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- <text id=90TT3508>
- <title>
- Dec. 31, 1990: Reparations For Black Americans
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 31, 1990 The Best Of '90
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 18
- Reparations for Black Americans
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Charles Krauthammer
- </p>
- <p> "Nobody's asking for reparations. I'm asking you to give us
- the crumbs from the table," said Craig Washington, one of five
- black Congressmen from the South, on the floor of the House.
- What crumbs? More and stronger affirmative action as mandated
- by the Civil Rights Act of 1990.
- </p>
- <p> George Bush, an aristocrat who hates to deny crumbs to
- anyone, vetoed the bill anyway, on the ground that it encouraged
- racial quotas. But the bill was more than just bad legislation.
- It was a sign of intellectual bankruptcy in our thinking about
- race. As race relations worsen, as ethnic divisions harden, as
- an ex-Nazi pulls nearly as many votes in Louisiana as did the
- 1988 Democratic presidential candidate, the country has run out
- of ideas.
- </p>
- <p> Take the Civil Rights Act of 1990. It makes it easier for
- minorities to sue the boss if the employee roster does not meet
- some statistical measure of racial balance. A nightmare for
- employers, a bonanza for lawyers, a crumb for blacks. How many,
- after all, would be helped by such legislation, and at what
- cost?
- </p>
- <p> There is no denying that affirmative action has started some
- blacks on the ladder of advancement and thus helped create a
- black middle class. There is equally no denying that because it
- violates the rights of some people purely on the grounds of
- race, it has exacerbated racial resentments.
- </p>
- <p> But as Shelby Steele argues, preferential treatment for
- blacks has an even more pernicious cost: it creates corrosive
- doubt in the eyes of both whites and blacks about the worth of
- any black achievement. However much people may deny it, no one
- can see a black professor or doctor without having the thought
- run through his mind: Did he make it on his own or did he get
- through on a quota? These doubts gratuitously reinforce in both
- blacks and whites a presumption of racial inferiority.
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, the idea that affirmative action is just a
- temporary remedy is a fraud. With every new civil rights act,
- like the one just attempted and soon to be reintroduced in the
- 102nd Congress, ethnic quotas and race consciousness become more
- deeply woven into American life. The current uproar over
- race-based college scholarships reminds us just how divisive the
- issue can be.
- </p>
- <p> What is to be done? Representative Washington has it exactly
- backward. Forget the crumbs, demand reparations. It is time for
- a historic compromise: a monetary reparation to blacks for
- centuries of oppression in return for the total abolition of all
- programs of racial preference. A one-time cash payment in return
- for a new era of irrevocable color blindness.
- </p>
- <p> Why reparations? First, because they are targeted precisely
- at those who deserve them. By now affirmative action has grown
- to include preferential treatment for Hispanics, women, the
- handicapped and an ever-expanding list of favored groups. This
- is absurd. By what moral standard should, say, a Marielito,
- already once rescued by America, enjoy a preference over, say,
- an Italian-American vet or an Irish cop? A Richmond ordinance
- struck down two years ago by the Supreme Court assigned 30% of
- city subcontracts to firms owned by minorities, defined as
- "Blacks, Spanish-speaking [citizens], Orientals, Indians,
- Eskimos or Aleuts." Richmond, capital of the Confederacy, is not
- known for its mistreatment of Eskimos. Yet under the law,
- Richmond would have had to prefer an Alaskan Eskimo to a local
- white in city contracting.
- </p>
- <p> Let us be plain. Richmond's sin--America's sin--was
- against blacks. There is no wrong in American history to compare
- with slavery. Affirmative action distorts the issue by favoring
- equally all "disadvantaged groups." Some of those groups are
- disadvantaged, some not. Black America is the only one that for
- generations was officially singled out for discrimination and
- worse. Why blur the issue?
- </p>
- <p> Reparations focus the issue most sharply. They acknowledge
- the crime. They attempt restitution. They seek to repay some of
- "the bondsman's 250 years of unrequited toil." They offer the
- wronged some tangible means to elevate their condition.
- </p>
- <p> For that very real purpose, reparations should be more than
- merely symbolic. Say, $100,000 for every family of four. That
- would cost the country a lot--about 50% more than the cost of
- our S&L sins--but hardly, for a $6 trillion economy, a
- bankrupting sum. (A 10-year 75 cents gas tax, for example, would
- pay the whole bill.) Recession may not be the best time to start
- such a transfer, but America will come out of recession.
- </p>
- <p> The savings to the country will be substantial: an end to
- endless litigation, to the inefficiencies of allocation by group
- (rather than merit), to the distortion of the American principle
- of individualism, to the resentments aroused by a system of
- group preferences. The fact is, we already have a system of
- racial compensation. It is called affirmative action. That
- system is not only inherently unjust but socially demoralizing
- and inexcusably clumsy. Far better an honest focused substitute:
- real, hard, one-time compensation.
- </p>
- <p> But is not cash-for-suffering demeaning? Perhaps. But we
- have found no better way to compensate for great crimes. Germans
- know that the millions they have dispersed to Holocaust
- survivors cannot begin to compensate for the murder of an entire
- civilization. Yet for irremediable national crimes, reparations
- are as dignified a form of redress as one can devise.
- </p>
- <p> Racial preferences, on the other hand, are a demeaning form
- of racial tutelage. Better the dignity of a debt repaid, however
- impersonally, than the warm glow of condescension that permeates
- affirmative action.
- </p>
- <p> It is time to reclaim the notion of color blindness before
- it is too late. A one-time reparation to blacks would help real
- people in a real way. It would honor our obligation to right
- ancient wrongs. And it would allow us all a new start. America
- could then rededicate itself to Martin Luther King Jr.'s
- proposition that Americans be judged by the content of their
- character, not by the color of their skin.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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