The reparations aren’t about slavery, they’re about the inherited discrimination from slavery.
I'm aware. I apologize if I worded it poorly (that seems to be my forte at times). It is why I referenced 'the multi-generational effects that slavery and Jim Crow laws had' as the laws and societal norms still put a portion of the population at an unfair disadvantage, to where the generations who followed were starting from a lower point of possibilities than those raised without those disadvantages.
I support this whether or not they should have been bailed out with taxpayer money.
Another problem I have (seems I have quite a few). I see the ease with which people look to others and say 'they should pay'. Wall street is rich, they can afford to pay, and we have reasons (real or imagined) as to WHY they should pay. Fine, I get that. But for me, everything always starts with the self. What can
*I* do about my situation? Can I learn a skill to improve my job? Can I go to school to earn better pay? Can I put more time in and save more in order to afford that desire? For me, it is almost always starting with the self and 'what can I do?' well before it places a burden or expectation on others. Even if something is not my fault, and the other party ('them') is fully responsible to address it, I question myself first. I suppose it comes down to 'let those without sin cast the first stone' or other morals like that, so I check myself first.
Though, if I have done all I can to address my situation, I then look to those around me who would naturally support me - my family, my church, my community. Those that have a vested interest in me, and would most benefit by my success. What can they do to help me and this situation?
Only as a last resort would I look to 'others' such as the gov't or strangers to try and help me. They have the least benefit from my success in a situation.
But ALL of that starts without the basic premise that it is 'their fault' and 'they should pay', in any situation. I suppose that's the major difference here, the gov't WAS part of the problem, in that their laws enforced and supported slavery and bigotry. In that sense, they ARE accountable. And, I can see the relatively easy stretch to view wall street corporations as existing and getting rich off of business that grew and thrived under those laws and social conditions - that they wouldn't have their money and power were it not for the laws and norms of the time. This is still a subject I need some time to chew on in order to shift my view, so I'll stop there with this point.
Assuming I get past that point, there still remains, 'who pays? how much? and how do we best use those funds?' Do all the companies suffer a flat tax, which isn't fair to recent businesses or foreign businesses who had nothing to do with that era of American history? Or do we create criteria by which companies are taxed at different rates based on...something? The promise of how those funds are spent is such a tease - a promise to voters who think that they, personally, will see a check in the mail...HA! I'd prefer a path that pays it for the betterment of all society, honestly. But I have yet to consider how that would be constructed.