California paved the way for reparations conversation. Will America ever follow?
About 60 years after mandatory attendance
for Canada’s brutal Indian residential school system ended, the country
created its own Truth and Reconciliation Commission. From the late
1800s to the mid-1940s, this school system prioritized the erasure of
Indigenous culture in Canada. Earlier this month, Canada’s government
agreed to pay $31.5 billion to fix country’s welfare system and to pay
reparations to indigenous people harmed by it, a settlement aided by
what the country learned from its commission.
Yet the closest thing America has to any of the
aforementioned commissions is California’s first-in-the-nation
reparations task force, which started in 2021, roughly 400 years after slavery first began and 156 years after Congress abolished it.
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