I frankly do not know what I am writing this. There are too many entanglements for the sake of clarity. Here, however, are a few random thoughts.
Jemar Tisby, Reparations, and the American
Rescue Plan Act
Jemar Tisby. I was listening to his
podcast this morning while exercising. He spoke of reparations and why the need
for. I had read in days gone by Ta-Nehisi Coates and his compelling article
about reparations. I recall Senator Mitch McConnell’s comment about sections
1005 and 1006 of The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 as reparations. Tisby and
Coates get it, and McConnell does not.
Sections 1005 and 1006 are not reparations
in the strictest sense of the word. They are about debt relief for Socially
Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers who experienced egregious maltreatment at
the hands of the county FSA office of the USDA. Debt relief was allocated for
those who had one of three different types of loans guaranteed by the USDA. But
then, the white farmers stepped in and claimed their privilege so as to be
included in the debt relief despite the fact that they are not members of the
class of SDFRs and neither have they been discriminated against. Nobody ever
said that farming was easy, but it should not be made more difficult because of
the color of one’s skin. And that, my friends, is the root of the story of
discrimination within the USDA.
White Farmers Feel Discriminated Against
To add fuel to the fire, the litigation on
behalf of white farmers against the USDA and the debt relief is Stephen Miller,
and also Mark Meadows, via American First Legal. As we know, Miller was in
charge of trump’s aggressive immigration policy that marginalized all sorts of
people. It’ll take a while to overcome those policy decisions and for trust in
America to be restored. Many see this move on behalf of Miler and American
First Legal as another white nationalism effort.
White farmers never ever experienced the
degradation of discrimination by employees of the USDA at the County Committee
level. There are literally dozens and dozens of federal reports and reports and
briefs done by outside consultants which explain definitively what happened to
Black farmers. For a briefer story, check out details in Hinson 2018.
The Numbers of Enslaved People Who Made it
to Our Shores
I reviewed the numbers for those enslaved
Africans who embarked for the Americas and those that arrived in the Americas
and those that arrived in American ports. The numbers are astonishing:
12,521,335 embarked and 10,702,657 disembarked in the Americas. Into American
ports disembarked 388,747 and then 835,000 were moved across the Second Middle
Passage. Check out Hinson 2018 for more details.
I then reviewed some numbers of whites and
Blacks back to 1790 in the census for that year and up this way. In 1790 there
were 607,681 Blacks and in 1860 there were 3.95M. In 1790 there were 3.17M
whites and in 1860 there were 26.92 million. And, there were 59,527 free people
of color in 1790 and in 1860 there were 488,070. Whites outnumbered Blacks and
free people of color.
The Economics of Slavery
Slavery had incredible influences on the
economic, political, and social fabric of our country. Do not let anyone tell you otherwise. The average
price of an enslaved person in 1850 was $400. In 2020, the price would be
anywhere from $14,000 to $240,000. $400 was much larger than the average
person’s income during 1850, so why would enslavers want to spend so much money
on them. Profits. It was all about the profits. If an enslaved person costs
$400 but was able to generate well up into the 100,000 during his or her
lifetime, then the investment would be worth it. When compared to the costs and
profits of hiring someone to work the cotton or the corn or the rice or the
whatever was much, much less.
Despite the horrors that enslaved people
had to endure, up to the point of death, and living on meager amounts of food,
working sun up to sun down and longer, and wearing woeful clothes, the profits
were clear. Take a good look at what Frederick Douglass said in chapter 7 of
the “Life and Times of Frederick Douglass,” and the glaring distinctions
between life in the big house and life in the row houses were brutal.
Divided by Commitment to Enslaving People
for Economic Gain
And still, as we attempt to litigate or
deconstruct or defend whatever our position is in terms of the Civil War, some
say it was all about states rights. Others declare it was about slavery.
However you cast it, it was about slavery and the right to own people because it
was the best economics of the time. Here is one pivotal quote: “Our position is
thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery-- the greatest material
interest of the world. Its labor supplies the product which constitutes by far
the largest and most important portions of commerce of the earth.” The entire
document is found here: https://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/csa_missec.asp
Black Farmers then and Now
And then switch to more modern times. Black farmers, just a generation or so
removed from slavery owned something like 16-19M acres, and there were
approximately 925,000 of them. Now, there are approximately 37,000 Black
farmers who are farming somewhere around 4M acres. White farmers are far more
numerous and farm substantially more acreage. Their farms are larger, something
like 436 acres to 120 acres.
And then move this way a little further.
In 1990 the Farm Bill designated a group of farmers as Socially Disadvantaged
Farmers and Ranchers. Not a lot of noise
about that until 2020 when hidden within the America Rescue Plan Act of 2021
was a sum of money for debt relief for Black, Hispanic, Asian, and American
Indian farmers and then a sum of money for programmatic sorts of things. And then the white farmers come out en masse
and file lawsuits in federal courts in Texas, Wisconsin, and Florida, led
ostensibly by one of trump’s henchmen in charge of the immigration policy.
Their complaints have several layers to them, all nuanced around white
privilege and white supremacy, alleging that the designation of SDFRs was
unconstitutional and that debt relief for that group was unconstitutional and
that white farmers should have their fair share of it.
Mistreated, Discriminated Against, Now,
How is That?
So, I decided to see how unfavorably the
first six litigants were treated. Those six pulled in $523,000 in subsidies,
MFP, and CFAP, the latter two of which are for Trump’s failed war with China
and the other is coronavirus relief funds. That’s a lot of money for being
mistreated between 1995 and 2020. Farmers and ranchers in the counties within
which those farms and ranches are located pulled in over $1.2B during those
same years. If indeed there is an appreciably small percentage of SDFRs in
those counties who received little if any support in terms of subsidies, MFP,
and CFAP, then I would not say that the white farmers have been treated poorly.
In fact, in keeping with how the USDA has worked since the beginning, the
system continues to work the way it is supposed to work, toward those who have white
skin.
What About Those Threads?
So, do you see the threads of this post?
What do you see?
If you and I were talking, and if I were
saying the words printed above, what would you hear me saying?
informative, sad, and true. Thank you for giving us real history. We have to know it, see it, and understand it if we are ever going to advocate for change. Thanks Waymon.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much for stopping by and reading this post. I appreciate the time and the validation that your comments bring. We will keep pushing for change.
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