Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Should Kamala Harris pay reparation­s?

- Jonathan Leaf, a playwright, wrote this piece that first appeared in Spectator USA.

What do Stokely Carmichael, Harry Belafonte, Colin Powell, Sidney Poitier and Busta Rhymes have in common? And how are Beyoncé, Ava DuVernay, Barack Obama and Kamala Harris alike?

None of the first set is descended from American slaves. All of the second are descended from slave-owners. Much of the media and the political establishm­ent is pushing the idea of reparation­s for Black Americans. But, as these lists show, it isn’t obvious who should get paid and who should pay.

Consider the case of Kamala Harris. Should her Indian mother pay reparation­s to her Jamaican father for his partial ancestry from slaves? Should she foot half the bill? Or should her father, whose ancestors also owned slaves, be taxed based on his degree of descent from slave-owners? Or should he, born a Jamaican, pay reparation­s to Native Americans, or take his reparation­s suit to the Spanish and British government­s, as Jamaica was never American territory?

To determine my debt to Ms. Harris, will we first calculate her slave-owning ancestry and then subtract her enslaved ancestry? Should my assessment be based on the year when my ancestors arrived? None of my ancestors lived in America in 1861. Neither did her ancestors. Should I be asked to recompense Ms. Harris, the daughter of recent immigrants?

Is it fair to require people who are not descended from slave-owners to shell out? The 1860 census showed that fewer than 394,000 American households owned slaves. Hence, the number of American descendant­s of slave-owners is a small fraction of the current U.S. population. And a large proportion of all Americans are the ancestors of people who came to our country after the Civil War ended. That may be nearly half of the total, and it includes a large share of the present Black population, many of whom emigrated from the West Indies or elsewhere. (Almost 9% of African Americans are new immigrants, which by itself should raise questions about claims that America is horribly racist.)

Reparation­s is a plan to benefit more African Americans based on the crimes of a proportion­ately small number of the current population’s ancestors. How can that fail to generate still more conflict, antipathy and division?

Reparation­s isn’t a new idea. Civil rights leader Bayard Rustin, who organized the 1963 March on Washington, was asked about it by the New York Times in 1969. Calling it “prepostero­us,” he added, “If my greatgrand­father picked cotton for 50 years, then he may deserve some money, but he’s dead and gone and nobody owes me anything.”

 ?? AP ?? Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif.
AP Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif.

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