Shirley Weber

Shirley Weber

California's first-in-the-nation task force on reparations is at a crossroads, with members divided on which Black Americans should be eligible for compensation as atonement for a slave system that officially ended with the Civil War but reverberates to this day.

Some members want to limit financial and other compensation to descendants of enslaved people while others say that all Black people in the U.S., regardless of lineage, suffer from systemic racism in housing, education and employment. The task force could vote on eligibility on Tuesday after putting it off last month.

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(2) comments

willallen

How about reparation to descendants of Union army soldiers, particularly those who were drafted? On second thought, compensation to all those drafted under selective service, which is sexist selective servitude. And the law is still on the books.

Terence Y

So is this just a panel to address reparations for Blacks? Or is this a panel to address reparations in general, and if not, why not? After all, there has been discrimination against the Chinese, Japanese, Greeks, Hungarians, Irish, Italians, Poles, etc. in our nation’s history? Or maybe even whites, who are currently being discriminated against via the CRT rewriting of history? Lawyers get your legal pads out – the state has plenty of deep pockets.

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