Table of Contents
What percentage of Americans are in favor of reparations?
When separated by race, the poll showed 74\% of black Americans, 44\% of Hispanics, and 15\% of white Americans were in favor of reparations. [ 6]
How much should we spend on reparations for slavery?
As Black Americans are estimated to hold at most, 3\% of the nation’s wealth, according to Census data, that amounts to $3.21 trillion. Eliminating the difference in household wealth, “would require a reparations outlay of $10.7 trillion” or, $267,000 per person for the 40 million eligible Black descendants of slavery, Darity and Mullen write.
What are reparations for World War II?
Reparations are payments (monetary and otherwise) given to a group that has suffered harm. For example, Japanese-Americans who were interned in the United States during World War II have received reparations. [ 1]
How many generations have there been since the Civil War?
About 330,000 white Union soldiers died during that war, either killed in action or from wounds and disease. They gave their lives to free blacks from slavery. By dying for that cause, they put an end to all the children they would have had in the future. If 30 years is a generation, there have been 5.1 generations since that time.
Does the history of slavery justify reparations for African Americans?
The history of slavery in the United States justifies reparations for African Americans, argues a recent report by a U.N. -affiliated group based in Geneva. They want people who enslaved no one to pay reparations to people who were never enslaved, based on the color of their skin.
Will White voters join the struggle for reparations?
In order for legislative reparations appeals to be validated, many more people will need to join the struggle, especially white voters. I know, based on my own personal experience, that being a white person making loud appeals for reparations is often met by both skepticism and derision.
Is it time to have a national conversation about reparations?
By having a national conversation about reparations, and by ultimately paying them, the United States can right a historic wrong while building a stronger and more equitable future. That shouldn’t be something only advocated by Black Americans —it is time for white Americans to join the call as well.