Reparations Lives On – The California Reparations Task Force is trying its best to skirt a landmark Supreme Court ruling

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by John Murawski

Last month, on the same day the Supreme Court declared college admissions based on race unconstitutional, Kamilah Moore, head of the California task force at the forefront of the national reparations effort, announced on Twitter that her cause is not affected by the decision: “Our reparations recommendations are not race-based, but rather are based on lineal descent.”
It’s a subtle distinction stemming from the California Reparations Task Force’s razor-thin 5-4 vote last year to restrict eligibility for reparations only to California residents who qualify by lineal descendant—either from an enslaved African American, or from a free African American person living in the United States prior to the end of the 19th century. That eligibility criterion will exclude several hundred thousand black people living in California—namely Caribbean, African, and South American black immigrants who arrived in this country in the 20th century.

As Moore affirmed that the task force’s work would endure, it rolled out an ambitious reparations program for an estimated two million black residents, containing more than 100 proposals, including free college tuition, a guaranteed income program, and cash payments that could exceed $1 million for some eligible African Americans.

The demands, now in the hands of state legislators, would cost California taxpayers an estimated $500 billion to $800 billion if enacted and lawsuits are virtually assured, as reparations skeptics consider eligibility by lineage to be a proxy for race. They also oppose the task force’s recommendation to repeal Prop 209, a statewide ban on racial preferences in government hiring, contracting, and college admissions that was reaffirmed by 57 percent of voters in a 2020 referendum.

“First and foremost, this is a legal matter. It will be challenged, if not by us, then by someone else,” said Wenyuan Wu, executive director of the California for Equal Rights Foundation, a lead group in the 2020 effort upholding Prop 209. Opponents are expected to challenge some of the historical claims as distortions or one-sided. UCLA law professor Richard Sander, who has spent his career researching the downsides of racial preferences, said the task force report is infused with Critical Race Theory, reducing complex history to simplistic explanations.

“A big challenge is going to be to put out an accurate counter-narrative,” Sander said. “One valuable thing from this process is the public can see what the critical race studies worldview and agenda is.”

Such responses might cite, for example, recent studies indicating that redlining—a practice of excluding risky neighborhoods from home lending programs and other financial services—may have affected more whites than blacks, even if blacks were disproportionately affected because of relative poverty and because of racial animus.

William Jacobson, clinical professor of law at Cornell Law School and president of the Legal Insurrection Foundation, which runs conservative websites, said the task force presumes every black person is a powerless victim who deserves compensation—precisely the sort of crude stereotyping the Supreme Court majority has rejected. Jacobson further said that calculating only harms without considering “the other side of the ledger”—like government assistance or other benefits someone’s parents or grandparents may have accrued over a lifetime—is dishonest.

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 â€śOur reparations recommendations are not race-based, but rather are based on lineal descent.”

,,, of people of ONE SPECIFIC RACE. You Democrats… how the hell can you elect people so stupid?

Reparations would be the end of California. Every black person seeking that windfall would flood into California with their hand out. Their economy would be overwhelmed and devastated. Eventually, they would have to end the reparations, resulting in a massive and violent revolt that would make the NYC’s Union Square Xbox riot look like… well, a peaceful protest. So, go ahead. We’ll enjoy the show, dumbasses.

Real conversations about reparations always go like this:
One person (50-87% of the population) says, “No way? Why should someone who never owned a slave pay someone who was never a slave?!”
The other person (7-13% of Americans) says, “Hellz yeah!! SHOW ME THE MONEY!”

So then we have to decide whether to explain the reason for reparations to the first person/the majority of people, OR explain the limits and reasoning for little to no reparations to the second.

The second is the easiest. They want money or compensation for their ancestor’s work and suffering, then ask them who their ancestor was? What slave are they related to? Dunno? Only interested in your ancestor’s money not your ancestor? If that’s the case then why should the majority of Americans care about the ancestors as well?

I say again, make Democrats and those who support Democrats pay the reparations. THEY supported slavery, the KKK, Jim Crow, institutionalized racism and opposed Civil Rights.

The only Republicans left in the People’s Republic of California are those who haven’t finished packing. If California passes some sort of reparations, it will pass, and they/Dems will pay. I’m not sure it’ll stand up to a California supreme court or a US supreme court, but you are 100% right: promise it/give it to some, and then stop or ask for it back and there’ll be violence that’ll make BLM protests look like PRIDE parades

I lived in San Diego (Pt Loma, then La Jolla) for a while back in the 90’s. Loved it. I took my wife and kids there in 2022 and 2023 for vacations. I absolutely could not believe the difference. In 2022, nothing looked the same-city entirely new development, BUT I was able to drive around by muscle memory w out problem! This year, omg, the homelessness, the drugs, the mentally ill, ZERO retail downtown because of that, shit and piss everywhere. and to own a house like I have here in Ohio is insane. I did the math, and I could buy every single house on my entire street, for the price of my house in SoCal. So sad and disappointing. I loved that city. Hardly any police, murders and shootings in every neighborhood. Break ins and squatters in even the nicest homes. Just unreal.

No decay, however, all new urban development with est 50-75BILLION more coming in the next few years. Same amount of money could rebuild my entire state, or pay some Ukrainian pensions(?!?!?!)

Have you seen the Nick Johnson videos of small town America? Or the Hoods n Hollers series?

So many towns just evaporating.

Still, for all he does I’m so happy that Pres Joe finally got some nap time. Working 12-4 M-F 6mos of the year has got to be grueling.

Democrats have a habit of promising monetary benefits to one of their crybaby groups only to have it shown to be illegal or unconstitutional. Of course, then they get to blame someone else for failing to deliver.

Newsom the Ninny and the rest of the Sacramento Crime Syndicate can all go and pound sand their all crooks and belong in prison doing Life Terms