Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Here’s how to offer reparations in a free society
Here’s how to offer reparations in a free society
Jun 16, 2026 9:54 PM

The topic of reparations is often a nonstarter for many conservatives, but it shouldn’t be. There are classical liberal alternatives to simple government payouts that can begin to repay black Americans still suffering from the repercussions of Jim Crow racism.

Read More…

Today we mostly associate the idea of reparations for America’s black population with left-wing politics, and that’s no surprise. Only Democratic candidates for president, such as Marianne Williamson, mention reparations as part of their political platform. However, the concept of reparations, properly understood, follows from classical liberal principles of rights to property, freedom of contract, the equal protection of the rule of law, and the right of citizens to freedom from government oppression. Serious libertarian thinkers like Robert Nozick mended reparations, though they often came up short on the practical details. But we also might think about reparations in the broader sense of “repair,” taking the particular historical perspective of American Christianity and the fraught history of white and black churches. Not as a final word, but as a creative contribution to this sticky question, I offer some thoughts here.

First, it’s important to lay out exactly what the justification for any kind of reparations would be. The example of Japanese internment serves us well as a kind of template: a case in which the government itself violated the civil and economic rights of Japanese Americans, who were pensated financially. The general wisdom is to cut off claims to reparations at about the length of a decent human life, say 60–80 years. Otherwise, we could be relitigating our history of violent usurpations forever, thus undermining the stability of our institutions and our ability to move forward as a legitimate regime. This means that we will concern ourselves with the crimes of Jim Crow, not slavery. It’s relevant, then, that those who suffered under Jim Crow are the exact same people as those that the term ADOS—actual descendants of slavery—would carve out anyway, since 90% of the freedmen remained in the South until the Great Migrations of the mid-20th century. And we also know that while Jim Crow was technically relegated to the South, all kinds of sundown laws, union exclusions, and other forms of rights violations persisted throughout the North as well.

There was also plenty of straightforward government crime against blacks from the Jim Crow period, including eminent domain abuse during “urban renewal” programs and the building of the Federal Highway System; the racist and hubristic redlining practices of the Federal Housing Administration; the collusion of police and courts with various forms of domestic terrorism against black citizens; and the way that federal support for unions translated to exclusion of blacks from many forms of government work. We could go on.

With such a recent history of government oppression of this sector of our population, tracking down the sufferers and their direct descendants is not a particularly difficult task, so how ought the government to make amends? The mon conservative and plaint against reparations is that in taxing current citizens to pay for it, we would be harming those who never did anything wrong. While the typical leftist response appeals to the notion that all white people have somehow benefited from our history of racism, the classical liberal must strongly disagree. While a few white people may have benefited financially from direct exploitation of their black neighbors, the legal and economic exclusion of any subgroup within a population never benefits the economy overall—rather the opposite. The white population of the United States is poorer than it would have been if black Americans had been allowed to buy homes, go to good schools, move where they wished, and develop their talents fully. This ought to be obvious. While white people in the past may have gotten something they wanted by feeling superior to black people, the fulfillment of such a twisted desire is not a benefit but a deep spiritual loss, as Martin Luther King Jr. argued so eloquently. It “distort[ed] the soul[s] and damage[d] the personality” of our parents and grandparents. My own father, the pastor of a multiethnic evangelical church in St. Louis, Mo., for 40 years, often described how he had to unlearn the racism of his childhood in Chattanooga, Tenn., in order to serve Christ well.

So I must agree with the conservative and libertarian critique that it would be unjust to take from current citizens to pay back Jim Crow survivors and their children or grandchildren for all the injustices they suffered. Instead, the just solution is for the government—the greatest perpetrator of these crimes anyway—to pay out of its own assets. Currently, the central government of the United States holds almost $2 trillion in government lands, and that’s not to mention other assets that might be liquidated. Much could be done with even half this amount, with the added advantageous effect of removing assets from the petent management of the state.

Let us suppose that these assets were sold off. What then? mon suggestion among pro-reparations thinkers is to provide so-called public goods such as parks and improvements, but I doubt I am the only one who is deeply skeptical that such a plan would result in anything transformative for the stickiest and most offensive of the remaining black/white inequalities: the wealth gap. While black and white es grow closer and closer together, wealth holdings remain quite low among the black American population, an e that is believably tied to the very crimes we indict the central government mitting. And state-controlled projects to “help” the munity are no more empowering when called reparations than they are when called welfare. What would be truly transformative? Access to business capital, for one. And the Conscious Black Conservatives have suggested an ingenious plan, in which capital is made available to entrepreneurs with a reasonable amount of beginners’ success under their belts, through loans that will be repaid and so recycled back into the original nest egg. This approach is interesting because it acknowledges that the munity will most likely gain wealth by economically empowering those among them who are already on their way but simply lack capital to expand. Even if it only arises from the reality of our organic networks, black employers are more likely to hire black workers, work with black distributors, and so on. This tendency means that empowering burgeoning black entrepreneurs could have far-reaching effects beyond merely increasing their own wealth holdings.

On the other hand, Glenn Loury has argued that such a race-based approach could have deleterious effects on racial reconciliation nationally, particularly given the economic hopelessness and despair prevalent among poor rural white populations today. This is where things really get thorny, especially as more scholars pay attention to the way that historically “poor white trash” (and out West, Latino populations) were often caught up in the same oppressive systems used against black Americans. While many of these e from Marxist historians who want to emphasize the role of class warfare, they’ve had an interesting resonance for conservatives who have long argued that inequalities assumed to be exclusively racial are deeply involved with class as well. It’s worth noting that the source of the wealth gap may be concentrated in parison between the wealthiest white and black people, while the e groups among both races parable wealth pared directly with one another. And there’s something attractive about the refusal to perpetuate the historic white supremacist strategy of pitting poor black and poor white Americans against one another. Offering such loans to any means-tested entrepreneur, then, could address racial tensions while still benefiting black Americans—whose poverty rate is double that of white Americans—disproportionately.

Even if the plan for restitution that I offer above gets us a lot closer to justice, that won’t make it politically viable. But the white church in America doesn’t need to take a vote or ask for permission to take up the project of repair and restoration between themselves and the black church. Much of this work will draw upon the concept of transitional justice, so well laid out by Anthony Bradley. One of the most powerful and practical of the seven principles of transitional justice described here is that of institutional memory. Proper memorialization of the past is deeply healing, just as the members of a dysfunctional family must work through their past if they want to move forward with emotional health. We must use plain speech about the record of white churches: the unwillingness to baptize black people to avoid spiritual equality; the Slave Bible, stripped of the Exodus and the minor prophets; the doctrine of the “spirituality of the church,” abused to avoid questions of earthly injustice; the doctrine of “the curse of Ham”; the plantation missionaries and their “gospel” of obedience to masters; support of the KKK; churches with raciallyexclusionary covenant deeds; theological denigration of the black church tradition; and on and on. This is not a matter of ginning up guilt, but simply of telling the truth so that the doctrinal and practical inheritance of white supremacy can be jettisoned while the unique insights of the black church tradition are discovered. Like all truly prophetic calls, the call to listen and cede cultural power back to black Christians from whom it was stolen will benefit white Christians as well. Dietrich Bonhoeffer underwent a significant spiritual awakening through his discipleship in Harlem’s Abyssinian Baptist Church, and I was deeply blessed by my research in the theology and history of the black church for my ing book, Black Liberation Through the Marketplace: Hope, Heartbreak, and the Promise of America.

There’s much more to be discussed here, but an appeal to both classical liberal principles and biblical ones by no means rules out reparations, whether in the form of state restitution or church restoration, in some form.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Salt of the Encyclical: A Call to Culture
“Laudato si, mi’ Signore!” Both the title and first line of the most recent papal e from St. Francis’ canticle which looks at nature as a great gift, but you all know that. Every news source worth its salt made that clear before the encyclical was released (either time); yet, we as Christians are called to be salt of the Earth. This entails more than a brief glance at the word on the street about the ecological pronouncement. What is...
The Same-Sex Marriage Decision: Ruling by Judicial Fiat
The U.S. Supreme Court decided today that it is unconstitutional for a state to declare that marriage is only between one man and one woman. There is nothing in the Constitution that requires states to redefine marriage, but the Court decided that the Due Process Clause prohibits defining marriage as it has been defined for millennia just as it found a right to an abortion in the same Due Process Clause over 40 years ago. The role of the Court...
Mahoney: New Václav Havel biography is ‘moving and intelligent’
Daniel J. Mahoney reviewed Michael Zantovsky’s 2014 book Havel: A Life in the City Journal last week, calling it “a remarkable book about plex and genuinely admirable human being.” Václav Havel was a Czech writer, philosopher and dissident who served as the first democratically elected president of Czechoslovakia and then the first president of the Czech Republic. Zantovsky’s “moving and intelligent book guarantees that Havel’s monumental achievement will not soon be forgotten,” Mahoney writes. As Zantovsky shows, Havel was “one...
Taxing Churches (and other Charitable Non-Profits) is Un-American
Within 48 hours of the Supreme Court issuing its diktat on same-sex marriage, there were already calls for religious organizations that oppose gay marriage to lose their tax-exempt status. But Mark Oppenheimer goes even further. The writer of a regular column on religion for the New York Times argues in Time magazine that “the Supreme Court’s ruling on gay marriage makes it clearer than ever that the government shouldn’t be subsidizing religion and non-profits.” There is a lot that could...
Unsanctified Mercy: Integrating Compassion and Conviction for Human Flourishing
Compassion is a marvelous virtue. Feeling concern for others and acting sacrificially — especially on behalf of those that cannot return the favor — reveals mature character and contributes to human flourishing. Compassion moves missionaries and monks to great efforts as they plant churches, pioneer institutions, and work for justice across cultures and geographies. Paul’s words are the motivation for his apostolic proclamation that, “…the love of pels us…” and, “one died for all, therefore all died. And those who...
‘El Papa es imprudente al hablar de conjeturas científicas’
Sirico appearing on InfoBae TV in March. While at Acton University not too long ago, Buenos Aires journalistAdrián Bono sat down with Rev. Robert Sirico to discuss Laudato Si’. Bono recently wrote about his interview with Acton’s president and co-founder at Infobae. “Muchos no saben que la encíclica depende de la hermenéutica,” Sirico argued, “que significa cómo puede interpretada. No es un documento infalible.” Simply put, Laudato Si’ is not a binding document for Catholics, but many don’t understand that....
Seven Judaic Points from ‘The Spiritual Nature of Human Work’
The Acton Institute’s 2007 book Environmental Stewardship in the Judeo-Christian Tradition offers insight on Jewish theology as it connects to creation and our place in the world. The following list provides seven key quotes from “The Spiritual Nature of Human Work,” an essay in the book written by Jewish scholars. 1. The religious Jew has much appreciation for the beauty of nature. We are filled with gratitude for these natural treats to our senses that are also natural treats to...
Big Oil Advocacy for Carbon Taxes
Today at The Federalist I explore “Why Big Oil Wants A Carbon Tax.” Perhaps such advocacy isn’t just made out of a sense of global citizenship and environmental stewardship. On the surface such advocacy may seem counter-intuitive. Why on earth, other than out of selfless benevolence, would a firm (or group of firms) advocate for higher taxes on their products? But on reflection, it makes some sense, and the reasoning is similar to why an online retailer like Amazon might...
Fifteen Theological Foundations of Stewardship from ‘A Biblical Perspective on Environmental Stewardship’
Since its publication in 2007, the Acton Institute’s Environmental Stewardship in the Judeo-Christian Tradition has been one go-to source for religious thought on environmental stewardship. The following list gathers information from “A Biblical Perspective on Environmental Stewardship,” an essay from the book that offers the Christian perspective on humanity’s place in nature. 1. God, the Creator of all things, rules over all and deserves our worship and adoration (Ps. 103:19—22). 2. The earth, and, with it, all the cosmos, reveals...
Are We Better Off if We Buy Local?
Over the past few decades buying locally produced goods and services over those produced farther away has e increasingly fashionable. However, this “modern” trend is really a reversion to an earlier period when most all products were produced and bought from people in a localized area. For most of human history, “buying local” was the only option. There may be many reasons we may want to buy local goods and services—but improving the local economy is not one of them....
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved