An Argument Against
US Slave Reparations
28 Aug 01
There is a
growing movement in the
1) The unpaid imposition of slavery did not compensate the slaves for their labor
and the government should now make up for this wrong.
2) The institution of slavery in this country has had a holdover effect keeping
black Americans in poverty to this day.
3) Slavery was a wrong imposed on a
single race, specifically black Africans, by another race, white Americans.
First, there
is not a single former slave alive today. If
there were they would certainly be due just compensation for their labor, but the
ancestors of atrocities do not deserve compensation in any way. As a precedent for this point of view, from the
last century, let us look at how the compensation of slave labor during the holocaust of
World War II has been handled. The thousands
of people that survived that inequity are being compensated by both the government of
Secondly,
blacks do not have a monopoly on living in poverty in this country. According to the latest census data approximately
30 percent of blacks and whites live in poverty. Hispanics
unfortunately have an even higher percentage living below the poverty line. All this current day poverty can not be attributed
to a disgusting institution that was ended 150 years ago.
It can however be attributed to present day governmental policy. There should be a monumental effort made by the
government, at all levels, to get all Americans out of poverty, but a policy centered on
only one race is just as wrong as slavery was.
Thirdly,
slavery could not have existed without the complicity of black Africans who supplied most
of the unfortunate humans that were sold into this dreadful condition. It was not just whites that kept this retched
institution going for over 200 years. In
addition, there were over 200,000 white Americans that paid the ultimate retribution
during the Civil War, when they gave their lives to end slavery. The reparation debt owed to slaves was paid a long
time ago when the North won the Civil War and freed them.
To use the
abhorrent history of slavery as the catalyst for any present day action, designed to
benefit only a single race, is clearly not justified.
If the argument were changed to one that would force the government and business to
do more to help all people in poverty today, then it would be a cause truly deserving of
immediate governmental action.