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Saturday
Jan292005
Saturday, January 29, 2005 at 04:37AM
Peter Flaherty, president of the
National Legal and Policy Center (NLPC), today criticized JPMorgan
Chase & Co. for apologizing for its alleged links to slavery.
Flaherty said, "Instead of caving in to shakedown artists, the bank
should have made the moral case against group guilt and in favor of
individual sovereignty. This is an act of corporate cowardice."
JPMorgan Chase apparently disregarded a warning by NLPC against
appeasing reparations activists. In a Nov. 15, 2004 letter to JPMorgan
Chase Chairman and CEO William B. Harrison, Jr., Flaherty wrote, "It is
imperative that corporations resist the growing calls to pay slave
reparations. Corporations are not legally or morally obligated to pay
money just because their 19th century predecessors may have profited
from slavery." JPMorgan Chase & Co., the parent company of Bank
One, disclosed last week that two of its predecessor banks in Louisiana
allowed 13,000 slaves to be used as collateral on loans and took
ownership of 1,250 slaves when the loans defaulted. The bank
purportedly took the action in order to comply with a 2002 City of
Chicago ordinance that any company doing business with the city must
reveal ties to slavery. The bank apologized for its links to slavery
and created a $5 million college scholarship fund for African-American
students in Louisiana. Flaherty continued, "Nothing required this kind
of groveling or the payment of $5 million in tribute." Of the
scholarship fund, Flaherty said, "If the scholarships are race-based,
JPMorgan is making a mistake. Race-based scholarships operate off the
same principle of slavery itself." [more]