About the cutoff, to me it gets fuzzy when clear past policies translate into lasting present-day impacts upon people alive today, but the key thing is how people alive today are affected, not what was done to people no longer alive today. The case of the treatment of black people in the US by the US government and slaveowners and like is notable in that there are definite lasting impacts upon black people alive today, and these are what should be recompensed. (Conversely, the Mongol genocides have little to no practical consequences for people alive today, so it makes no sense to recompense people for them.)Linguoboy wrote: ↑Thu Oct 14, 2021 5:25 pmI think you may have missed my follow-up where I say exactly this. My disagreement with Travis seems to be that he thinks the cutoff should be a single human lifetime and I think that's too short. If I grow up deprived and traumatised because of something done to my parents, why should I be denied compensation?
Moreover, I think all of this talk about sorting people into categories is a willful conflation of personal responsibility with institutional responsibility. When it comes to something like genocide or redlining, we're talking a whole different class of crime than your dad robbing my dad. These were actions taken by institutional actors--either governments or private agents with the approval (tacit or explicit) of governmental authorities--whose actions impacted all of society. The US government of today is a direct successor of the US government which enabled widespread segregation of and discrimination against Blacks and other people of colour; it doesn't get to shrug off its responsibility just because the people running it today decide they don't want to shoulder it. Nobody who signed the Webster–Ashburton Treaty is still alive today; does that mean we get to seize whatever bits of Canada we want?
About personal responsibility versus institutional responsibility, one can definitely say that institutions with continuity with the past are responsible for their past actions, but at the same time, when it comes to reparations, they are ultimately paid for by taxpayers (money for reparations have to come from somewhere, and even if governments pay for them by printing money, that is still an implicit tax through inflation), and hence are only just when those taxpayers themselves are guilty, directly or indirectly, of the crimes in question. (Hence reparations by Germany for the Holocaust were just in nature.)