Reparations Due to the African-American Population?

A UN panel announced that the United States owes African-American people reparations for slavery. The announcement apparently stems from the various police brutality reports that are reminiscent of the trauma of lynchings. The committee also said that the US needs to confront its racial legacy.

I definitely think that black people are owed reparations in some sort of manner. I think they should start with repealing the laws implemented during the War on Drugs, and properly funding school systems in areas that are predominately black.

The UN isn’t currently demanding reparations be paid, so, unfortunately, I don’t believe that the US will in anyway take heed of this announcement. But, I appreciate that the report from the UN was released. We just need some action behind it now.

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/reparations-african-americans-un

Lynchings Today

On April 17, two black men, Alize Ramon Smith and Jarron Keonte Moreland were found dismembered in a pond in Oklahoma. Both men were 21.  Four people have been arrested for their murders.

Knowing that these kinds of things are still heavily present in today’s society is not only painful but terrifying. I’m glad to know there have been arrests, but the fact that black people are still being lynched in 2018 is unacceptable. No one deserves to die like that. It’s also disturbing how little news coverage this is getting. Many of the major mainstream media news sources haven’t even touched it, and I think that’s a shame because awareness is the first step to putting a stop to it.

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/four-arrested-smith-moreland-killings_us_5aece2b9e4b041fd2d26c641

Conceived by Rape: Eartha Kitt Rises

Throughout these first few weeks of class, we explored the nature of relationships between slaves and their masters. In particular, we talked about how masters would often rape their female slaves as a way to produce more slaves, especially after the Trans-Atlantic slave trade was outlawed in the early 1800s. Because slaves were considered to be property and were treated as if they were animals, there was no such thing as consent for a slave. If the master said to sleep with him, there was no choice in the matter. As a result, a lot of slaves were born mixed: their father, a white slave master, their mother, a black slave. It also illustrates the type of captivity that slavery was.

Because it is currently Black History Month, copious amounts of people post Black American facts on the internet to bring awareness to the public, and one of the posts I saw mentioned Eartha Kitt, a black singer, dancer, actress, and all around performer. The post mentioned her history, so I looked further into it. Eartha Mae Keith was her birth name, and she was born on the cotton plantation where her mother worked in 1927. Her mother, Anne Mae Keith, was raped by the white son of the plantation owner, and Eartha was conceived. Kitt was even outcast by her mother’s husband because of her lighter skin. She eventually went on to become fluent in four languages and learned to sing in seven, even acted in more than thirty films. She was actually the voice actress for my favorite Disney villain, Yzma. Kitt was also an activist who spoke out against the Vietnam War and was blacklisted for it. Kitt wasn’t even allowed to know the truth about her father until 1998 after going to court over it. To me, Eartha Kitt is a reminder that even after slavery was over, black women were still being used as simply a means of reproduction. But even through her circumstances, Kitt rose up to show the world her worth.