Reparationists —
As we honor Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy, it is essential to reflect on the continued relevance and urgency of the reparations conversation. We should be reminded of Dr. King’s profound commitment to addressing the harms of racial capitalism and how those ideals are deeply intertwined with the movement for reparations.
Dr. King understood that economic justice and racial justice were inextricably linked. Without a transformation of our racial attitudes and our economy, we would always fall short of living up to the stated ideals of this supposed democracy.
Today’s Opinion section delves deeper into this topic through a piece inspired by Dr. King’s speech “A Rising Tide in Racial Consciousness” by exploring how the reparations movement, much like the civil rights movement, is gaining momentum.
As we mourn and celebrate Dr. King, let us renew our commitment to his ideals and consider the role of reparations in achieving the dream he envisioned.
With radical love,
Trevor
News Recommendations
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Opinion: The Rising Tide of Reparations Consciousness
In 1960, Martin Luther King Jr. gave a speech at the 50th anniversary of the National Urban League titled “The Rising Tide of Racial Consciousness,” where he illuminated why Black Americans were experiencing a sweeping “tide of racial pride and self-consciousness.”
Today, we find ourselves at a similar juncture to the one Martin Luther King Jr. addressed in his era. It is a time marked by the growing movement for Black reparations, wherein Black people are not only bringing to light the vast racial disparities in income, wealth, education, and political representation that our communities experience but are also vigorously pursuing restitution for the centuries of harm that have led to these inequities. This resurgence of the reparations movement is a reflection of the broader movement for Black liberation, particularly over the last ten years.
In recent history, several pivotal moments have significantly contributed to a renewed sense of motivation in the movement for reparations, most notably including:
The Birth of the Black Lives Matter Movement
Emerging after the acquittal of George Zimmerman in 2013, the Black Lives Matter movement brought renewed attention to the issue of police and vigilante violence perpetrated against Black individuals. Over the last decade, the movement’s growth and impact have turned the phrase “Black Lives Matter” into a rallying cry for justice and the end to the brutality and systemic injustice faced by Black people across the globe.
The Charleston Church Massacre
As former president Barack Obama entered the last year of his presidency, a shooting at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston took the lives of nine Black people and served as a stark reminder of the deep-seated racial hatred that still exists in segments of the U.S. population. In his eulogy following the massacre, President Obama noted that
“There is something particularly heartbreaking about the death happening in a place in which we seek solace, and we seek peace, in a place of worship. Mother Emanuel is, in fact, more than a church. This is a place of worship that was founded by African Americans seeking liberty. This is a church that was burned to the ground because its worshipers worked to end slavery. When there were laws banning all-Black church gatherings, they conducted services in secret. When there was a nonviolent movement to bring our country closer in line with our highest ideals, some of our brightest leaders spoke and led marches from this church’s steps. This is a sacred place in the history of Charleston and in the history of America.”
This moment definitively ended any argument that our country had entered a post-racial era. It served as a mirror, reflecting the nation’s failure to align its professed ideals of equality and justice with the realities faced by its Black citizens.
The Movement to Topple Confederate Monuments
In 2017, Charlottesville, Virginia, witnessed a disturbing convergence of white nationalists, neo-Nazis, and far-right neo-fascists, spurred by the planned removal of statues of Confederate figures Robert E. Lee and General Thomas Jackson. This event tragically escalated when Heather Heyer, a counter-protestor, was killed by James Alex Fields Jr., a self-proclaimed white supremacist who intentionally drove his car into a crowd. Heyer’s death starkly underscored the deadly consequences of white supremacist extremism.
The Southern Poverty Law Center reports that as of 2022, 482 Confederate symbols had been removed, renamed, or relocated from public space since 2015, including the removal of 159 Confederate memorials in 2020 alone. This movement represents a crucial shift in the public narrative regarding slavery and its legacy, challenging the glorification of the Confederacy and promoting a more truthful historical narrative.
In thinking about narrative power, the ability to tell stories that shift perceptions, mental models, and cultural mindsets, the toppling of Confederate monuments signifies a shift in such power, reflecting a growing public determination to redefine the historical storylines that shape our collective understanding of slavery and its aftermath in American society.
The Murder of George Floyd
In 2020, the world watched former police officer Derek Chauvin kneel on the neck of George Floyd for nine minutes and twenty-nine seconds, choking the life out of him.
In the aftermath of Floyd’s death, there was a notable increase in the discussion of reparations, particularly at the local and state level. In response to the heightened conversation about anti-Blackness, California Governor Gavin Newsome signed a bill to create a nine-member reparations task force, which published its final report last year.
Since 2020, several local reparations initiatives have been started across the United States, including:
Although we’ve witnessed recent backlash since the uprisings of 2020, the significance of the protests and organizing immediately following the murder of George Floyd, Breonna Tayler, and Ahmaud Arbery has undoubtedly spurred increased awareness, legislative momentum, and an impact that has intensified the national conversation about reparations.
Juneteenth Becoming a Federal Holiday
On June 17, 2021, Juneteenth was established as a federal holiday in the United States, marking a significant moment in the nation’s journey toward reparations. This day commemorates June 19, 1865, when Union soldiers reached Galveston, Texas, bringing the long-awaited news of freedom to enslaved Black people — news that came nearly two years after President Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation.
The annual observance of Juneteenth now serves as a poignant reminder of slavery’s mark on U.S. history and the delayed emancipation of many Black Americans. However, it also serves as a national acknowledgment of historical injustices and sets the stage for ongoing conversations and actions aimed at addressing the deep-seated impacts of slavery.
The significance of this day intertwines with the evolving conversation on reparations, and while HR 40, the bill proposing the establishment of a federal commission to examine reparations for Black Americans, has yet to pass, the annual observance of Juneteenth presents a recurring opportunity to advocate for its advancement and calls for transformative change.
Becoming A Repaired Nation
We are embarking on a transformative journey of “becoming,” as described by the late bell hooks — evolving into a nation that bravely confronts the enduring scars of our past. This evolution involves recognizing that we are inheritors not only of the ideals but also the sins of our forefathers.
We are approaching a collective understanding that to realize the dream envisioned by King, we must navigate a path that actively addresses the ills birthed from the weaponization of race and the pervasive effects of racism. In essence, to heal as a nation and to progress toward the ideal of a colorblind society, we must be unflinchingly explicit and intentional in confronting racial issues. It is only through a racially conscious approach that we can truly repair and grow as a unified nation.
National News
The Nation: Martin Luther King, Critical Race Theorist
Axios: The reparations movement is having another moment
NBC: Reparations gained historic momentum in 2023 because of California’s efforts
The Grio: MLK was a ‘woke,’ critical race theorist who fought for diversity, equity and inclusion
New York Times: Confederate Monument Is Taken Down in Florida
Brookings: Black wealth is increasing, but so is the racial wealth gap
Austin American-Statesman: Is racial wealth gap 'smallest it's been in 20 years,' as President Joe Biden said?
Democracy Now!: “The Cost of Inheritance”: Meet the Descendants of Enslavers and Enslaved Fighting for Reparations
ABC News: Confederate monuments spark debate about how cities remember their history
The New Yorker: One Man’s Fight to Close the Racial Wealth Gap, in “The Barber of Little Rock”
Daily Beast: Reckoning with Reparations on Martin Luther King Day
Ayanna Pressley: PRESSLEY HIGHLIGHTS HARMFUL IMPACT OF HOUSING DISCRIMINATION ON BLACK HOMEOWNERSHIP, RACIAL WEALTH GAP
Forbes: Artificial Intelligence Could Widen Racial Wealth Gap In U.S. By $43 Billion, Research Suggests
Truthout: Grassroots Groups Are Doing Small-Scale Reparations in Absence of Federal Action
Chronicle of Philanthropy: From TV’s ‘The Gilded Age’ to the Fight for Reparations: Lessons for Philanthropy in 2024
KPBS: If reparations aren’t politically viable, what’s the next best thing?
Texas Public Radio: What do tangible reparations for Black Americans look like?
Associated Press: Biden condemns white supremacy in a campaign speech at a church where Black people were killed
The Atlantic: Substack Has a Nazi Problem
Washington Post: Ramaswamy increasingly embraces fringe theories, far-right claims in Iowa
LGBTQ Nation: The reparations & LGBTQ+ rights movements are aligned. Let’s harness the power of a united front.
Local News
Blavity: CHICAGO MAYOR PUSHES FOR REPARATIONS TO REDUCE CRIME
St. Louis Dispatch: St. Louis reparations committee to get more time to draft recommendations
KPBS: 2024 will be a big year for the reparations debate in California
Evanston Roundtable: Reparations payments for direct descendants
CBS: Buffalo shooter who killed 10 at Tops supermarket to face death penalty in federal case
NPR: What changed after a California school district banned teaching critical race theory?
Evanston Now: City drawing sets reparations payment order
KBPS: California debates who should be eligible for reparations for slavery
Marketwatch: California, New York reparations efforts are counterproductive — a federal program is best, expert says
Washington Examiner: California’s controversial reparations plans face $37.9 billion obstacle in form of state budget deficit (Reparations Daily (ish) does not endorse the Washington Examiner)
Capital Gazette: Proposal for reparations raises more than a few questions; sculpture finalists don’t represent Annapolis
Mission Local: Mayor nixes S.F. reparations, but Black college hub still possible
Kansas City: MLK Day inspires Kansas City G.I.F.T. to bridge racial economic gap on East Side
California Roundtable: California's road to reparations
NJ Spotlight News: Organized religion supported NJ slave trade, Reparations Council is told
Axios: Detroit's reparations task force sees slow start
International News
Al Jazeera: ‘More mainstream’: In the UK, push for slavery reparations gains momentum
Reuters: Reparation bonds could unlock $300 billion for Ukraine
Scientific American: As the Climate Crisis Deepens, High-Polluting Nations Must Start Paying Reparations
Irish Times: Family referendums will be ‘part of reparations’ for past mistreatment of single mothers and children
Land Back
CBS: Upper Sioux Agency State Park closing permanently, land to be given back to native community
MPR News: State closing Upper Sioux Agency State Park to transfer land back to tribe