Tyehimba
Tyehimba
Posts: 1788
RastafariSpeaks
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« on: November 05, 2003, 03:12:21 PM » |
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THE BATTLE FOR SLAVERY REPARATIONS: FATHER AND DAUGHTER CONVICTED IN TAX CASE
By Monica Moorehead
The U.S. government and the super-rich capitalist class that it serves wish that the struggle for reparations would go away. Instead, this struggle will continue to manifest itself in various forms as long as the unfulfilled aspirations for justice and equality exist, as a legal case in Virginia shows.
Robert Forster and his daughter, Crystal Forster, were
convicted last July for "conspiracy" to defraud the U.S. government. Both Forsters are scheduled to soon be sentenced in a U.S. District Court in Richmond, Va.
Taking the advice of her father, Crystal Forster had carried out a bold act when in 2001: she filed for a $500,000 income-tax refund. She did this as a vehicle for compensation for the unpaid labor of her slave ancestors.
Upon receiving the refund, she used some of it to pay back her student loans and to cover the cost of her brother's first-year tuition at a very expensive college, Virginia Tech.
The convictions carry a maximum sentence of seven years. The father stated from jail: "This is not an effort to defraud the U.S. government. This was purely a protest against the U.S. government. ....Black people are not treated as humans, but as things by the U.S. government. We were used as resources to enrich this country and we get no inheritance from the wealth we brought." (Associated Press, Oct. 23)
Forster also renounced his U.S. citizenship while in jail. He was denied the lawyer of his choice when he tried to fire his attorney and have him replaced by an Indigenous attorney.
Like most African Americans, Forster has suffered from racist attitudes most of his life. He had sued the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs hospital for denying him a promotion because of his nationality. He reportedly felt very slighted when the courts awarded him only $5,000.
In 1993, the Black-oriented magazine Essence published an editorial urging Black people to file for a delinquent tax rebate of over $43,000 per household. The magazine viewed this amount as today's dollar equivalent of the 40 acres and a mule that were promised to the freed slaves after the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863.
President Andrew Johnson, the pro-slavery sympathizer who succeeded Abraham Lincoln, veteoed the 40 acres and a mule. Johnson's racist act helped lay the basis for overturning Black reconstruction in the South.
Forster is a tax return preparer. He took inflation into account and, for some of his clients, increased the amount posed in the Essence editorial twelvefold. The Internal Revenue Service stated that more than 80,000 income tax returns were submitted in 2001 asking for non-existent slavery tax credits. The total amount was $2.7 billion.
'THEY OWE US'
The real criminals are not the Forsters but the in-justice system that keeps alive the legacy of slavery today with institutionalized racism. The primary victims of this racism are African Americans, Latinos, Indigenous people and other peoples of color. Every social institution is tinged with white-supremacist ideology in order to divide and conquer the masses.
If this were not the case, there would have been a federal reparations program in existence long ago. No administration has even officially apologized for the U.S. policy of enslaving millions of African people, let alone offered compensation to the descendants of the slaves.
There are now class-action lawsuits in federal courts where African Americans are suing U.S. corporations for their past complicity in maintaining slavery. The lawsuits argue that corporations such as Fleet Boston Financial, Aetna and CSX are guilty of commiting crimes against human ity along with profiting off of unspeakable human suffering. The lawsuits state that the wealth created by slavery would amount to an estimated $1.5 trillion in unpaid wages today, considering inflation.
If the class-action lawsuit is won, some of the plaintiffs plan to use the financial restitution to establish a collective fund to provide the decent education and health care that have been systematically denied to African Americans for decades.
Is it just a coincidence that people like the Forsters get caught and convicted, and the rich don't? Absolutely not. There exist so many legal loopholes that the U.S. super-rich can manipulate to avoid paying millions of dollars in taxes without being convicted, much less winding up in court.
This is another example of which class benefits from the capitalist system. It is certainly not the workers, the poor, the oppressed or what is left of the middle class. It is the capitalist class composed of corporate heads and investors who are laughing all the way to the bank.
As long as the horrific legacy of U.S. slavery is alive and well, the struggle for social equality and justice remains inevi table. The Forsters deserve the support and admiration of every working and poor person of all nationalities for taking a heroic stand against racism.
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