Home
If you're not familiar with Williams, he's black and a professor at George Mason Univ in addition to being a syndicated columnist.
This appeared in our local paper today.


Several Democratic presidential hopefuls are calling for Americans to make reparations for slavery. On June 19, the House Judiciary subcommittee on the Constitution, civil rights and civil liberties held a hearing. Its stated purpose was “to examine, through open and constructive discourse, the legacy of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, its continuing impact on the community and the path to restorative justice.”

Slavery was a gross violation of human rights. Justice demands that all participants in the trans-Atlantic slave trade make compensatory reparation payments to slaves. However, there is no way that Europeans could have captured millions of Africans. That means compensation would have to be paid by Africans and Arabs who captured and sold slaves to Europeans in addition to the people who bought and used slaves. Since slaves and slave traders and owners are no longer with us, compensation is beyond our reach and it’s a matter that will have to be settled in hell or heaven.

Let’s pretend for a moment that the reparations issue makes a modicum of sense. There’s the question of responsibility. More explicitly, should we compensate a black person of today by punishing a white person of today, by taking his money, for what a white person of yesteryear did to a black person of yesteryear? If we believe in individual accountability, we should find that doing so is unjust. In other words, are the tens millions of Europeans, Asian and Latin Americans who immigrated to the U.S. in the late 19th and 20th centuries responsible for slavery, and should they be forced to cough up reparations? What about descendants of Northern whites who fought and died in the name of freeing slaves? Should they pay reparations to black Americans? What about non-slave-owning Southern whites — who were a majority of Southern whites — should their descendants be made to pay reparations?

Reparations advocates make the unchallenged pronouncement that United States became rich on the backs of free black labor. That’s utter nonsense. While some slave owners became rich, slavery doesn’t have a good record of producing wealth. Slavery existed in the southern states and outlawed in most of the northern states. Buying into the reparations argument suggests that the antebellum South was rich and the slave-starved North was poor. The truth is just the opposite. In fact, the poorest states and regions of our country were places where slavery flourished: Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia. And the richest states and regions were those where slavery was absent: Pennsylvania, New York and Massachusetts.

The reparations movement would be an amusing sideshow were it not for its damaging distractions. It grossly misallocates resources that could be better spent elsewhere. According to the state Department of Education, 75% of black California boys cannot meet state reading standards. In 2016, in 13 of Baltimore’s 39 high schools, not a single student scored proficient on the state’s mathematics exam. In six other high schools, only 1% tested proficient in math. The same story of low education outcomes can be told about most cities with large black populations. I’d like to see lawyers bring class-action suits against public school systems in cities like Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Detroit and Los Angeles for conferring fraudulent high school diplomas. Such diplomas attest a 12th-grade level of academic achievement when in fact those youngsters often cannot perform at sixth- or seventh-grade levels.

The nation’s most dangerous big cities are Detroit, Oakland, St. Louis, Memphis, Stockton, Birmingham, Baltimore, Cleveland, Atlanta, Chicago and Milwaukee. The common characteristic of most of these cities is that they have predominantly black populations and blacks have considerable political power as mayors, city councilmen and chiefs of police. Energy spent on reparations should be used to solve those problems.

As of 2014, U.S. taxpayers have spent $22 trillion on Lyndon Johnson’s War on Poverty (in constant 2012 dollars). Adjusting for inflation, that’s three times more than was spent on all military wars since the American Revolution. If money alone were the answer, the many issues facing a large segment of the black community would have been solved.

There’s another possible reparations issue completely ignored: Blacks as well as whites live on land taken, sometimes brutally, from American Indians. Do blacks and whites owe American Indians anything?
Walter Williams, Armstrong Williams and Thomas Sowell are some of the greatest conservative thinkers and writers of our time. Oh yeah and they are Black.
Was he the guy on Breaking Bad?
Add Clarence Thomas.
Posted By: las Re: Walter Williams on reparations - 06/26/19
"Toms"..........ask any (well, maybe 99.9%) of any black well enough educated to read and understand what those men have to say.

Logic is a fallacy. "We want" is their reality.
Originally Posted by Jim_Conrad
Was he the guy on Breaking Bad?

That Walter was white, Walter White.
He is spot on.......
Here’s an idea for reparations. We agree on a price, and you sell me for all time your right to complain about racism. Take the money, and you can never ever again emit a whisper about racism, to anyone, or else you have to pay me back with penalties.

Everyone with a little money to spare take on one whiny black person, and maybe we shut this whole thing down, hey?

I don’t know if I’m serious; but it’s an interesting idea anyway.
lets take a trillion dollars from the people who did it and give it to the people that they did it to. oops,they are all dead. case closed.i

I don't know why they keep bringing up things that never really happened .
Walter Williams has always made sense, and it doesn't matter if you're Black or White. He was my favorite fill-in for Rush back in the day.
Lots of white people came here after slavery ended. It doesn’t seem fair for them to pay!
Slavery was gone before Idaho even became a state and men from the Idaho territory died to end it, but they want us to pay them for it.
Its a shame that Walter William's name is not mentioned in nearly every political/economic argument. Brilliant man!
Walter Williams is a great thinker and he is correct. If you think about it we've been paying for far too long and the only think it's done is create more want.
© 24hourcampfire