Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Wrong Way On Reparations

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Wrong Way On Reparations

    WRONG WAY ON REPARATIONS
    By Ed Feulner

    Washington Times, DC
    May 21 2007

    The United States motto is written on most of our money: E Pluribus
    Unum, "out of many, one." But if Congress has its way, plenty of
    our dollars will be spent to separate Americans into ethnic groups
    instead of bringing us together as one people.

    The House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed the "Guam World
    War II Loyalty Recognition Act" May 8 and didn't seem to consider it
    controversial. The bill breezed through by a wide, 288-133, margin
    and didn't even undergo the usual debate; lawmakers voted to suspend
    the rules so it could pass swiftly.

    But this bill should not have been noncontroversial. This is no
    mere measure to rename a Post Office or federal building. If this act
    becomes law, it would require the Treasury secretary to pay reparations
    to "Guam residents who were killed, raped, injured, interned, or
    subjected to forced labor or marches," as well as to "survivors of
    compensable residents who died in war or survivors of compensable
    injured residents." The bill could cost taxpayers $126 million.

    There are several things wrong with this picture. First, it wasn't
    the United States that abused the people of Guam. Imperial Japanese
    troops occupied the island in 1941 (immediately after they attacked
    Pearl Harbor) and held it for more than three years. As elsewhere,
    the Japanese invaders treated the population cruelly.

    Guam's congressional delegate, Madeleine Bordallo, ignored that
    history as she tried to explain why the bill was necessary. "There
    is a moral obligation on the part of our national government to pay
    compensation for war damages in order to insure to the extent possible
    that no single individual or group of individuals bears more than a
    just part of the overall burden of war," she told the House.

    But the U.S. bears no blame here, and no responsibility. We fought to
    prevent the island from being taken by the Japanese, and fought to
    free it again. Some 3,000 Americans were killed and more than 7,000
    wounded in the 1944 battle for the island. That's a price paid in
    blood that can never be made up with mere dollars.

    Besides, World War II ended 62 years ago. And that brings up another
    critical point: If the U.S. is supposed to make restitution to people
    harmed decades ago by one of our (then) enemies, where do we stop?

    Residents of the Philippines could demand handouts, since that
    country was also under U.S. protection before being captured by the
    Japanese. Korea and China could also make a case, since they also
    all suffered from Japanese domination.

    And that's just Asia. Nazi Germany was equally cruel to residents
    of the countries it occupied. We certainly can't afford to make
    restitution to everyone in Eastern Europe. Yet we would likely have
    to, since it would be difficult to find a religious or ethnic group
    that didn't suffer during World War II.

    But things wouldn't stop there. Once you're on a slippery slope,
    it's difficult to stop. We might find ourselves making payments to
    the survivors of Bosnian Muslims killed by Serbs during the 1990s,
    the descendants of Armenians killed by Greeks during World War I,
    and certainly the descendants of African-Americans brought to this
    country as slaves.

    The Guam bill is little more than a reparations foot in the door.

    If it succeeds, we can expect a flood of similar complaints from all
    corners of the globe. The United States, a country that has fought so
    hard to spread freedom around the world -- and is still fighting to
    protect newly won freedom in Iraq and Afghanistan -- would be forced
    to pay reparations as if we were a human-rights abusing rogue nation.

    Our country is unique because it opens its arms to immigrants from
    everywhere and gives them the chance to become citizens. If we start
    allowing ethnic groups to make claims on the Treasury because of
    where they were born, we'll quickly lose the unity that makes our
    nation work.

    We simply can't afford the "Guam World War II Loyalty Recognition Act."

    Ed Feulner is president of the Heritage Foundation.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X