It’s possible, as Bill Clinton put it, to work hard and play by the rules. But the history of black people in America reveals one set of rules for blacks and for everyone else, even if you do succeed.
The strength of Ta-Nehisi Coates’ Atlantic essay arguing in favor of reparations to the black community is that it does not focus on slavery. The core of the piece is one of the most concise, eloquent summaries of the parts of history we so like to forget, or have never learned.
Contemporary black poverty is not an accident of history or simply a failure of blacks to inculcate themselves with the virtues of thrift, modesty and diligence from their betters. It is rooted in public policy. As Coates writes, “The kind of trenchant racism to which black people have persistently been subjected can never be defeated by making its victims more respectable. The essence of American racism is disrespect. And in the wake of the grim numbers, we see the grim inheritance.”
Many people believe that America’s obligations to the descendants of slaves ended with the adoption of the 13th Amendment, which ended slavery, or in the 1960s when Jim Crow finally fell. Yet that, as Coates writes, is hardly the end of the story.
Reconstruction, America’s all too brief experiment in interracial democracy after the Civil War, was shattered by violence and terrorism. Black Americans were rendered back into an exploitative system of labor but a step away from slavery. Disenfranchisement immunized the American political system from being responsive to black interests, violence curtailed the ambition of those who would rise above their station, and those who escaped North found themselves fenced into ghettos and subject to what Coates calls legal plunder and the forces of a “free market” that appraised the value of homes and neighborhoods based on skin color. The modern American middle class was built on government policies that deliberately enriched whites while excluding blacks, Coates writes.
One needn’t agree with Coates that monetary recompense is necessary or possible. But his essay shatters what we might call the myth of the white bystander — the idea that where we are today is a result of something other than the deliberate consequences of public policy; that institutionalized racism was confined to one region or political party; and that the benefits distributed by America’s racial caste system did not accrue to white Americans who arrived after emancipation.
People of goodwill do not know this history, not because of animus or personal racism but because it is rarely taught. Black and white Americans must discover it on their own.
The constant companions of policies meant to disenfranchise and dispossess black Americans are the grand national myths to justify their impact, and to contemporary ears the logic has always seemed as firm as iron.
Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens famously declared that his government “rests upon the great truth that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery — subordination to the superior race, is his natural and normal condition.” After emancipation, the coercion of the freedmen back into a forced labor system was deemed necessary for blacks to learn the responsible habits of free people and honest labor, to be taught by the those who had stolen theirs. The public school system in the South was constructed so as to deny blacks an equal education and reinforce preconceptions of black intellectual inferiority.
During and after Reconstruction, as North and South built their reconciliation on a framework of white supremacy, it was said that black men were not ready for the ballot, or for emancipation, so as to justify a reconstituted near-slavery. History was written so as to sustain such an arrangement not just after Reconstruction but for decades hence. Yet even during Jim Crow, the role of the state in enforcing differences in status between black and white were dismissed.









