The plight of Black farmers and the fight for reparations

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Black farmers, representing a mere 1.4% of the nation’s farmers, have long faced discriminatory practices. Their struggle for justice and equity continues in the face of historical and ongoing challenges within the agricultural sector. Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s promise of reparations Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has pledged to pay Black farmers $5 billion in reparations. In a conversation with John Boyd Jr., founder of the National Black Farmers Association, Kennedy expressed his commitment to addressing the injustices faced by Black farmers, including the alleged discriminatory distribution of financial aid by the USDA. Controversy over Biden’s relief efforts President Joe Biden’s American Rescue Plan in 2021, which aimed to provide $4 billion in relief to farmers of color, was halted by a federal judge. The ruling suggested that the program did not consider applicants’ financial status, focusing solely on race, and did not show evidence of intentional discrimination by the USDA in recent subsidies or pandemic relief efforts. Legal challenges and the road ahead The provision to aid socially disadvantaged farmers and ranchers was met with lawsuits from White farmers and legal groups, leading to a preliminary injunction by a federal judge. The USDA’s definition of “socially disadvantaged...

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