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Reparations Assessment
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Additional Links & Notes |
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April, 2002 |
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christopher edley jr. says elsewhere
and i concur that there should be no such thing as a debtor race and a
creditor race, but certainly some transfer of wealth is in order. but
the irony is, i think, that in the case of america, blacks are probably
not going to do what is necessary for this transfer of funds.
in all the time that has transpired
since i last considered this subject since september 10th to be precise,
it dawns on me that perhaps the time to make the case for economic reparations
may have passed. like around 1969. there are several factors which drive
this.
#1. a lack of extremist recourse.
#2. a lack of a geopolitical claim.
#3. globalization.
i don't know the details of the plaintiffs
or complaint in a recent reparations suit, but i have head that one of
the respondants is aetna insurance. i think one of the others was an old
boston bank, which reminded me of first boston. but first boston is now
credit suisse first boston. many of these old line firms have been and
are being merged out of existence. it's going to be difficult to deal
with corporate immunities, as enron proves. american and multinational
corporations simply cannot be punished other than through shareholder
pressures. the irony of this is that puts jesse jackson front and center
again, because he, more than any individual or collective in america can
get a company's stock to quiver because of racist charges. a friend of
mine works in community relations for toyota and she tells me that company
is absolutely petrified of jackson.
on the matter of geopolitics, there
simply isn't any international support for african american causes. we
used to matter to the world, and now we do not. not at all. it is something
i haven't considered in all this time, but i don't believe there is any
forum anywhere which considers the plight of the american negro. that
is because the american negro doesn't exist any longer. there is no negro
problem in this world, and even if there were, it pales in significance
to the kurdish problem, the hutu problem, the albanian problem, and a
dozen others.
i'll be called a bum and worse but
the lesson of the holocaust seems to be that nationalism solves nothing.
it only gives armies a home. these days i'm rather curious to check out
what non-zero sum game theorists had to say about world government and
pay close attention, because the way things are turning out, nations seem
to be playing an old dysfunctional game and the moral high ground belongs
to radical, violent liberation movements. in mind are subhas bose' indian
rebel nationalists in concert with gandhi, malcolm x in concert with king,
hamas in concert with whomever we eventually recognize as the good negroes
of palestine, the 'good' mujahadeen in concert with karzai, etc.. [ok
this all sounds grasping and far-fetched beyond utility]. but my point
is that a good portion of negoitiating a peace requires a credible threat
of war. that's how nations are reformed. african americans are not going
to issue a credible threat of war for reparations, and the amount of reparation
due from this nation requires that much. i believe olgetree will make
the case and prove the theory, but the cost of not repairing is not high
enough.
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