The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #100212   Message #2006863
Posted By: Azizi
25-Mar-07 - 03:29 PM
Thread Name: I'm Sorry
Subject: RE: I'm Sorry
Imo, the issue of compensation for the enslavement of Black people is a red herring whose purpose is to keep divided all the middle class and poor people regardless of race, ethnicity, and nationality, from those who do have, most of which aren't people of color but some of which are.

Instead of talking about compensation, even in a snarky way as folks are doing in this thread, it seems to me that it would be more productive to focus on how and why systems work to maintain such an unequal distribution of wealth in the United States and elsewhere in the world.

Here's a comment from Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. that addresses this point:

"On the Distribution of World Wealth and American Global Priorities

Some months ago Mrs. King and I ventured over to that great country known as India. I'll never forget the experience of meeting with the great leaders of India, and meeting people from all over the country. A noble and marvelous experience. But I'll tell you now there were those depressing moments. For how can one avoid being depressed when he sees with his own eyes millions of people sleeping on the sidewalks? In Calcutta more than a million people sleep on the sidewalks every night. They have no homes to go in,they have no beds to sleep in. How can one avoid being depressed when he discovers that out of India's population of four-hundred million people, more than three-hundred sixty-five million make an annual income of less than thirty dollars a year? And most of these people have never even seen a doctor or a dentist. When I noticed these conditions something within me cried out: Can we in America stand idly by and not be concerned? And an answer came: No. For the destiny of India and the destiny of every other nation is tied up with the destiny of the United States. And the destiny of the United States is tied up with the destiny of India. And I started thinking about the fact that here in the United States we spend more than a million dollars a day to store surplus food and I started thinking: I know where we can store that food, free of charge: in the wrinkled stomachs of the hundreds of millions of people who go to bed hungry each night.

And I think we've spent far too much of our money in the United States establishing military bases around the world rather than bases of genuine concern and understanding."

(From a speech about the "American Dream," 1965)

CourseworkHelp Distribution of wealth http://kevincassell.com/PERSON/QUOTE.HTM