Will America Ever Pay? Racial Justice and Reparations
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Katherine Tate
In this essay, I explore the question of how the government will likely respond to demands by Black activists to compensate the descendants of Black slaves for the historical injustice of slavery in the United States. Public opinion surveys reveal strong racial divisions on the question of whether the U.S. government should compensate or apologize to the descendants of Black slaves. Based on my efforts to gain an officers commission for my fathers military service in World War II as well as the recent case of discrimination against Black farmers by the Department of Agriculture, I argue that it is unlikely that the government will compensate Blacks monetarily for the historical injustice of slavery. However, I think that an apology by the U.S. government will ultimately be issued.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Article
- Florida: Too Close to Call, Again?!
- Bellwether Politics in Missouri
- Ohio: The Heart of it All
- Judicial Confessions: John F. Kerry, Catholics, and the Supreme Court
- The Ninth Amendment and the Negative Pregnant
- Will America Ever Pay? Racial Justice and Reparations
- Generational Conflict in Urban Politics: the 2002 Newark Mayoral Election
- Review
- Fahrenheit Red, Fahrenheit Blue
- Fahrenheit 9/11: A Review?
- The Degeneration of American Political Culture and the Documentary Film in Fahrenheit 9/11