Sunday, December 1, 2019
Slaver Peparations Are Wrong Essays - Slavery, Racism,
  Slaver Peparations Are Wrong    Slavery Reparations Are Wrong   Ladies and gentlemen; I don't believe that anyone in this   chamber would move to disagree with the idea that slavery was an   atrocity, committed from the depths of the darkest parts of the human   sole. Africans were seized from their native land, and sold into   lives of servitude into a foreign land. Indeed, it was a tragedy on   such a scale that cannot be measured nor quantified. And it is this   very notion of unquantifiable tragedy which speaks to the matter of   reparations for slavery. To be quite blunt, reparations, even if they   may be deserved, are not feasible under any system or economic tangent   - indeed such an undertaking would only not remedy the situation, but   it would sink Africa and her people deeper into the cycle of poverty   and oppression that they have so struggled to free themselves. While   the arguments against reparations may seem shallow or self-serving to   advocates of such a system, upon examination, the logistics of what to   give, and whom to distribute it to, preclude any potential benefits of   such a system of indemnity and requite. The point of the follow   critique is not to say that Africans were not mistreated, nor that   they are not worthy of reparations, but that perhaps reparations are   not an adequate solution to this situation, and indeed will only serve   to worsen.  Africa is a continent in dire straits. European colonization   and colonialism damaged the native structure and society - some might   say that this simply proves that European man caused, and ought to pay   for, the damages done to Africa and her people. However, I would   argue that simply placing a 'band-aid' blanket over Africa, would   serve only to mask their problems, and relieve us of our guilt. It   was this same attitude that the early European missionaries took with   Africa - that they are not capable of dealing with their own problems   and situations. Authors suggest that reparations should take the form   of capital transfers and African status in the International Monetary   Fund (Mazuri, 22). Does this sound like mending the deep running   wounds and damage done to Africa, or like a transfer of monetary funds   in order to fix Africa? Indeed, this idea of presenting money to   Africa in order to apologize for what we have done is nothing more   than a quick fix solution - it is not a long-term remedy for the   underlying structural damage. The very center of Africa has been   changed, for better or for worse. Surface solutions, while some may   claim they are a good beginning or perhaps just a token of our   apologetic state, will only further social damage and entrench abusive   African regimes. A cognate situation with African Americans is with   that of Afrocentric history (Asante, 174); many suggest that perhaps   we ought to provide black student with their own curriculum, such as   to instill in them a sense of pride that will improve their education.   The U.S. News and World Report comments:   The Afrocentric curriculum is usually presented as an   attempt to develop pride in black children by giving them a racial   history But what kind of pride and self-esteem is likely to grow   from false history? And how much more cynical will black children   be if they discover that they have been conned once again, only   this time by Afrocentrists?  It is a sure-fire formula for   separatism and endless racial animosity (Leo, 26)   This author suggests that indeed, conferring upon youths of African   descent their own different history will not only further the racial   segregation, but also provide them with a false sense of history,   fueling the animosity. If the rest of the world were to suddenly step   down and bestow upon Africa special privileges and grants, it would   only create a sense among the global village that Africans are   'different' and require some sort of special assistance in order to   succeed. This type of compensatory system would not only be   insufficient to ever repay blacks for the injustice to them, but also   further the rigid separatism that plagues African Americans today -   what they need is equality, not special programs catered to what   guilty-feeling Europeans feel they owe them.  Aside    
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