Bit of both.
I'm not really a supporter of reparations. I don't think they make sense, because they're not a direct amends. The people paying for the reparations aren't the ones who committed the wrongs, and the people receiving the reparations aren't the ones who were wronged. It's not justice, it's visiting the sins of the father onto the sons for seven generations... only it's not even the actual father and the actual sons, it's more like visiting the sins of a hypothetical father onto any sons who vaguely fit the general description of "has a penis and had a father at some point in their life".
Additionally, I find the arguments for reparations to be lacking in substance, and predominantly motivated by emotion. Personally, I get a bit miffed about the continuing discrimination against women that seems to be perfectly acceptable to people who are quite ready to take up arms for minorities. Yes, I know it's a bit selfish, but frankly, I'm a bit tired of women always being expected to take a back seat and place their priorities lower on the totem pole than any other group's issues are.
None of that, however, denies that black people, in general, have been mistreated and disenfranchised and discriminated against. They have, and quite blatantly so. Those inequities in the system need to be fixed.
I don't personally think that cutting someone a check actually fixes the problem, or even remotely addresses it. It's as naïve as thinking that giving people free money will "fix" poverty because then those people won't be "in poverty any more. It glosses over the causes and the systemic issues that trap people in poverty, it ignores the lack of jobs and prospects, it sweeps under the rug the massive impact of childhood disparity in educational and nutritional quality as well as parental stress.
It's not a solution. It's a pay-off. It's the guilty-white-guy version of cutting a check to the mistress so she won't tell your wife about the affair.