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Rep. Keith Ellison: ‘We Were Held In Slavery Longer Than We’ve Been Free’
News One For Black America ^ | May 22, 2012 | Kirsten West Savali

Posted on 06/16/2012 11:54:59 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

REPARATIONS PART II

From the day he was sworn into office in 2006 with his hand placed on the Quran, Representative Keith Ellison (pictured left) (D-MN), the first Muslim American elected to the U.S. Congress, has exemplified political bravery.

As previously reported by NewsOne, before entering into public service, he was an attorney with the law firm of Lindquist & Vennum, specializing in civil rights, employment, and criminal defense law. He was then appointed executive director of the Legal Rights Center in Minneapolis, a non-profit organization that specialized in representing clients living in poverty.

Rep. Ellison is also a passionate supporter of H.R. 40, the proposal to establish a Commission to Study Reparation Proposals for the African-Americans Act, authored by Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.) In a pivotal moment in U.S. history, Congress officially studied the institution of slavery, its lingering ramifications, consequences, and viable methods that the United States should address during hearings by the Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Civil Liberties. Conyers had introduced the legislation for almost two decades, and 2007, was the first year that an official hearing took place.

“For over 19 years, I have introduced H.R. 40 — not to spark controversy or promote division — but to direct attention to a historical wrong that warrants substantial consideration,” Rep. Conyers said when he gaveled the Oversight Hearing on the Legacy of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade. “With an H.R. 40 commission, this nation could come closer to racial equality and understanding. Slavery is a blemish on this nation’s history, and until it is addressed, our country’s story will remain marked.”

When we asked Rep. Ellison why he joined forces with Conyers on such a politically risky legislation, he answered simply, “It was the right thing to do.”

In an exclusive interview, NewsOne spoke with the fiery politician from Minnesota about the violent history of slavery; other dehumanizing eras in African-American history; reparations; and how, when, and to whom redress could logically be dispersed.

******************************************************************************************

NewsOne: Do you agree that reparations should be awarded to the African-American community for the economic and psychological impact of slavery, Reconstruction, Jim and Jane Crow, the Civil Rights Era, and the Reagan Era when drugs flooded our communities?

Rep. Ellison: I think the conversation is generally too simplistic. Yes, I think we need to study reparations. When there’s injury there should be redress, right? It’s a basic concept of justice, but some people automatically leap to the conclusion that the only legitimate form of redress is direct cash payments, and that might not necessarily be the case. I’m not saying that, that isn’t the right way, but it needs to be studied.

Let’s figure out what companies benefited from slavery — the shipping companies, the underwriting companies, the insurance companies. Who built the equipment? How international was it? One thing that needs to be comprehensively studied is what financial benefit the African-American community has meant for America. People need to recognize that. I think one of the reasons that we have these pervasive unkind stereotypes is many of us don’t recognize — and many others won’t acknowledge — the value we brought to this country.

When we were brought here in 1619, until, I think, after 1865, because the legal slave trade did not end with the American Civil War, we didn’t even have control over our own intellectual property. Our intellectual property was legally the property of our owners. I’ve always found it fascinating: I was born in 1963; my father was born in 1928; his father was born in 1896; and his father, Crawford Ellison, was born into slavery in 1861, in Burke County, Georgia. What does that mean?

That this is a very recent phenomenon.

I went to law school and practiced law for many years and we took courses in property, but we never had one single case on the property of all of these slaves. Take for instance, if you beat someone’s slave and they die. What’s due? What’s void? What should the family have received? They had rules against excessive force against animals, but not against slaves.

There is just an entire range of questions that need to be answered. And for America to look squarely into the eyes of her past, it would be a good thing to do.

NewsOne: So if you don’t necessarily believe that direct cash payments are the way to go, then what?

Rep. Ellison: Well, even that needs to be studied, because is that the best way? Is that the best way for redress to occur? We are talking about a multi-generational injury. The people who were in slavery are now all dead, so we want to compensate them for slavery, [but] we can’t, because they’re all gone. Now, there could be some sort of survivor benefit, but how could that be distributed?

Perhaps you have an ancestor who migrated from Africa and didn’t go through the American slave experience. Maybe one of your parents is White and the other is Black. Maybe you’re only 1/8 Black. At some point, people who say that we have to get reparations and we have to get money, I just think that is simplistic and it’s 100 times more complex that that. So we need to really plumb the depths of it. What about the African Americans who owned slaves? Do they pay? How do we differentiate between the ones who legitimately owned slaves from the those who were freed and had to buy their children’s freedom or their wives’ freedom? They’re on the books as slaves.

What about the Native-Americans, the Cherokee? Do we demand reparations from the Tribal governments? I mean, this thing is complicated and the worse thing we can do is take a complicated subject and try to simplify it — because we do injustice one way or another. Rhode Island was implicated in ship building during the slave trade, New York is guilty of underwriting capital used in the slave trade, and as a country, we tend to always focus on the South.

To study this thing in depth not only rights an egregious wrong, but tells us more about ourselves as Americans.

Then what about the international scope — England, the Caribbean, South America. Who would be responsible to pay? Would [it be] the Ashanti Empire, who aided and abetted the slave trade? Or would we just focus on the American government?

It might be entertaining barber shop conversation, but it’s 10 times deeper than that.

NewsOne: When you look at the government’s integral role in the perpetuation of slavery, how governments in Germany paid reparations to the Jewish community, how the United States is even paying some form of reparations to Native Americans. Why do you think there hasn’t been more of an active push to rectify the financial and psychological subjugation of African Americans in this country?

(VIDEO AT LINK)

Rep. Ellison: Well, let me tell you, in terms of “active push,” there ain’t never been reparations for anyone, for anything, unless the plaintiff made a demand. No one who inflicts injury on anyone else, they don’t volunteer reparations. If African Americans want to have a more in-depth exploration into what we’ve contributed to America, then we have to be the ones who make that call.

A lot of people think, “Oh, I voted for that guy, he’s supposed to come in here and fix my life up.” Well, democracy doesn’t work like that. You vote for people, then you have to stay engaged in the process, tell them what you want, what you expect. You have to organize, just like everyone else does. That’s how politics works, always has.

NewsOne: From your point of view, how can we address the stigma attached to the mere mention of reparations, often times from within our own communities?

Rep. Ellison: Well, you have to take into consideration that African Americans were just as complex, complicated, conflicted, intelligent, inventive, and creative as we are now. We walk around today and it’s almost impossible to imagine Black people being owned by anyone else — but four generations ago we were. Even the slaves who were freed sometimes walked around like slaves without masters.

Think about that.

Even when we weren’t owned by one person, there was still the chains of “you can’t live here, you can’t work here, you can’t pursue that profession, you can’t educate your kids here.” It was a horrible existence in many ways.

NewsOne: When you look at the South, specifically, and how the ramifications of slavery stand out in vivid detail — obesity, sub-par education, some towns where you can still find separate Black and White proms — in many ways it’s still a very “don’t-cross-over-the-railroad-tracks” existence. There are some people who honestly cannot believe that some places in the Deep South are still that way. You can feel slavery as with the neo-confederatism of the antebellum home tours and restaurants shaped like Mammy. Shouldn’t there be some kind of economic push, possibly in the form of financial reparations, just to begin restructuring the hub of where the degradation began?

Rep. Ellison: You know, the neo-confederacy, where they want to remember the South in a fond way, flying the rebel flag everywhere; these people took up arms against the United States and that’s called being a “traitor.”

That’s called being a “traitor.”

Jefferson Davis [President of the Confederate States of America] was a traitor. These people were traitors against the United States and the fact that they could ever hold any honor, anywhere is an outrage. What did they fight for? Did they fight for a noble cause? No, they fought to keep other human beings in bondage. They are totally disreputable, contemptible, and hold no value in the United States of America.

Still again, for there to be any kind of “active push” toward reparations for slavery, African Americans are going to have to organize and demand it.

NewsOne: Malcolm X said in “By Any Means Necessary”:

“If you are the son of a man who had a wealthy estate and you inherit your father’s estate, you have to pay off the debts that your father incurred before he died. The only reason that the present generation of White Americans are in a position of economic strength…is because their fathers worked our fathers for over 400 years with no pay…. We were sold from plantation to plantation like you sell a horse, or a cow, or a chicken, or a bushel of wheat…. All that money…is what gives the present generation of American Whites the ability to walk around the earth with their chest out…like they have some kind of economic ingenuity. Your father isn’t here to pay. My father isn’t here to collect. But I’m here to collect and you’re here to pay.”

According to Harper’s magazine (November, 2000), the United States stole an estimated $100 trillion dollars for 222,505,049 hours of forced labor between 1619 and 1865 with a compounded interest of 6 percent.

Do you agree with Malcolm’s statement? That aside from the morality of reparations, the United States is legally liable to repay at least that sum to the African-American community?

Rep. Ellison: I respect Malcolm, but there are some things we don’t agree on. For instance, he said, “By any means necessary,” I say, By any moral means necessary. There’s a huge difference. So can you legally [shift] liability to the state for injuries committed against your ancestors four generations ago? There could possibly be some legal theories that support that. I don’t know them as I sit here.

That’s why I say we need to study this stuff, so we can dig into it and learn more about it. I mean, if four generations ago, your great-great-great grandmother was in an accident, through no fault of her own, that she didn’t get compensated for, can you sue for that today? The law would say no because there’s a statute of limitations on it. But if someone killed your loved one, can you sue for that? Well, yes, you possibly could, because the statute of limitation on that is quite a bit longer — if there is one.

But before people start screaming for money, saying, “Oh, look at what you did,” we need to understand slavery more. They sold slaves on the [National] Mall. Presidents and leaders were afraid that when foreign dignitaries visited, they would see that and be embarrassed. There’s documented evidence of that fact that I just stated.

I believe the collective White society is ashamed of it, and by the way, the collective Black society is ashamed of it because they don’t want to face the fact that we were that degraded.

No one wants to stare this thing in the face. From a White standpoint, it’s “look, that happened a long time ago, let’s move on.” From an African-American standpoint, it’s “it happened a long time ago and it still affects me today, but I don’t want to be reminded of the pain.”

NewsOne: African Americans are tired of being cast into the role of “victim.”

Rep. Ellison: Exactly. It’s disempowering to be the “victim.” People want to be in the role of “victor.” And it may help to realize that we were not the only ones disempowered. For instance, could poor southern Whites have been paid more if not for slavery? They probably could have. The only reason they accepted such low wages was because they were in direct competition with slave labor.

Does the White working class have a claim for reparations? I don’t know. But people want to make it simple, and it’s not simple. We know that it’s a mistake to make a simple issue complicated. It can be an even bigger mistake to make a complicated issue simple.

I’ll give you an example. If someone says, ‘What are my taxes, what’s my refund?’ And the government says, “Oh, I don’t know. We’ll just give you something; we’ll give you what we got.” Well, wait a minute, what about deductions, what about dependents? It’s an intricate, detailed process. There’s this deep injury associated with slavery that none of us have really looked at in-depth, and it would be a disservice to do otherwise.

NewsOne: As a liberal Democrat in the U.S. House of Representatives, how do you answer the criticism (and address the misconception) that public welfare programs enable rather than cripple African Americans? Is there a way to restructure the system so that it is clear that welfare is not a handout, but a necessity in a nation with an inbred, imbalanced sense of economic equality?

Rep. Ellison: This is an interesting issue, and my answer would be no. And here’s why: America caring for our poor and unfortunate is something that should be done without any regard to historical injury. We should do it because it’s the right thing to do. We shouldn’t allow our senior citizens to eat dog food or have to pick between a meal and medicine. We should make sure that every child has a decent meal in the morning before they go to a decent school. We should make sure that we don’t have homeless people living under bridges. And that should be done without any regard to historical injury.

Even if there was never any historic injury, it shouldn’t be that only wealthy White males get government contracts to build highways. We should be striving for diversity for its own sake.

In my view, reparations has everything to do with slavery and African Americans being denied their God-given right to own themselves.

If there was an African slave who ran away, he would have been found guilty of theft — theft of himself. They said we had no more legal rights than a chicken or a cow, and yet, if a chicken were to peck its master, the master would say, “Oh, that’s just a chicken, chickens peck sometimes.” But if a slave were to strike his or her master, they would be held morally culpable.

They didn’t have any laws saying that chickens couldn’t read and write, but they had laws saying that Black people couldn’t read and write.

This was a system of oppression. It’s important to know what slavery means in our lives not just historically, but how it affects us as Americans today. It’s important, a basic matter of arithmetic. We were a legal slave-owning society from 1619 to 1865.

We were held in slavery longer than we’ve been free: There are whole generations who lived their whole lives, had kids and died. Those kids lived their whole lives in slavery, had kids and died. Their kids lived their whole lives in slavery and died again. In slavery. There have only been about four generations after slavery.

And we have to look at White society as well, how this institution of oppression made good, decent human beings that God created into cruel despots. It supported patriarchy and sexism. It created this myth around White womanhood. These people became cruel and mean in order to preserve this institution.

Everyone was affected.

We have to go through the work to figure out what reparations is, that’s what I’m arguing for. I think it would be an important journey for our nation. Bottom line: We’re all Americans today, but you can’t heal a dirty wound, you have to clean it out first.

********************************************************************

Rep Ellison provided powerful, comprehensive insight into the complexity of reparations, and there are still many questions that can be asked: Can the U.S. government, even though they recently unsigned the “Rome Statute” that governs the International Criminal Court, be charged with ”crimes against humanity” for the atrocities of slavery, Reconstruction, Jim/Jane Crow, and the Civil Rights and Reagan Eras?

Recently, a U.S. judge ruled that Iran and Syria owed one family $323 million for the death of their son in Israel by a suicide bomber, citing terrorism.

Should/can this decision set the precedent for domestic terrorism as well — and could it be argued that slavery and the aforementioned deadly eras were time periods where domestic terrorism reigned specifically against African Americans?


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Conspiracy; Government; Politics
KEYWORDS: economy; keithellison; obama; reparations
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
"Yes, I think we need to study reparations. When there’s injury there should be redress, right?"

Fine, I'll agree to reparations - as long as it's stipulated that they can only be disbursed to those who were slaves.


41 posted on 06/17/2012 5:28:15 AM PDT by reagan_fanatic (Worst. President. Ever.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Keith Maurice Ellison (born August 4, 1963)

______________________________________________________
Thats 1963 not 1863 so you do not qualify for victimhood payments, nor will I feel guilt for a practice that ended 102 years before your birth.


42 posted on 06/17/2012 5:32:17 AM PDT by JohnD9207 (Mitt better grow a pair or this thing will be over soon.)
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To: wardaddy
And the life of a North American slave versus the tropical Negroes left behind Does anyone even bother to examine this?
And how many whites gave their lives to end slavery in the Civil War? And does the reparations crowd plan to share their spoils with the descendents of the families who lost all those soldiers?
43 posted on 06/17/2012 5:33:13 AM PDT by samtheman (If we want Obamugabe out, we must vote him out.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

However, Ellison wasn’t there.


44 posted on 06/17/2012 5:36:54 AM PDT by popdonnelly (Socialism isn't going to work this time, either.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The historical wrong Mr.Ellison, would have been allowing
a beguiler like yourself ever be accorded the recognition as a member of Congress. IMO No Muslim ought qualify for Congress as they fundamentally lack the necessary allegiance to this
Country and our way of life. We were established by Christians to be a nation among the Christian nations of the Western
Civilization. But as Mr.Lincoln said in 1863 Fast day proclamation “We have forgotten God.”Perhaps Ellison ought be sent back to school under Mr. Thomas Sowell to correct the
Congressman’s understanding of what he claims is a historical wrong.


45 posted on 06/17/2012 5:42:50 AM PDT by StonyBurk (ring)
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To: Absolutely Nobama

Minnesota is home to CPUSA.org

Communist Party of the USA.


46 posted on 06/17/2012 6:01:43 AM PDT by opbuzz (Right way, wrong way, Marine way)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
‘We Were Held In Slavery Longer Than We’ve Been Free’

So go sue your democrat party. If your sense of the Confederacy is so acute it allows you to mock those who fought under the Stars and Bars as traitors you should also understand it was your democrat party who worked so diligently to maintain de facto enslavement after the Civil war.

And that faith you embrace, you're the ones who sold the blacks into slavery in the first place and still believe in slavery.

Ellison, yer a putz.

47 posted on 06/17/2012 6:06:47 AM PDT by MurrietaMadman
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Is this coming from the man whose prophet married little girls?


48 posted on 06/17/2012 6:07:00 AM PDT by Woodsman27
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

It simply doesn’t register anymore. Other than to remind me to buy more ammo.


49 posted on 06/17/2012 6:10:32 AM PDT by Caipirabob (I say we take off and Newt the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure...)
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To: fella
I’ll bet this guy also claims that the Egyptians were black. If so I’ll give him that but then he has to give me this: his people held my people in slavery for over 400 years and it took a number of acts of God to set us free and even then his people tried to chase us down to re-enslave us. So his people need to pay us reparations with 4,000 years worth of compound interest to boot. Or his people could just call it even and get off of their “Give-Me” fat butts and go about the business of fending for themselves

More likely, like Obama and Rev. Wright, he believes Jesus and his followers were black. However slavery is the reason that, as far back as Alexander, Egypt hasn't pursued their various nonsensical lawsuits, most recently an issue in 2003. Some threads. For the suit in Alexander's court see Sanhedrin 91a.

Egypt, Arabia, et. al. v. the Jews

In defense of Moses-Egyptians may sue Jews over the Exodus.

Egyptian Jurists Sue 'The Jews' for Compensation...of Gold Allegedly Stolen During Exodus from Egypt

Sue the Jews!

Group of Egyptians to Sue 'All Worldwide Jews' Over "Theft of Pharoah's Gold" (No Joke)

50 posted on 06/17/2012 6:16:35 AM PDT by SJackson (As a black man, you know, Barack could get shot going to the gas station, M Obama)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
American slaved were enslave by black Africans in Ghana, Gambia, Senegal ,

If they really wanted reparations, wouldn't make sense to go to the original perpetrators??? Have you ever heard of anyone asking for reparations from Ghana, Gambia, Senegal???

51 posted on 06/17/2012 6:17:47 AM PDT by Bulwinkle (Alec, a.k.a. Daffy Duck)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Let Barry pay him, he's got slave traders on one side of the family, slave owners on the other.

Census records, genealogical research show forebears of Obama’s mother owned slaves

52 posted on 06/17/2012 6:20:15 AM PDT by SJackson (As a black man, you know, Barack could get shot going to the gas station, M Obama)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

If you want to know how Reparations payments would go simply study the Pigford shakedown.


53 posted on 06/17/2012 6:20:27 AM PDT by Venturer
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
NewsOne: Do you agree that reparations should be awarded to the African-American community for the economic and psychological impact of slavery, Reconstruction, Jim and Jane Crow, the Civil Rights Era, and the Reagan Era when drugs flooded our communities?

I guess a case can be made (a very weak one) for all these things listed as reasons for reparations....except...

But how in the world can the black community hold Reagan from the 1980's WAY PAST the civil rights era is responsible for black people killing their own communities by selling, abusing and using the drug "crack"...

Black people sold it, black people used it, black people abused it, black people profited from it...

and these morons want us to pay them for their own immoral behavior...

Sorry...I forgot they are liberals

54 posted on 06/17/2012 6:32:03 AM PDT by Popman (When you elect a clown: expect a circus...)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

And most inner-city blacks are still living under slavery today. They get their rent paid by section 8, food stamps, free medical care paid for in exchange for “staying on the democrat plantation”.


55 posted on 06/17/2012 6:33:41 AM PDT by Cyclone59 (Obama is like Ron Burgundy - he will read ANYTHING that is on the teleprompter)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I’’ll bet that if his ancestors weren’t held as slaves in America he’d be a slave in Africa right now. Or he’d be living in poverty.


56 posted on 06/17/2012 6:36:54 AM PDT by FrdmLvr (culture, language, borders)
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To: Absolutely Nobama
The very fact that this libtard is in Congress is a sure sign of our decline. Again, I’m forced to ask: What happened to Minnesota

Along with Pelosi, Reid, Schumer, Barney Frank, Maxine Waters, Tierney, Waxman, Leahy, Boxer, John "F'n" Kerry, Al "Fool" Franken, Sheila Jackson Lee, etc.....

A few key members of the Libtard Rogues Gallery...

57 posted on 06/17/2012 6:40:26 AM PDT by BlatherNaut
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To: Cyclone59

The Great Society worked well didn’t it?

Destroyed the black family structure in just two generations.

Illegitimacy went from 19 to 75%.


58 posted on 06/17/2012 6:41:18 AM PDT by nascarnation (t)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

When both the perpetrator and the victim are dead, in this case for many years, the statute of limitations has expired. Both the bible and secular law forbids visiting the sins of the father on the child.

Get over it Keith, if you want to address slavery talk to Islam which still practices and condones that practice and pedophilia.


59 posted on 06/17/2012 7:24:35 AM PDT by W. W. SMITH (Maybe the horse (RNC) will learn to sing)
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To: Fresh Wind

Give them the reparations on condition that all affirmative action programs for blacks immediately end.

Or that any who take the reparation have to leave the country for Liberia.


60 posted on 06/17/2012 7:29:21 AM PDT by W. W. SMITH (Maybe the horse (RNC) will learn to sing)
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