2001 - 2002 LEGISLATURE
ASSEMBLY AMENDMENT 60,
TO ASSEMBLY SUBSTITUTE AMENDMENT 1,
TO ASSEMBLY BILL 1
March 14, 2002 - Offered by Representatives Morris-Tatum, Young, Williams,
Turner and Coggs.
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3"
(3zx) Urging Congress to enact H.R. 40 of the 1st Session of the 107th
4Congress, which acknowledges the fundamental injustice, cruelty, brutality, and
5inhumanity of slavery and establishes a commission to examine the institution of
6slavery and make recommendations to Congress on appropriate remedies.
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(a)
The legislature finds that:
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1. Approximately 4,000,000 Africans and their descendants were enslaved in
9the United States and colonies that became the United States from 1619 to 1865.
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102. The institution of slavery was constitutionally and statutorily sanctioned by
11the government of the United States from 1789 to 1865.
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13. In 1865, the Freedmen's Bureau, created by the government to help newly
2freed slaves, pledged 40-acre parcels and the loan of a federal mule to work the land,
3but President Andrew Johnson reneged on the pledge.
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4. The slavery that flourished in the United States constituted an immoral and
5inhumane deprivation of Africans' life, liberty, citizenship rights, and cultural
6heritage, and denied them the fruits of their own labor.
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75. Sufficient inquiry has not been made into the effects of the institution of
8slavery on living African-Americans and society in the United States.
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96. H.R. 40 establishes a commission to:
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10"a. examine the institution of slavery which existed from 1619 through 1865
11within the United States and the colonies that became the United States, including
12the extent to which the Federal and State Governments constitutionally and
13statutorily supported the institution of slavery;
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b. examine de jure and de facto discrimination against freed slaves and their
15descendants from the end of the Civil War to the present, including economic,
16political, and social discrimination;
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c. examine the lingering negative effects of the institution of slavery and the
18discrimination described in paragraph b. on living African-Americans and on society
19in the United States;
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d. recommend appropriate ways to educate the American public of the
21Commission's findings;
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e. recommend appropriate remedies in consideration of the Commission's
23findings on the matters described in paragraphs a. and b.; and
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f. submit to the Congress the results of such examination, together with such
25recommendations".
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17. California has enacted chapter 934, statutes of 2000, which directs the
2California commissioner of insurance to investigate and report to the California
3legislature and the public all records of insurance companies regarding slaveholder
4insurance policies, and determine whether the insurers profited from slavery.
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58. National Reparations Convention was held this year in Chicago at which,
6according to the
Wisconsin State Journal of February 11, 2001, convention
7participants joined a growing group of academics, activists, and governmental
8officials who believe that repaying African-Americans for the 246 years of unpaid
9labor of their ancestors could relieve poverty and hopelessness among modern-day
10African-Americans.
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119. It was reported in the
Wisconsin State Journal of February 11, 2001, that one
12reason why people are now willing to talk about reparations may be that other groups
13victimized because of their religion, skin color, or nationality have won apologies and
14even cash payments for their suffering.
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1510. A letter of formal apology and $20,000 were given by the U.S. government
16to each Japanese-American held in internment camps during World War II.
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1711. Austria has established a $380,000,000 fund to compensate Nazi-era slave
18laborers.
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1912. It was reported in the
National Post of September 23, 2000, that some of
20Germany's largest corporations agreed to pay billions of dollars in reparations to
21individuals enslaved in their factories during World War II and that the Anglican
22Church in Canada faces bankruptcy as a result of claims arising from aboriginals
23who were abused in church homes.
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113. Representative F. James Sensenbrenner of Wisconsin, the house judiciary
2committee chairman, has indicated that it is too early to determine whether H.R. 40
3will be on the committee's agenda.
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(b) The legislature of the state of Wisconsin hereby urges Congress to pass H.R.
540.
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6(c) The assembly chief clerk shall provide a duly attested copy of this subsection
7to the president and secretary of the U.S. Senate, to the speaker and clerk of the U.S.
8house of representatives, and to each member of the congressional delegation from
9this state attesting the adoption of this subsection by the 2001 legislature of the state
10of Wisconsin.".