Posted on 04/29/2015 10:37:29 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
A photo published in The Baltimore Sun on Tuesday showed young black men gleefully, almost hysterically, dashing out of a looted Baltimore CVS store that would later be set ablaze.
One was clutching a box of Froot Loops and half-gallon of ice cream, and one had a couple 50-ounce bottles of Arm & Hammer Laundry Detergent, dermatologist tested, for sensitive skin.
The mob mentality that existed at that moment prompted them to grab items worth less than $20. It was a criminal act warped by the African-American experience in the U.S., where they and their ancestors have long been denied the staples of daily life as immediate as food and as abstract as opportunity to participate in the American dream. Their crime makes an undeniably convincing argument for the need to discuss slavery reparations.
The concentrations of black populations in urban centers are the result of generations of racist policies on housing, banking, education, employment and criminal justice. These cities absorbed people freed from a 250-year-old slave economy that required a civil war to end it. The truth is, the bigotry and commercial exploitation of African-Americans that enriched the nations earliest industrialists still exists and continues to funnel black communities into dead ends from which escape is difficult, to say the least.
Those young men with their ice cream and laundry detergent have the choice of seeing their neighborhood as valuable, nurturing communities, or as traps built by the power structure that has determined this is where they belong.
The police, who should be serving and protecting, too often rule by intimidation, meting out punishment beyond the charge of their office. This is not about police going into neighborhoods and straightening out black-on-black crime. Its about men being afraid to go to jail for not paying child support, making eye contact with a police officer or selling loose cigarettes. These arent criminal behaviors, they are responses to living under intimidation.
Looting, violence, vandalism and crime are no solution. They are unjustifiable. They are wrong. They are deplorable. But should they be unexpected any less than infection follows an untreated wound? Two wrongs don't make a right, but until the wound is healed, how could we expect to prevent the infection? Reparations is a way to treat that wound.
The reality of life for the urban black American is heartbreakingly present in the instruction the mother has to give her son regarding police interactions, in the student who isn't even aware that her chances for success are less than those of her more affluent peers. But for so many other Americans, these lives are viewed over one electronic device or another and become reality for what amounts to a few moments in the world of media.
U.S. Rep. John Conyers has in every session of Congress since 1989 filed a bill that would begin a discussion on reparations, but it never passes. This discussion must take place. We must understand why black lives matter, and why in 2015 it's necessary for so many beautiful Americans to be walking through city streets to remind us of that.
What form reparations might take is unknown, but we know that all the policies imbued with racism mentioned above need repair. That might be the place to start.
President Obama said from the White House on Tuesday, "If our society really wanted to solve the problem, we could; it's just that it would require everybody saying, 'This is important; this is significant.' And, that we don't just pay attention to these communities when a CVS burns, and we don't just pay attention when a young man gets shot or has his spine snapped, but we're paying attention all the time because we consider those kids our kids."
Lets remind Congress that This is important; this is significant, and remind ourselves of it, while were at it.
The inexperienced demanding others assuage their white guilt.
>> A quarter of a million dollars, tax-free and a one-way ticket back to Africa and you renounce your US citizenship upon arrival. Deal?
That would be a billion bucks to get rid of 4,000 of ‘em.
Kind of steep, but your idea has possibilities. Especially if we get to pick which 4,000. :-)
I think reparations will probably be approved after most of us are dead. That is, when Whites are in the minority (maybe about 40%) or so. In fact, by that time, all former minority groups may vote reparations for themselves.
That is the bad news. The worse news is that such a law will be one of the last acts of the United States of America. The total collapse of the USA will occur soon after that.
Many of us have relatives who were killed in the Civil War, where are our reparations?
Pray America is waking
Those Yankees did not die for their freedom, they died to consolidate power in DC. I wish people would at least know what the war was about without just coming up with what the media was spewing at the time.
Of course many “liberated” blacks were pressed into service, hence the underground railroad to Canada.
True that. At first I thought this has to be satire. It's so over the top. But nooo!
Hard pill to swallow, but swallow it we must if the Republic is to survive.
How about a one way ticket home to Africa.
So now it is only right to reward crime.
The stupidity is breathtaking...
They owe reparations to me!!! They have taken lots more out of the system than anyone else all because they had a great grandparent who was a slave 160 years ago
Its one big giant scam to get Gov’t money one way or another
It’s been paid - 22 trillion.
Now STFU and get to work.
In most of these riot-torn cities, welfare is higher than minimum wage.
Part was repaid in genes..... Michael Jordan
Was stationed there in the 80s. I’m convinced it’s something in the water up there. Funny how none of these obnoxious d-bags ever call for reparations for Mary Jo Kopechne’s family.
The Cape Cod view stopped publication in 2013.
This article is from a New Bedford publication called South coast today. It has a history of being very left wing.
http://www.southcoasttoday.com/article/20150429/OPINION/150429374/101228/NEWS0301
The comments after the article are really good. Not a lot of support for the editor’s view.
More blacks have immigrated here since 1890 than were here pre-slavery.
Sorting out if you were actually the 100% ancestor of slaves and not an Ethiopian immigrant from 1970 might cost a trillion dollars and 75 years before one dime was paid.
But, hey - 2/3 of America has at least a portion of Af.American DNA.
We all g’on be rich.
My union ancestors paid reparations many time over. No reparations, only repatriation.
If you went on the campaign trail and kept calling for “our black community to finally get their repatriations!” it would only be 1 in 10 blacks who would realize you WEREN’T talking about reparations. That would be fun to watch.
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