America did not simply inherit a racial wound. It inherited a debt.
Debt Without End: The Case for Reparations in the United States by Darius Blackman presents a direct and structured case for reparations, tracing the damage from chattel slavery through the systems that followed: Black Codes, convict leasing, stolen land, redlining, discriminatory federal policy, and the deliberate restriction of Black wealth.
This book moves beyond slogans and political noise. It examines how history became policy, how policy became economic outcome, and how generations of Black Americans were forced to carry the cost of systems built to extract labor, limit ownership, block opportunity, and protect accumulated advantage.
Blackman challenges the myths commonly used to dismiss reparations. He connects past to present, loss to wealth, law to consequence, and public memory to public responsibility. The result is a clear argument that reparations are not about guilt, charity, or symbolism. They are about record, obligation, repair, and consistency.
Written for readers, educators, students, book clubs, activists, policy thinkers, and anyone willing to confront the unfinished business of American history, Debt Without End asks a question the country can no longer avoid:
If the debt was never paid, what does justice require now?