The
concept of the government paying reparations
to the descendants of enslaved Africans is by no means new. Since the
unrealized promise of “40 acres and a mule,” Black people
have promoted the issue of reparations, envisioned what reparations
should look like in terms of scope, nature and potential price tag,
and even proposed legislation to address compensation for centuries
of kidnap, rape, plunder and forced labor, followed by years of Jim
Crow segregationist terror, and present-day institutional racism.
What
is different now is numerous Democratic presidential candidates, in a
political party in which Black support is crucial, have expressed
support for reparations. Although many Democratic politicians are
invoking reparations as a buzzword, and some have mentioned some
policy proposals, the question remains as to whether they are truly
serious about reparations.
N’COBRA,
the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America, says
reparations should assume as many forms as necessary to address the
injury caused by chattel slavery and its ongoing vestiges. Aside from
cash payments, reparations include resources for repatriation of
African descendants to Africa, economic and community development,
land, scholarships, exoneration of political prisoners and
elimination of racially unjust laws. The organization has determined
there are five categories of injury from slavery, including the
destruction of African peoples’ peoplehood, nationhood and
culture; physical and mental health; a dual system of criminal
punishment that stems from slavery and continues to treat Black
people more harshly that whites to this day, and the racial wealth
gap in which Black people were impoverished through enslavement,
segregation and present-day economic discrimination. N’COBRA
maintains that under international standards, reparations means “full
repair” — to “wipe out all consequences of the
illegal act” as if the injustice had not occurred.
The
National African American Reparations Commission (NAARC) has
developed a 10-point reparations plan that includes a formal apology
and establishment of an African Holocaust Institute, the right of
repatriation and program to bridge the barriers between Africans in
the U.S. and on the continent, and the right to land. This includes
free land, and the transfer of public land to people of African
descent with full autonomy and sovereignty, and for social and
economic development. Other measures include resources for regional
Black-owned health and wellness centers; a National Board of
Education of African Ancestry to accredit African-centered
educational programs in majority Black public schools; free tuition
at HBCUs; funding of an African American Housing and Finance
Authority to build “holistic and sustainable ‘villages’”
for Black people; federal funding the Black press; preservation of
Black monuments and sacred sites, and repairing the damage of the
“criminal injustice system.”
At
the recent National Action Network annual convention in New York,
hosted by Rev. Al Sharpton, nearly all of the widening field of 2020
Democratic presidential contenders were present. And most expressed
support for legislation in Congress that would further the cause of
reparations. The bill introduced by Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee
(D-Texas), H.R.
40,
is known as the Commission to Study and Develop Reparations Proposals
for African Americans Act, which would establish a commission to
examine slavery and recommend remedies. The lawmaker, who has assumed
the mantle from the original sponsor of the bill, former Rep. John
Conyers (D-Michigan), said in a statement that while some people have
attempted to downplay the importance of the reparations debate by
focusing on monetary compensation for individuals, the real issue is
whether America can grapple with a legacy of enslavement that impacts
us today.
“In
short, the Commission aims to study the impact of slavery and
continuing discrimination against African-Americans, resulting
directly and indirectly from slavery to segregation to the
desegregation process and the present day,” Jackson Lee said in
a statement. “The commission would also make recommendations
concerning any form of apology and compensation to begin the long
delayed process of atonement for slavery.” Jackson Lee called
the measure a “holistic bill” that goes beyond tackling
the economic implications of enslavement to explore the moral and
social ramifications of the institution.
There
are numerous estimates of the cost of reparations, ranging from
several trillion dollars to as much as $59.2 trillion. According to
Professor William “Sandy” Darity of Duke University,
reparations achieves three objectives: “acknowledgment of a
grievous injustice, redress for the injustice, and closure of the
grievances held by the group subjected to the injustice.”
Darity notes that many of the multitrillion-dollar estimates for
reparations are underestimates that do not even incorporate the
damage caused by slavery and the costs of Jim Crow segregation. He
believes legislation and political support versus court action are
necessary to bring about reparations, however substantial the popular
white opposition may prove. Darity argues for a reparations portfolio
including $1 trillion to $6 trillion direct payout, whether
distributed as a lump sum or over time, and “’establishment
of a trust fund to which eligible blacks could apply for grants for
various asset-building projects, including homeownership, additional
education, or start-up funds for self-employment,’ or even
vouchers for the purchase of financial assets.”
While
many of the Democratic presidential hopefuls support the reparations
bill in Congress, they have yet to move beyond generalities and
articulate a comprehensive vision for what they believe reparations
should look like. A few candidates, however, have described some
vague policy prescriptions meant to take the form of reparations. For
example, Sen. Kamala Harris points to her LIFT Act, which would
expand the earned income tax credit for middle class families and
purportedly lift 60 percent of Back families out of poverty on the
grounds that Black families suffer from racial disparities.
Sen.
Cory Booker has proposed the American Opportunity Account Act, a $700
billion social wealth fund or baby bonds program that would give
means tested payments to 18-year-olds. Critics note the fund, meant
to close the racial wealth gap, would not accomplish the task, as a
wealth transfer of $15.2 trillion — amounting to 17.5 percent
of U.S. wealth in 2016 — is required to accomplish the task.
Booker has also introduced the Senate companion to Rep. Jackson Lee’s
reparations bill. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) — who
supports the reparations bill, called for repairing the racial wealth
gap, a federal jobs guarantee and major tax reform. Sanders had
previously said reparations would be divisive and would not pass in
Congress, arguing that “I think there are better ways to do
that than just writing out a check.”
Julian
Castro challenged Sanders’ opposition to writing a big check,
noting that programs such as Medicare for all would require doing
just that. “And so, if the issue is compensating the
descendants of slaves, I don’t think the argument about writing
a big check ought to be the argument that you make, if you’re
making an argument that a big check needs to be written for a whole
bunch of other stuff,” Castro said. “So, if, under the
Constitution, we compensate people because we take their property,
why wouldn’t you compensate people who actually were property?”
Sen.
Elizabeth Warren said it is time for a “national, full-blown
conversation about reparations in this country.” “America
was founded on principles of liberty and freedom and on the backs of
slave labor,” Warren said at a town hall in March. “This
is a stain on America, and we’re not going to fix that, we’re
not going to change that until we address it head on, directly.”
Warren also has noted the need to “confront the dark history of
slavery and government-sanctioned discrimination in this country”
that has kept generations of Black families from building wealth, and
the need for “systemic, structural changes to address that.”
The senator has also introduced the American Housing and Economic
Mobility Act, which would address affordable housing by assisting
home buyers in communities with a history of redlining.
Presidential
candidate, author and activist Marianne Williamson has proposed $200
billion to $500 billion for reparations, claiming that “anything
less than $100 billion is an insult.” Williamson said she does
not think the average American is racist, but rather is “vastly
undereducated, underinformed about the real history of race in the
United States.”
On
the 400th anniversary of the enslavement of Africans in Virginia,
reparations to address the damage of slavery will be costly, and yet
are necessary. Democratic candidates are talking about reparations,
but they are only scratching the surface.
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