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Brazile: We Need ‘Some Reconciliation’ for African-Americans in U.S.; Follow South Africa Model
pjmedia.com ^ | February 10, 2019 | By Nicholas Ballasy

Posted on 02/11/2019 1:12:42 PM PST by Red Badger

WASHINGTON – CNN political analyst April Ryan, Washington bureau chief for American Urban Radio Networks, said past U.S. presidents like Bill Clinton and George W. Bush refused to formally “apologize for slavery” because it would lead to some form of reparations for descendants of slaves.

“In my first book, I tackled the issue of reparations as a healing, as a possible healing, asking people… from the time I started at the White House, when the race initiative happened with Bill Clinton, oh my God, everybody was saying that’s the girl who is always asking, ‘Mr. President, will you apologize for slavery?’ But it’s real. When he started that race initiative issue, people were thinking about, OK, if you are talking about race and healing, there’s this black-white dynamic that has to be healed and also a Native American dynamic that really wasn’t on the table like it should have been,” Ryan said during a recent Race in America Today discussion to mark Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday.

“But when it came to the black-white issue – will there be an apology for slavery – there were some blacks that were for it and some blacks that were against it. He was listening to a cross-section of black people and they never apologized. You know why? And this is the truth. It never came to that formal ‘OK, we’re going to apologize or not.’ You know one of the main reasons why? Because if you say I’m sorry then you have to come out with some kind of healing – that is reparations,” she added.

Ryan continued, “How do you determine reparations, now or in, what is it? 1997, 98. What is it? It is not 40 acres and a mule – and 40 acres and a mule now would equate to a house in Potomac and a Land Rover. So then you get into the question: Who is black now? And all of that was, yes, I am African-American, period, end of story. And if I do, what is it? Twenty-two or 23 [percent] in me, OK, fine, but I’m African-American.”

Ryan explained why she isn’t going to ask President Donald Trump if he will apologize for slavery.

“I have asked that question over and over again. George W. Bush said, well, Africans participated so they deal with it, yes, President Obama’s administration thought, well, why would the black president apologize for slavery? The optics of it did not look right and you know what the answer is with this president. I’m not even going to ask,” she said during the event.

“I’m not going to ask anything anymore about, are you racist? You just watch and see what it is. If it looks like a duck, sounds like a duck, walks like a duck, it’s a duck,” she added.

Former Democratic National Committee Interim Chairwoman Donna Brazile suggested that the U.S. follow South Africa’s example on reparations.

Under President Thabo Mbeki in 2003, the South African government announced it would “pay reparations totaling $85 million to more than 19,000 victims of apartheid crimes who testified about their suffering before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission,” according to the New York Times.

Brazile said she has “always believed” the U.S. “needed something” like the reconciliation process that took place in South Africa.

“So, 244 years of slavery and, based on what I learned from my family, when slavery was over with, they had no car, they had no home, they had nothing, they started from scratch, from 1863 to 1964, getting public accommodations you had a whole other struggle with Jim Crow, and then from 1964, ’65 forward. We’re not that far from where we started and yet we’re still having this conversation,” Brazile said.

“I’ve always believed that we needed something like they had in South Africa where we talk about reconciliation, where we’re able to put this stuff on the table,” she added. “Look, I’m more like James Brown. I don’t want to nobody to give me nothing – just open the door, I’ll get it myself. But I don’t want to nobody to hold me back. I’m not going back.”

Brazile connected the issue of reconciliation to her experiences as a member of the Catholic Church.

“I was in the Catholic Church last week, first Sunday, and I almost cried because my church is asking us to forgive them…. When I first started in the church I had to sit in the back because I was black. Now I can sit anywhere I want and this church is now apologizing. So the church needs some reconciliation now. We need it in our country. We don’t have it,” Brazile said.

“We can’t talk as Americans about our shared experiences because we don’t have a path. So we have to create those spaces in our community.”

The Commission to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African-Americans Act (H.R. 40) seeks to “address the fundamental injustice, cruelty, brutality, and inhumanity of slavery in the United States and the 13 American colonies between 1619 and 1865 and to establish a commission to study and consider a national apology and proposal for reparations for the institution of slavery, its subsequent de jure and de facto racial and economic discrimination against African-Americans, and the impact of these forces on living African-Americans, to make recommendations to the Congress on appropriate remedies, and for other purposes.”

The bill calls for a 13-member commission to study reparations and “the president shall call the first meeting of the commission within 120 days” after the enactment of the legislation.

“Seven members of the Commission shall constitute a quorum, but a lesser number may hold hearings,” the bill reads.

Wesley Lowery, national correspondent for The Washington Post, said he would be “fascinated” to see the results of a federal study of reparations if H.R. 40 became law.

“I do think that it would make sense for us to study and explore the ideas around reparations. And too often we have conversations about reparations, we base that conversation in slavery,” Lowery said.

“When you read someone like [Ta-Nehisi] Coates, he has made the argument that, fine, let’s have a discussion about reparations based in red lining, let’s have a conversation in terms of housing policy, that American wealth comes from our ability to own homes. And we know why black Americans have not had the opportunity to own their homes and pass that wealth down while white Americans have, right?” he added.

Lowery continued, “As we grapple with the reality that we’re only about 50 years into full franchisement of African-Americans in the United States of America, I think there’s a real conversation and debate to be had, even if you were to set slavery aside, what other systematic structural forms of discrimination have lasted into our current times and our current generation that we might explore a way to provide reparations for.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; US: California; US: District of Columbia
KEYWORDS: california; districtofcolumbia; donnabrazile; jeffbezos; kamalaharris; reparations; washingtoncompost; washingtonpost
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To: Leep

Lyndon Johnson started that up.

Actually, Brazille needs to learn her black history

President Monroe even created a whole country up for reparations and repatriation in 1825(?) called LIBERIA complete with an annual budget.
They are still dependant to this day.


21 posted on 02/11/2019 1:30:40 PM PST by himno hero (had'nff)
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To: Red Badger

Hey Donna, if you can hold me responsible for slave holders from 150+ years ago, then I can hold you responsible for all the black muggers I’ve encountered.


22 posted on 02/11/2019 1:30:54 PM PST by PapaBear3625 ("Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." -- Voltaire)
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To: libstripper

I just paid off my 30 year mortgage at 16 years, thanks to President Trump’s new tax cuts.

I grew up, poor as poor could possibly be in RURAL MISSISSIPPI.

Nobody ever gave me a damn thing.....................


23 posted on 02/11/2019 1:34:28 PM PST by Red Badger (We are headed for a Civil War. It won't be nice like the last one....................)
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To: Red Badger

Out of the myriad Blacks that I know, there have only been a few who were Brazile type activists. Seems like Brazile and other Black ‘leaders’, along with a minority of our Black population, want not equality, but Black Supremacy. My question is: What will be enough? 50 years of advantage wasn’t, what will?


24 posted on 02/11/2019 1:35:45 PM PST by originalbuckeye ('In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act'- George Orwell.)
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To: Red Badger

25 posted on 02/11/2019 1:36:35 PM PST by mbarker12474
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To: Red Badger

Hey Donna, Shut up and participate. Blacks have been given too much already. Nothing is ever enough. Nothing. Why bother? You want to be equal? How about we just ignore you like everybody else? Why should there be any further special treatment of blacks when it doesn’t help, isn’t appreciated, and only divides us further. Stand up for yourself and stop with the constant hand out. Stop listening to people who tell you you can’t make it because whitey is keeping you down. Nobody is keeping you down but democrats and your black “leaders”. I’m fed up with it. You weren’t a slave, I never owned a slave. I owe you nothing. White Christian men are the only people to put an end to slavery. We aren’t your enemy, you are.


26 posted on 02/11/2019 1:37:58 PM PST by bk1000 (I stand with Trump)
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To: Red Badger

Yes April Ryan is walking and quacking like a duck, and yes, she is a RACIST.


27 posted on 02/11/2019 1:38:05 PM PST by TexasM1A
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To: Red Badger

They must be losing black votes because of their focus on illegals. Got to get the slaves back on the plantations.


28 posted on 02/11/2019 1:39:57 PM PST by BookmanTheJanitor
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To: libstripper
Then we hear the argument that whites just generally start off with a lot of inherited wealth, especially because more whites than blacks own their own homes.

My parents were po' folks from Alabama. Neither of them had more than about a Junior High education. My mother literally had to quit school and pick cotton. All during my childhood, our family (my parents and my 2 sisters and me) frequently had to move because we would get evicted from one house or another. We almost never had hot water or heat because my parents could not afford to pay the gas bill. We eventually fled to Texas to escape garnishment of my dad's wages.

Eventually, everything evened out, and my dad got a job at which he worked for decades. The only "privilege" we ever had was that we all had a work ethic, and it was considered shameful to take money from the government. I became the first emember of my family to attend college.

29 posted on 02/11/2019 1:41:22 PM PST by Sans-Culotte (Time to get the US out of the UN and the UN out of the US!)
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To: Red Badger

Necklacing, white genocide and land seizures?


30 posted on 02/11/2019 1:41:33 PM PST by Ancient Man
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To: Red Badger

Paying reparations to an ACTUAL VICTIM of injustice is the right thing to do.

All of the ACTUAL VICTIMS of slavery are dead.
As are all of the men who owe them an apology.

When Ronald Reagan apologized to Japanese Americans for their WW II internment a lot of them were still alive, and it was something the U.S. Government had actually done to them.

The U.S. Government did not hold any slaves, and, in fact, eventually went to war to free them.

So many holes in her logic.


31 posted on 02/11/2019 1:42:01 PM PST by Buckeye McFrog
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To: Red Badger

I grew up, poor as poor could possibly be in RURAL MISSISSIPPI.

Nobody ever gave me a damn thing..................…
_________________________________________________

Mine was more of a case of genteel white collar semi-poverty in the Chicago area. Congratulations to you. Each of us did basically the same thing by hard work and saving that allowed us to rise above where we started. Given all the AA over the last 50 years, it’s astounding how little progress so many blacks have made. When Steve Hilton started talking about “white privilege” and reparations last night I saw how totally ignorant he was about how most of us got where we are and just wanted to barf.


32 posted on 02/11/2019 1:45:19 PM PST by libstripper
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To: Red Badger

“244 years of slavery”

This country’s independence was recognized by Britain in 1783; the Emancipation Proclamation was in 1863.

The US had legal slavery for 80 years; gibsmedats repeat “400 years” and it is a complete lie. At this point, blacks have been free for much longer than they were slaves (nearly twice as long).


33 posted on 02/11/2019 1:45:19 PM PST by kearnyirish2 (Affirmative action is economic warfare against white males (and therefore white families).)
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To: BookmanTheJanitor

You’re right - but those Hispanics don’t want to fund this charade.


34 posted on 02/11/2019 1:46:05 PM PST by kearnyirish2 (Affirmative action is economic warfare against white males (and therefore white families).)
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To: Red Badger

Discrimination happens even to whites.

I lost out on a law enforcement position because the hiring authority knew my spouse worked for a social service agency and made assumptions about me.

I lost out on a position because the person they hired was Hispanic and I was told specifically that it was why I was not selected.

I also had my DNA tested. I am 2% Congolese.

Where are my reparations?


35 posted on 02/11/2019 1:46:10 PM PST by marajade (Skywalker)
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To: Red Badger

At least $8 trillion has already been paid.

Not such a Great Society for all that money........


36 posted on 02/11/2019 1:46:14 PM PST by Lurkinanloomin (Natural Born Citizen Means Born Here of Citizen Parents_Know Islam, No Peace-No Islam, Know Peace)
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To: Red Badger
calculate the value of 40acres and a mule in today's dollars and then for every slave ON THE BOOKS the day slavery was ended, split it among their kin... AFTER proving they are actually blood kin to said slave

then no more welfare, nothing, the end.

37 posted on 02/11/2019 1:48:02 PM PST by Chode ( WeÂ’re America, Bitch!)
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To: kearnyirish2

These race-mongers are getting VERY tiresome. All I can say to her is KMA! Anyway...the War On Poverty “redistributed” a couple trillion to these parasitic whiners.


38 posted on 02/11/2019 1:48:02 PM PST by hal ogen (First Amendment or Reeducation Camp?)
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To: TLI

That’s good, will have to remember that.


39 posted on 02/11/2019 1:48:50 PM PST by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: Red Badger

She does understand that not all slave owners were white - many were tribal types and others were black - in fact, the first slave owner in the US was black.


40 posted on 02/11/2019 1:49:16 PM PST by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now it is your turn ...)
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