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25910 Posts in 9966 Topics by 982 Members Latest Member: - Ferguson Most online today: 60 (July 03, 2005, 06:25:30 PM)
+  Africa Speaks Reasoning Forum
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| |-+  Reparations
| | |-+  The Case for Reparations - Ta-Nehisi Coates
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Author Topic: The Case for Reparations - Ta-Nehisi Coates  (Read 10356 times)
Nakandi
KiwNak
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Posts: 533


« on: May 22, 2014, 10:03:50 AM »

"In 1783, the freedwoman Belinda Royall petitioned the commonwealth of Massachusetts for reparations. Belinda had been born in modern-day Ghana. She was kidnapped as a child and sold into slavery. She endured the Middle Passage and 50 years of enslavement at the hands of Isaac Royall and his son. But the junior Royall, a British loyalist, fled the country during the Revolution. Belinda, now free after half a century of labor, beseeched the nascent Massachusetts legislature:

The face of your Petitioner, is now marked with the furrows of time, and her frame bending under the oppression of years, while she, by the Laws of the Land, is denied the employment of one morsel of that immense wealth, apart whereof hath been accumilated by her own industry, and the whole augmented by her servitude.

WHEREFORE, casting herself at your feet if your honours, as to a body of men, formed for the extirpation of vassalage, for the reward of Virtue, and the just return of honest industry—she prays, that such allowance may be made her out of the Estate of Colonel Royall, as will prevent her, and her more infirm daughter, from misery in the greatest extreme, and scatter comfort over the short and downward path of their lives.

Belinda Royall was granted a pension of 15 pounds and 12 shillings, to be paid out of the estate of Isaac Royall—one of the earliest successful attempts to petition for reparations. At the time, black people in America had endured more than 150 years of enslavement, and the idea that they might be owed something in return was, if not the national consensus, at least not outrageous."

Full article: http://www.theatlantic.com/features/archive/2014/05/the-case-for-reparations/361631/
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Nakandi
KiwNak
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Posts: 533


« Reply #1 on: May 23, 2014, 01:15:45 AM »


Video: Ta-Nehisi Coates Talks White Supremacy and Reparations

http://colorlines.com/archives/2014/05/video_ta-nehisi_coates_talks_white_supremacy_and_reparations.html
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Nakandi
KiwNak
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Posts: 533


« Reply #2 on: May 26, 2014, 10:34:56 AM »

An 'Expert' Responds to Ta-Nehisi Coates on Reparations (Quotation marks mine)

Why has the idea of reparations been so anathema to the American public?

That's a great question particularly since people are not particularly opposed to reparations for injustices that have been perpetrated against other folks aside from black Americans. We ultimately did have a reparations program for the Japanese Americans that were incarcerated during World War II. We could argue over whether or not the amounts of the compensation were adequate, but there was at least a piece of legislation that was passed and signed by the President at the time.

It is interesting that the question of compensation for African Americans tends to draw so much more heat than the compensation for other groups. We can even think about this on an international scale and other instances of injustices. The only answer that I can come up with is that it’s deeply routed in the American psyche about black inferiority and that in some sense blacks must be responsible for their own problems.

Full interview here http://www.demos.org/blog/5/23/14/expert-responds-ta-nehisi-coates-reparations
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