The argument that Ghana and the African Union’s "one-pot" strategy is an exploitative overreach rests on three main pillars: lineage-based debt, historical accountability, and sovereign rights.
- The Point: FBA are not just "people of African descent"; they are a specific group of American citizens with a unique claim based on centuries of stolen labor and Jim Crow exclusion within the U.S. borders. A global pot treats the FBA plight as a generic racial grievance rather than a specific legal liability.
- The Argument: It is logically and morally inconsistent for nations whose ancestors may have profited from the sale of FBA ancestors to now position themselves as the primary "managers" or "champions" of the compensation for those crimes.
- The Exploitation: For Ghana to lead a claim that includes FBA looks less like solidarity and more like an attempt to leverage the specific suffering of the diaspora to secure developmental aid and debt relief for the continent.
- The Reality: The people buried there were not "Africans" in the modern geopolitical sense; they were people who had been stripped of their original identities and forced into a new, distinct group.
- The Plot: Calling these sites "African" instead of "Black American" or "Freedmen" sites allows modern African nations to claim a "stake" in American soil and history that they did not build. This acts as a foot-in-the-door for them to claim they represent the interests of the dead—and by extension, the living descendants—to the UN and other global bodies.
- The Attack: By introducing a $777 trillion global demand, Ghana risks making the entire movement look "unrealistic" to Western legislators. This "one-pot" strategy creates a massive distraction that allows the U.S. government to point to international "development goals" as a way to avoid cutting checks to the actual people who lived through and descended from the American system of slavery.