New York state will create a commission tasked with considering reparations to address the persistent, harmful effects of slavery in the state, under a bill signed into law by Gov. Kathy Hochul on Tuesday.

It comes at a time when many states and towns throughout the United States attempt to figure out how to best reckon with the country’s dark past, and follows in the footsteps of similar task forces established in California and Illinois.

“In New York, we like to think we’re on the right side of this. Slavery was a product of the South, the Confederacy,” Hochul, a Democrat, said at the bill signing ceremony in New York City. “What is hard to embrace is the fact that our state also flourished from that slavery. It’s not a beautiful story, but indeed it is the truth.”

The law, which was passed by state lawmakers in June, says the commission will examine the institution of slavery, which was fully abolished in New York by 1827, and its ongoing impact on Black New Yorkers today.

  • pan_troglodytes@programming.dev
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    7 months ago

    there hasnt been any slavery in New York in basically 200 years. no one affected by it is alive now. nor are their children, or even their children’s children.

    • ChonkyOwlbear@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      A lot of the old money that built New York, like the Vanderbilts, Goldman, and Lehman families became rich on the backs of slaves. The ancestors of the slave owners inherited that wealth and with it the debt to the ancestors of their slaves.

        • ChonkyOwlbear@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Those families did things like build parks, libraries, museums, concert halls, and schools that New Yorkers all have benefitted from. If you live in New York (or The US in general), you have benefitted from the spoils of slavery.

          • Drusas@kbin.social
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            7 months ago

            As do the descendants of slaves who have those same amenities available.

            That’s not the argument you think it is. Also, my family came over poor on both sides. We weren’t the ones doing the oppressing.

            • ChonkyOwlbear@lemmy.world
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              6 months ago

              Black people were systematically prevented from benefiting from those amenities for generations (and sometimes still are).

              My family are poor immigrants on both sides too. That doesn’t matter. If you buy a house and later find out that the plumbing is bad, that is your responsibility even though you didn’t create the problem. We inherited this country and with it the obligation to fix the broken parts.

              • Drusas@kbin.social
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                6 months ago

                I understand what you’re saying but disagree with your ultimate conclusion.

                The average modern-day American did not directly benefit from slavery and many didn’t even come to the country until after slavery had been long since abolished. Some of those people were also treated as ethnic minorities though they may be seen as “white” now. Which is to say, they were terribly disadvantaged in the American economy because they were immigrants or descended from the “wrong” background.

                Any reparations that are to be made should be made by the perpetrators or those who have directly benefited from said perpetrators’ actions. To tax other impoverished lineages in order to provide reparations to another group which had it even worse is unjust.

                I do firmly believe that the country needs to address its systemic issues, but I don’t believe that taxing the majority to give cash to the aggrieved is the solution.

    • MicroWave@lemmy.worldOP
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      7 months ago

      You sound like this guy in the article:

      State Senate Republican Leader Rob Ortt said in a statement that he believes New York’s recommendations will come at an “astronomical cost” to all New Yorkers.

      But this doesn’t necessarily mean cash reparations:

      California in 2020 became the first state to create a reparations task force. The group handed its two-year report to state lawmakers in June, who then introduced a bill that would create an agency to carry out some of the panel’s more-than 100 recommendations, including helping families with genealogical research. But turning those proposals into policies could be difficult, given the state is facing a heavy budget deficit.

      Other states, including Massachusetts and New Jersey, have considered studying reparations, but none have yet passed legislation. A Chicago suburb in Evanston, Illinois, became the first city to make reparations available to Black residents through a $10 million housing project in 2021.

    • jmcs@discuss.tchncs.de
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      7 months ago

      no one affected by it is alive now

      Millions of people are still affected. Black people are much poorer on average, which leads to a circle of misery involving everything from access to education, to crime rate, to perpetuation of racism, that keeps them down.

      Just because the original victims and perpetrators are dead doesn’t mean the crime is not creating new victims every day.

      • RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        And it’s not just slavery. It’s centuries of racism inherent to social, legal, political, and economic systems that continue to have ramifications. The civil rights movement was only 65 years ago (wait, 65 years? Oh, how the time flies) and everyone knows that absolutely did not solve racist policy in the US.

    • girlfreddy@lemmy.ca
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      7 months ago

      no one affected by it is alive now. nor are their children, or even their children’s children.

      You’re wrong there. All the descendants of the white slave owners are people who profited from slavery through inheritances.

      • pulaskiwasright
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        7 months ago

        What percentage of Americans are descendants of slave owners? a lot of Americans didn’t even immigrate to the untitled states until after slavery was abolished.

        • pan_troglodytes@programming.dev
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          7 months ago

          What percentage of Americans are descendants of slave owners

          it’s a vanishingly small number. only around 6% of all Americans were slave owners. some were killed during the civil war, others in succeeding wars (notably WW1 and WW2) - the current number is unknown as that isnt really tracked, but it’s unlikely to be more than 4% of the current population.

          you cant really fault the decedents for what happened 200 years ago though - they werent there, their parents, and even grandparents werent born yet. for most families it’s been 5 or 6 generations (or more). getting reparations would be something that should have been attempted 200 years ago. it’s simply laughable to consider it now.

        • prole@sh.itjust.works
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          7 months ago

          I can tell you that nearly 100% of black Americans were descendants of slaves and parents/grandparents that lived through Jim Crow and institutionalized racism (hard to say exactly what % since we completely destroyed any possibility of tracing most of their history or genealogy). The Tulsa Race Massacre was only two, maybe three generations ago.

    • FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      no one affected by it is alive now. nor are their children, or even their children’s children

      You are almost certainly wrong about that, and they deserve to be compensated for the labor that was robbed of their ancestors.