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Reply to "It's (finally) time for reparations. It's time for the US to pay its debt. "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I admit I hadn’t thought much about reparations in the past. The whole concept seemed too complicated and challenging. BUT this essay by Nikole Hannah Jones has really changed my mind. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/06/24/magazine/reparations-slavery.html She does an excellent job detailing the history of racial oppression and injustice and how the only way to truly transform our country and achieve racial justice is to address the root issue - [u]WEALTH[/u]. And how white Americans have received government support over the last 150 years that has propelled them to generational wealth while Black Americans have had the opposite experience. It’s really excellent and I hope everyone can take the time to read it. I know it's long but a very worthwhile read. Some key points from her essay: [quote][i]In other words, while black Americans were being systematically, generationally deprived of the ability to build wealth, while also being robbed of the little they had managed to gain, white Americans were not only free to earn money and accumulate wealth with exclusive access to the best jobs, best schools, best credit terms, but they were also getting substantial government help in doing so.[/i] That’s what the Great Society was supposed to do: free housing, Medicaid, TANF, welfare, et al. More money is never going to change anything for the better. Not much has changed since MLK said this in 1967: [i]“it didn’t cost the nation anything to integrate lunch counters. It didn’t cost the nation anything to integrate hotels and motels. It didn’t cost the nation a penny to guarantee the right to vote. Now we are in a period where it will cost the nation billions of dollars to get rid of poverty, to get rid of slums, to make quality integrated education a reality. This is where we are now. Now our struggle is for genuine equality, which means economic equality. [b]For we know that it isn’t enough to integrate lunch counters. What does it profit a man to be able to eat at an integrated lunch counter if he doesn’t have enough money to buy a hamburger?[/b]” As we focus on police violence, we cannot ignore an even starker indication of our societal failures: Racial income disparities today look no different than they did the decade before King’s March on Washington. [b]No progress has been made over the past 70 years in reducing income and wealth inequalities between black and white households[/b] To summarize, [b]none of the actions we are told black people must take if they want to “lift themselves” out of poverty and gain financial stability — not marrying, not getting educated, not saving more, not owning a home — can mitigate 400 years of racialized plundering. Wealth begets wealth, and white Americans have had centuries of government assistance to accumulate wealth, while the government has for the vast history of this country worked against black Americans doing the same.[/b] “The cause of the gap must be found in the structural characteristics of the American economy, heavily infused at every point with both an inheritance of racism and the ongoing authority of white supremacy,” the authors of the Duke study write. “There are no actions that black Americans can take unilaterally that will have much of an effect on reducing the wealth gap. For the gap to be closed, America must undergo a vast social transformation produced by the adoption of bold national policies.” Reparations are not about punishing white Americans, and white Americans are not the ones who would pay for them. It does not matter if your ancestors engaged in slavery or if you just immigrated here two weeks ago. [b]Reparations are a societal obligation in a nation where our Constitution sanctioned slavery, Congress passed laws protecting it and our federal government initiated, condoned and practiced legal racial segregation and discrimination against black Americans until half a century ago. And so it is the federal government that pays. [/b] The real obstacle, the obstacle that we have never overcome, is garnering the political will — convincing enough Americans that the centuries-long forced economic disadvantage of black Americans should be remedied, that restitution is owed to people who have never had an equal chance to take advantage of the bounty they played such a significant part in creating. Each year Congress allocates money — this year [b]$5 million — to help support Holocaust survivors living in America[/b]. Race-neutral policies simply will not address the depth of disadvantage faced by people this country once believed were chattel. Financial restitution cannot end racism, of course, but it can certainly mitigate racism’s most devastating effects. If we do nothing, black Americans may never recover from this pandemic, and they will certainly never know the equality the nation has promised. If black lives are to truly matter in America, this nation must move beyond slogans and symbolism. Citizens don’t inherit just the glory of their nation, but its wrongs too. [b]A truly great country does not ignore or excuse its sins. It confronts them and then works to make them right.[/b] If we are to be redeemed, if we are to live up to the magnificent ideals upon which we were founded, we must do what is just. [b]It is time for this country to pay its debt. It is time for reparations.[/b][/i][/quote] Thoughts? Do you think it's time for the US to pay its debt? [/quote][/quote] We already have via the Great Society: Medicaid, welfare, public housing, TANF, et al. [/quote]
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