Tulsa Mayor Says City Should Pay $100M In Reparations For 1907 ‘Tulsa Race Massacre’

Tulsa’s newly elected mayor has unveiled a $100 million reparations plan tied to the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, seeking private funds to provide scholarships and housing. The move follows similar national efforts, raising questions about the long-term goals and political motives behind these initiatives.

Key Facts:

  • Tulsa Mayor Monroe Nichols IV has proposed a $100 million private charitable trust as part of a reparations effort related to the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.
  • The trust aims to provide scholarships, housing, and revitalization projects for descendants of victims—without direct cash payments.
  • The plan seeks to secure most of the $105 million in funding by June 1, 2026.
  • $60 million of the proposed funding would go toward building upgrades and redevelopment on Tulsa’s north side.
  • The City Council must approve any transfer of city-owned assets to the trust.

The Rest of The Story:

Tulsa Mayor Monroe Nichols IV, the city’s first Black mayor, announced a sweeping plan to raise $100 million through private donations as a form of reparations tied to the Tulsa Race Massacre.

Nichols emphasized that the trust would not issue direct payments but would fund scholarships, housing initiatives, and infrastructure projects primarily in North Tulsa.

“For 104 years, the Tulsa Race Massacre has been a stain on our city’s history,” Nichols said.

He linked the massacre and subsequent urban planning decisions, like highway construction and redlining, to ongoing economic disparity.

His vision is to use the trust to revitalize affected areas and restore what was lost in the historic Greenwood District.

Nichols’ effort parallels national conversations.

Just weeks ago, Rep. Summer Lee (D-PA) introduced the Reparations Now Resolution, demanding trillions in federal spending for Black Americans to address systemic racism rooted in slavery and segregation.

Commentary:

Every time we hear another politician promote reparations, it’s clear the goal isn’t justice—it’s division.

Monroe Nichols’ proposal is no different.

While wrapped in emotional language and historical references, it’s another attempt to keep racial wounds open for political capital.

Let’s be honest: the Tulsa Race Massacre was horrific.

But it happened in 1921.

No one alive today caused it or suffered directly from it.

America has spent decades correcting past injustices, with civil rights laws, affirmative action, and massive social spending.

How much is ever enough for those determined to keep the grievance industry alive?

Instead of focusing on real challenges—like crime, poor education systems, and economic stagnation in urban centers—leaders like Nichols push symbolic gestures that won’t fix anything.

North Tulsa doesn’t need more “committees” or “charitable trusts”; it needs leadership that stops pandering and starts delivering results.

And while Nichols claims there won’t be cash handouts, this is clearly a stepping stone.

These “non-cash” programs are just a backdoor path to the same goal: redistribution dressed up in moral rhetoric.

Meanwhile, the timing isn’t accidental.

His plan surfaces just as far-left figures like Summer Lee call for trillions in reparations on a national scale.

It’s a coordinated campaign built on fantasy economics and historical guilt.

America cannot survive if every grievance from a century ago becomes the basis for a financial claim today.

That path leads to resentment, endless demands, and social decay.

Voters need to reject these divisive agendas before they consume what’s left of national unity.

If someone wants to raise $100 million in private donations, fine.

But let them do it without dragging public trust or taxpayer assets into another racialized political scheme.

The Bottom Line:

Tulsa’s mayor is promoting a $100 million reparations trust to address the long-past tragedy of the 1921 massacre.

Though framed as a local charitable effort, it aligns with broader national calls for racial reparations.

These proposals don’t solve real problems—they stoke division and distract from effective governance.

It’s time our leaders focused on fixing today’s issues instead of endlessly re-litigating the past.

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