LISTEN VT RADIO | JOIN TEAM VT | SIGN-UP DAILY NEWSLETTER
VETERANS TODAY ON : FACEBOOK | TWITTER | VT FORUM
|

Senate Backs Apology for Slavery

Resolution Specifies That It Cannot Be Used in Reparations Cases

By Krissah Thompson Washington Post Staff Writer

The Senate unanimously passed a resolution yesterday apologizing for slavery, making way for a joint congressional resolution and the latest attempt by the federal government to take responsibility for 2 1/2 centuries of slavery.

     

"You wonder why we didn’t do it 100 years ago,"  Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa), lead sponsor of the resolution, said after the unanimous-consent vote. "It is important to have a collective response to a collective injustice."

The Senate’s apology follows a similar apology passed last year by the House. One key difference is that the Senate version explicitly deals with the long-simmering issue of whether slavery descendants are entitled to reparations, saying that the resolution cannot be used in support of claims for restitution. The House is expected to revisit the issue next week to conform its resolution to the Senate version.

Harkin, who called the Senate’s vote an "important and significant milestone," said he wanted the resolution passed yesterday to closely coincide with Juneteenth, a holiday first celebrated by former slaves to mark their emancipation.

This recent willingness to deal with the nation’s difficult racial history has come about in part because of President Obama’s election, said Rep. Stephen I. Cohen (D-Tenn.), who began pushing for an apology more than a decade ago when he was a state senator and pronounced himself "pleased" with the Senate vote.

Still, Cohen said, "there are going to be African Americans who think that [the apology] is not reparations, and it’s not action, and there are going to be Caucasians who say, ‘Get over it.’ . . . I look at it as something that makes people think."

Even among proponents of a congressional apology, reaction to yesterday’s vote was mixed. Carol M. Swain, a professor of political science and law at Vanderbilt University who had pushed for the Bush administration to issue an apology, called the Democratic-controlled Senate’s resolution "meaningless" since the party and federal government are led by a black president and black voters are closely aligned with the Democratic party.

"The Republican Party needed to do it," Swain said. "It would have shed that racist scab on the party."

Republicans, however, were supportive of the resolution. "It doesn’t fix everything, but it does go a long way toward acknowledgment and moving us on to the next steps to building a more perfect union, doing the things that Martin Luther King would talk about, like building a colorblind society," said  Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.).

As with all congressional apologies — but especially this one — concerns about liability for restitution were part of the political calculations, in this case because of the long-running debate about whether the descendants of slaves should be compensated.

Charles Ogletree, the Harvard law professor who has championed restitution, was consulted on the Senate’s resolution and supports it, but he said it is not a substitute for reparations. "That battle will be prolonged," he said.

Randall Robinson, author of "The Debt: What America Owes to Blacks," said he sees the Senate’s apology as a "confession" that should lead to a next step of reparations. "Much is owed, and it is very quantifiable," he said. "It is owed as one would owe for any labor that one has not paid for, and until steps are taken in that direction we haven’t accomplished anything."

Cohen said he and Harkin worked closely with the NAACP and other civil rights groups on language that would not endorse or preclude any future claims to reparations. "It will not harm reparations but won’t give any standing to it," Cohen said.


Related Posts:

  • No Related Posts

Short URL: http://www.veteranstoday.com/?p=7366

The views expressed herein are the views of the author exclusively and not necessarily the views of VT or any other VT authors, affiliates, advertisers, sponsors or partners. Legal Notice

Posted by on Jun 19 2009, With 0 Reads, Filed under Civil War. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
Apply for Your VA Home Loan Now Apply for VA Loan Now Education Get Educated at Excelsior College Get Educated at Excelsior College Get Your Loan Now Get Your Loan Now Get Your Loan Now Apply for your VA Home Loan Now Apply for your VA Home Loan Now Apply for your VA Home Loan Now Apply for Jobs on HireVeterans.com Now Apply for Jobs on HireVeterans.com Now Apply for Jobs on HireVeterans.com Now

COMMENTS

To post, we ask that you login using Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, or Hotmail in the box below.
Don't have a social network account? Register and Login direct with VT and post.
Before you post, read our Comment Policy - Feedback


Comments Closed

1 Comment for “Senate Backs Apology for Slavery”

  1. SLAVERY

    When you chain the neck of a slave
    The other end fastens to you.
    Your heart and soul become corrupt
    And all which is evil you’ll do.

    No government shall exist for long
    Who’s people are not really free.
    Though around the world there are those
    Who stay blind to how life should be.

    Any who must enslave others
    Will dwell in their own living hell
    After death, they’ll join their master
    In that place from heaven he fell.

    But till then we’ll fight and resist
    Making them put their chains away.
    And those of us who may die first
    From heaven shall watch and pray

    By Conservative Poet
    Tom Zart
    Most Published Poet
    On The Web

    TOM ZART’S RADIO POEMS

    You can hear all of Tom Zart’s 340 poems
    of love, war, faith and more 24-7 on web radio at

    http://internetvoicesradio.com/Arch-TomZart.htm

    Tom Zart ARCHIVES:

    Forums-War Poet Tom Zart : Veterans Today – News for U.S. Military …

Comments are closed

 

Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Join Our Daily Newsletter
  View Newsletter ARCHIVE

WHAT'S HOT

  1. U.S. Department of Defense Contract Awards for May 21, 2012
  2. Spouses Seeing More Job Choices
  3. Is 2013 the Real 2012?
  4. Health Care Petition for Military Families Poisoned at Camp Lejeune
  5. Massive Anti-NATO Protests in Chicago
  6. Why An Ex-Marine Turns Pacifist
  7. Top 10 Veterans Stories in Today’s News May 21, 2012
  8. Homeland Security in the Land of the Free
  9. Hafez Aladdeen Is An Israeli Patriot
  10. US Declares ‘Total War’ on Islam
  11. Cross Talk : Farewell Israel?
  12. NATO – Rogue Arm Of America’s War Machine Must Be Dismantled
  13. Life in Occupied Chicago
  14. Screw Religion! Go With God
  15. 9/11 and Islamophobia
  16. NATO Vulture Culture
  17. Evil, Madness, and Blind Spots: Two New Books on Psychopathy Leave their Selective Empathy Showing
  18. US House Stealthily Passes Extreme Pro-Israel Legislation
  19. Ending the Mindset That Gets Us into War
  20. Mr. President, We Have Had Enough
  1. Gerry: You mean Jeb, grandson of Aleister Crowley, Sherrf / Bush is the AC. Sure could be! But my money is on Jamie,...
  2. PAUL LEO FASO: As usual, Gordon Duff’s comments are very much on time. Not only do they reflect a generalized...
  3. Detlef Reimers: Thank you, Exalibur, for this important and truthfull comment. But don’t get fooled, the...
  4. fauxxbatt: is that a “Shakespearean” part, surely not for hyre off thy lowely “kraigslisp”,...
  5. Detlef Reimers: What a shame for the US media in this historical important situation, they simply shut down mostly...


Apply for VA Home Loan Now!

Archives