CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 18, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“RESTITUTION PLAN STYMIED EVEN
BEFORE IT'S REVEALED”
California’s
three-year-old Reparations Task Force might have been much better off had it
taken a week or so after the latest U.S. Supreme Court ruling on affirmative
action before revealing its plan for monetary and other compensation to the
descendants of African-American slaves.
For
the court’s 6-3 decision ending affirmative action in college admissions
(and likely in many other areas, too) makes it very plain that if
California lawmakers actually adopt many of the task force’s 100-plus
recommendations, they will quickly be struck down in courts that abide by
decisions of the nation’s highest judicial body.
That’s
because receiving benefits from the task force’s suggestions – and that’s all
they really are – would depend mostly on ancestry and race rather than anything
that has happened to any living individual.
That’s
a complete no-no, wrote Chief Justice John Roberts in the Supreme Court’s
governing opinion eliminating race-based affirmative action at Harvard
University and the University of North Carolina, which served as stand-ins for
all the other institutions that have practiced affirmative action for decades.
Meanwhile,
the justices essentially upheld what California universities and some employers
did after this state banned affirmative action via a 1996 ballot initiative.
Roberts
wrote that if individuals have demonstrably overcome handicaps, overt racial or
religious bias, poverty and other serious roadblocks to success, it’s fine to
give them special consideration in college admissions. But race or ancestry by
itself is no longer enough to merit such treatment.
That’s
essentially what California universities have done since the late 1900s. The
results have created student bodies not quite as diverse as before, but still
allow for a very robust mix of races and ethnicities at this state’s colleges.
Essentially, the California campus’ route around the end of affirmative action
has been endorsed for use nationwide.
The
same thing should happen with the Reparations Task Force recommendations, which
provide formulae for the state to award billions of dollars worth of grants to
the descendants of former slaves. They would be compensated not only for
slavery, but also for post-slavery discrimination including injustices
perpetrated by courts, health care systems, universities, real estate agents,
red-lining banks, apartment landlords and employers, among others.
The
task force recommends a blanket apology for treatment of African-American slaves,
former slaves and their descendants in California, even though it was never
formally a slave state. The group said nothing about other forms of slavery
practiced here for many decades, including forced labor by Native Americans
whose settlements were often destroyed, similar forced labor by imported
Chinese workers and some other human trafficking offences.
There
is no mention of the fact that California fought to end slavery in the Civil
War, although prior to that, slave owners could and sometimes did bring
enslaved individuals here with them. The state’s African-American slave
population rarely exceeded 10,000.
But
the distinguishing fact about the task force recommendations is that they hinge
almost entirely on ancestry – only direct descendants of African-American
slaves need apply for any benefits if a procedure is ever established.
That
runs directly contrary to the Supreme Court’s logic in striking down
affirmative action. So it probably won’t fly in any court where a lawsuit might
be filed against the restitution plan or any materially significant part of it
that state lawmakers might someday pass.
Of
course, that does not rule out an official apology from the state for whatever
role California played in sustaining or encouraging slavery. Nor would it rule
out special grants to schools that serve predominantly minority student bodies.
Such grants exist today.
Nor
does it negate the recommendation that the state Department of Justice lead an
effort to root out racial bias in courts and prisons. It also does not prevent
carrying out the recommendation for “listening sessions” about racial
injustices, collecting personal testimonies for historic preservation and use
of school curricula to help end racism.
None
of those things provide direct material benefits to any individual, even if
they could lead to major improvements in the lives of many who believe they
suffer discrimination today.
But
direct financial benefits to individuals based on this plan are unlikely to
materialize, despite the strong sense among many African-Americans that this
would be yet another injustice against them.
-30-
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski
Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign
to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address
is tdelias@aol.com
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