Race and the history of slavery in the US is a highly sensitive topic (here in America). Recently, a news story came out about a town - Charleston, SC - that has officially apologized for its key role in slavery. According to the numbers, roughly 40% of all African slaves taken to the US were brought to Charleston.
A lot of people are upset about this, and the main idea seems to be that no living persons are connected to and/or responsible for slavery (either directly or indirectly), and so no apologies should be made. The argument can probably be more formalized as follows:
P1 - People should only apologize for those things which they are either directly or indirectly responsible for. (The 'responsible' party, here, being the causal antecedent of slavery)
P1.2 - People should only receive apologies for those things in which they were either directly or indirectly affected by.
P2 - No person alive today is either directly or indirectly responsible for slavery.
C - There should therefore be no apologies made for slavery.
How would you judge this type of response? The issue seems to be one of moral responsibility, and I guess that a further, possibly more difficult question can be posed -
What is the status of our moral agency regarding actions committed by our ancestors?
Read another response by Allen Stairs