Cash is okay, but jobs at living wages is better.

Otherwise, we will be saying Oprah deserves "reparations," but a poor white who grew up in poverty deserves nothing.
Anonymous
The debt is unpayable and those who incurred that debt are dead. Most whites haven't accrued wealth either. It's undeniable that racism has significantly impeded the ability to accrue wealth, but there are a lot of other reasons besides racism that result in people not accruing wealth as well.

The column articulates injustices very well but despite describing the "technical details" as the easy part buries the actual action at the very end and then glosses over it. "Who should pay how much to whom?" is the critical question.

"Congress" should pay an undetermined sum for an undetermined period of time "to any person who has documentation that he or she identified as a black person for at least 10 years before the beginning of any reparations process and can trace at least one ancestor back to American slavery."

"Congress," of course, does not have any money it doesn't get from taxpayers. A tax on, say, poor whites to increase the wealth of, say, middle class blacks, doesn't seem like a great solution.

An estate tax for 50 years on estates over $50 million payable to African Americans who can trace an ancestor back to American Slavery and with income of less than $30,000 per year would deserve serious consideration.

Maybe other approaches would as well. But the litany of accurate grievances without a concrete statement about who pays what to whom just sounds like a request for a blank check that won't be regarded as sufficient whatever it might be.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:By suggesting that there is a debt to be paid, you've revealed your true position.


You don’t think there is a debt to be paid?

Did you read the essay?


NP. No, I don't think there is a debt to be paid. I think a conversation about affirmative action and preferential hiring is much more relevant and meaningful. And full of controversy, so won't be dull.


Did you read it? I’m curious if you think the same after reading the essay.


Yes. I don't agree with the essay, it hasn't changed my mind.


You think there is no “debt” in terms of....

The literal sense:
“the prosperity of this country which is inextricably linked with the forced labor of the ancestors of 40 million black Americans”

“At the time of the Civil War, the value of the enslaved human beings held as property added up to more than all of this nations’ railroads and factories combined. And yet, enslaved people saw not a dime of this wealth. They owned nothing and were owed nothing from all that had been built from their toil.“


Or the retribution sense for creating policies that blocked black people from building wealth - even excluding them from government handouts like the Homestead Act, etc.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Reparations to those who were slaves not their descendants. That is ludicrous!


The slaves are long dead. No reparations have been made. The debt hasn’t gone away.
Anonymous
Any reparations money will likely disappear in a just a few years.

Looking to lottery winners as an example, the money disappears quickly and doesn't result in generational advantages. If one was to implement reparations, cash payments are a shirt term solution at best.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:By suggesting that there is a debt to be paid, you've revealed your true position.


You don’t think there is a debt to be paid?

Did you read the essay?


NP. No, I don't think there is a debt to be paid. I think a conversation about affirmative action and preferential hiring is much more relevant and meaningful. And full of controversy, so won't be dull.


Did you read it? I’m curious if you think the same after reading the essay.


Yes. I don't agree with the essay, it hasn't changed my mind.


I agree.
And, this comment is flat out false: "No progress has been made over the past 70 years in reducing income and wealth inequalities between black and white households"
Anonymous
This will never happen, and rightly so.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I believe in reparations, but just don't think it's possible. I just want equity in economic and housing policies. Real equity. Affirmative Action benefited white women the most, but got a bad rap. I think we need to rethink Affirmative Action.


What policies will actually bring economic equity though?

Racial income disparities today look no different than they did the decade before King’s March on Washington.

No progress has been made over the past 70 years in reducing income and wealth inequalities between black and white households


How can we achieve this without wealth leveling?
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