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Reparations and that Chicago story Cohen told about Trump

By Clarence Page, Tribune Content Agency on

I was looking into how the issue of reparations to African-Americans who descended from slaves has returned to the national political conversation -- and wondering why -- when a little story in Michael Cohen's opening statement Wednesday to the House Oversight Committee reminded me.

As an illustration of why he described his former boss, President Donald Trump, as a "racist," Cohen recalled a day when they were riding through a "struggling neighborhood in Chicago." "He commented that only black people could live that way," Cohen said. "And he told me that black people would never vote for him because they were too stupid."

Right. How could we, black people, sensibly resist Trump's heartfelt appeal for our votes: "What the hell do you have to lose?"

Is Cohen telling the truth? Although I approach Trump and his team like Ronald Reagan dealt with Russia, "Trust but verify" -- except I have learned to reverse that with Trump to "Verify, then trust" -- Cohen's account squares with other low opinions of black people that we have heard attributed to Trump, who in his early real estate days was accused by the federal government of discriminating against black apartment applicants.

I spent years covering the struggling Chicago neighborhoods like the one Cohen described. I also know a lot of success stories that have come from public-private partnerships between low-income residents and enlightened downtown executives who know a simple truth of urban life: Inside every ghetto there's a neighborhood struggling to make a comeback.

I think neighborhood development could be a form of reparation, but it will have a much broader consensus of support if we don't limit it to African-Americans.

 

Reparations is an issue that began around the end of the Civil War. In 1865 Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman issued special field orders to grant each freed family "40 acres of tillable land" in the sea islands and around Charleston, S.C., for the exclusive use of black people who had been enslaved. About 40,000 freed slaves were settled on land in Georgia and South Carolina.

But after Abraham Lincoln's assassination, President Andrew Johnson reversed the order and the land was returned to its original owners. It was one of many betrayals of black aspirations that would reimpose second-class citizenship on black Americans with the end of Reconstruction.

The former Rep. John Conyers Jr., D-Mich., pushed without success for almost 30 years, beginning in 1989, to pass a bill to create a commission to study the "impact of slavery on the social, political and economic life of our nation" and propose possible reparations. It got nowhere.

But now, in the run-up to 2020, Democratic candidates have been asked about it and some have expressed support for the idea or some form of it.

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(c) 2019 CLARENCE PAGE DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

 

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