Page 2 Portland Observar February 6. 1961 EDITORIAL/OPINION Bite the bullet. The Reagan A d m in istra tio n is now in the process o f m aking c u ts in the 1981-1982 budget proposed by President Jim m y Carter. Before looking at Reagan's proposed cuts -- m o stly in hum an services -- we need to examine the document he is starting w ith. The 1981-1982 budget calls for expenditures of $739.3 billion, 25 per cent of which goes to the military. The military budget calls for a 14.2 per cent increase. This is the only part of the bud get th a t Reagan hopes to expand -- he would like to buy more weapons. Am ong the programs Reagan wants to cut are highw ays, synthetic fuel projects, c o m ­ m u n ity and econom ic developm ent grants, fo o d stam ps, u n e m p lo ym e n t in sura nce, student aid, public housing, etc. The Reagan administration would like to cut m ulti-purpose block grants to cities and "a c ­ tion g ra n ts " that are used to subsidize com ­ mercial developments by 30 per cent. Rather than build more public housing to offset the housing shortage, the Reagon administration wants to subsidize more old apartments. Although removing oil and gas cost control, Reagan wants to eliminate much of the sub­ sidy to transit systems. W hile denying the econom ic developm ent funds to provide more jobs, the Reagan people w a nt to decrease m oney available to une m ­ p loyed. R egulations over fo o d stam ps, m edical care and other social program s w ill eliminate many families now eligible -- making only the poorest of the poor eligible. The Carter b u d get is based on an une m ­ p lo y m e n t rate of 7.5 to 5 8 per c e n t, b u t carries a reduction of unemployment benefits. Carter left 340,000 public service jobs for the unemployed. He proposed $81 m illion for job training for youth and $31 for job training for those unem p loyed because of te ch n ica l changes. Reagan is expected to eliminate the public service jobs fo r victim s of short-term joblessness and to drop the youth proposal. The m ilita ry b u d get is a d iffe re n t s to ry . While the American people are being asked to cinch up their belts and live frugally, the Carter budget calls for $180 billion to maintain current sp e n d in g ; b o ls te r m ilita ry c o n s tru c tio n , o p e ra tions and m aintenance, research and development and to raise military pay. Added m oney w ill be sp e n t on re c ru itm e n t and tra in in g ; m ore on e q u ip m e n t to place in Europe; and massive increase in weapons pur­ chase. Reagon is expected to add to the funds for weapons. Among the weapons to be purchased w ith a $49.1 b illio n price tag are: the M X In te r Ballistic Missle at $3. billion; T rident Missile submarine at $3. billion; cruise missiles (laun­ ched from air, sea and ground) at $1.5 billion; B52 m odernization at $356 m illio n ; F15 and F16 at $2.8 billion; tanks at 1.1 billion; nuclear attack submarines at $779. million, etc. Hid­ den in the budget is the new "stealth plane". A to m ic warheads w ill cost $4.7 b illio n . A nd the Reagon adm instration w ill add to this ar- sonal. This massive and growing military budget — which is used to protect the economic interest of giant corporations abroad and to suppress many peoples of the world - is being torn form the pockets of those who are least able to pay. Of the $711.8 billion in tax revenue, only 9 per cent comes from the Corporate Income Tax. Individuals pay 74 per cent. So as you consider the real needs of the A m e rica n people -- jo b s , fo o d , h o u sin g , m edical care, e d u c a tio n -- do as th e y say. "B ite the bullet." Grants T hat c h ild re n lo o k lik e (h e ir parents is no coincidence. Parents pass on to th e ir c h ild re n , genes, genetic m a te ria l, in the fo rm o f chromosomes which determine the phyical characteristics the child w ill have: height, skin colour, colour o f hair, eyes, shape o f nose, blood type and the like. By the time the child is b orn, a ll these characteristics are already pre-determ ined. W hether the ch ild w ill resemble the fa th e r more than the m other w ill depend on whose genes are the m ore dominant. I f the m o th e r’ s genes fo r height are more dominant than the father’ s then the c h ild w ill resembe the mother more in terms o f height. On the o th e r hand, the fa th e r’ s eye colour may be more dom inant than the mother’ s in which case the child w ill have “ m o th e r’ s height and fa th e r’ s eyes.” Because so m any o the r fa c to rs beside genes are in ­ volved and also becasue each physical characteristic is determined by its own separate p a ir o f genes (one from the mother and one from the fa th e r), the c h ild may end up looking like neither parent which is not always indicative o f some “ fun­ ny business” on the side. S ickle C ell A n e m ia , is one o f those b lo o d diseases th a t parents can also pass on to th e ir ch ild re n. To understand the phenomenon o f this disease, one has to delve in to the science o f Genetics which is the branch o f science devoted to inheritance and all its ram ifications. A ll people can be divided into three basic categories on the basis o f their b lo o d types. Those w ith n o rm a l blood are said to have H b(a)H b(A ) blood (fo r a du lt hem oglobin - one H b(A) gene from the father and the other from the mother). Those with Sickle Cell Anemia are said to have Hb(S) H b(S) type b lo o d and the ones w ith H B (A ) HB(S), one good gene and one bad one, are said to Letters to the Editor_________ Employee got no help I believe that w hile raeists and " line in stitutions use em ploym ent i m eans ol c o n tro llin g Black ,•> ’I’le I Ins was tru e o f the P o rtla n d P ublic School d istric t durin g the short tune I was an employee there. I had been hired as a public relations specialist by the district’s public in­ fo rm a tio n d e p a rtm e n t (I’ll)) to work on the school's desegregation e ffo rts . I w orked from Jan u ary through March ot last year before I was tired. My superiors were co n ­ tent to assign me clerical duties at a eery high salary rather than allow me to carry out the responsibilities detailed in the job opening adver­ tisement. W hen I insisted on doing public- re la tio n s work o f a m ean in g fu l n a tu re , a n d , when I to ld my superiors our public relations to and with the Black citizens of the district should include more than expensive -- but separate -- dinner meetings, I was first isolated then tire d on grounds I was incompetent I rep o rted to and also appealed ins tiring to the board ot education I had worked with them as a group Mid I had previously confided to three ol them -- Herb C aw thorne. Bill Scott and Joe Rcikc -- ms suspicions that the PI I) ol I ice was in te n tio n a lly not pro v id in g the board with the professional skills of which we were capable 11 ollow me acting S u p e rin te n d e n t I enw u k 's a p p o in tm e n t by the b o a rd , the d ire c to r ol the I’ ll) o ffic e was removed.) I especially co m m u n icated my co n cern s to H erb < a w th o rn e ; he initially sh ared my belie! ot the inadequacy and unresponsiveness ol the PH ) office. But shortly belote my te rm in a tio n , Mi ( a w th o rn e said “ I was on my ow n.” W henever the issue o f my d ism issal cam e b e lo re the b o a rd . ( aw th o rn e, Rcike and Scott c o n ­ tin u a lly a ffirm e d the d istrict a d ­ m in istra to rs’ actions. Steve Buel, who is passed o tt as a liberal, look pains to com plain the district ad m in is tta to rs had not adeq u ately docum ented the evidence to tustilv in v I i t mg. I hen he voted a w bite hot al t i t iiiaiiou. «»ills Wally Priestly voted against ms le t in it ia t io n . I understand why the other board members voted to a ffir m my dism issal. A n d I am p ro u d that W a lly P rie s tly d id not buy that policy o f control. But, I don’ t know why H erb C a w th o rn e voted tim e a lte r tim e th a t 1 be dism issed or tailed to ask - as I suggested - that the board investigate my charges. Surely a Black vote in a raging sea o f in s titu tio n a liz e d w h ite racism would have been heard in this com­ munity. I w ill not be surprised i f there is no substantive conse rva tive o p ­ p o s itio n to M r. C a w th o rn e as he seeks election to an o ffice to which we could not appoint him. Portland Observer The Portland Observer (USPS 969 6801 is pubh.hed every Thur»- day by Exie Publiihmg Company. Inc . 2201 North Killmosworth Portend Oregon 97217 Post OH.ce e o , 3137, Portland, Oregon 97208 Second class postage paid at Portland, Oregon Subscriptions »10 00 per year in Tri County area Postm aster Send address changes to the Portland Observer, P .0 Box 3137 Portland. Oregon 97208 The Portland Observer was founded in October of 1970 by Alfred Lee Henderson The Portland Observer is a champion of tustice, equality and liberation an alert guard against social evils, a thorough analyst and critic of discriminatory practices and policies, a sentmal to warn of impending and existing racist trends and practices; and a defender against persecution and oppression Bruce Broussard Editor/Publisher WtMM« Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association MEMBER NHWA peb AtiocitHon ■ Foundoa 1M5 feeling weak. The patient had also been having palpitations and short­ ness o f breath and had been partici­ p atin g less and less in a th le tic ac­ tiv itie s as he had been in previous years. To date, apart from treating the frequent crises, no cure fo r Sickle Cell disease has been found yet. The fact that it is a hereditary disease has made it that much more d iffic u lt to arrest. It is by no means restricted e xclu sively to Blacks since it has been found among M editerranean people such as the S icilia n s, C o r­ sicans, Greeks, Italians and others b o rd e rin g on the M e d ite rra n e a n . The incidence is much higher among Black people th o u g h , w ith an estim ated fo u r o f every thousand Blacks in th is c o u n try having the disease and one in twelve having the tra it. The o n ly suggestion th a t the m edical e stab lish m en t has fo r eradicating Sickle Cell disease is for every couple c o n te m p la tin g m arria g e to undergo genetic screening which is a process where o n e ’ s genetic m ake-up is d e te r­ m ined. Once one has obtained h is / her genetic h isto ry and that o f the intended spouse, the tw o can then decide w hether they w ill m a rry or not. From their genetic charts, they can be able to te ll w hat sort o f children they are likely to have. The idea behind th is lo g ic is to discourage people w ho c a rry the tr a it fro m m a rry in g and so the sickled genes w ould die w ith them. Were th is to happen, the gene fo r the Sickle Cell w ould eventually be w iped o u t. The weakness o f th is a rg um en t o f course is th a t it deprives carriers o f, that most fu n ­ damental o f rights: the right to have c h ild re n . N onetheless, genetic screening is a good idea before one takes the plunge and gathers enough courage to walk down the aisle. Next W eek: A fric a Dairy II. Thinking about Reagan fli- Dr. Mann in# Marable I)ear I diioi have the tra it. This th ird category carries the potential fo r passing on S ickle C ell A n e m ia to th e ir o f f ­ spring depending on the blood type, genes, o f the spouse. I f an H b (A ) H b (A ) person marries another H B (A ) H b (A ) per­ son, the c h ild w ill have H b (A ) H b (A ) type blood and be perfectly normal. W ith an H b(A ) Hb(S), they w ill be carriers. When tw o carriers Hb( A) Hb(S) marry, every time they have a baby, there is one chance in fo u r that the c h ild w ill be norm a l, one chance in fo u r that it w ill have the disease and one in tw o that it w ill be a carrier. Iro n ic a lly , S ickle C ell A nem ia disease evolved as a defense mechanism against another disease, m a la ria , w hich a ffe c te d m ostly people that live w ith in the tropics. In parts o f West A frica and Central A fr ic a , the incidence o f m a la ria , caused by the tse tse fly was very high and, over the years, people developed the sickled gene as the body’ s defense against malaria. B lood cells are n o rm a lly round and biconcave and they w ou ld th e re fo re flo w easily th ro u g h the body’ s blood vessels. In the case o f Sickle Cell Anem ia, the red blood cells acquire a sickle shape w hich impedes th e ir passage th ro ug h the c a p illa rie s . W hen th is happens, some organs o f the body such as the kidneys and heart can be deprived o f oxygen and, in the past, victim s o f the disease used to die from renal fa ilu re , heart fa ilu re , th ro m bo sis and in fe c tio n . Persons w ith Sickle C ell A n em ia p e rio d ic a lly go in to shock when the percentage o f sickled blood cells in the body is ab­ norm ally high. The disease was first described by James Herrick, a Chicago physician in 1904 when he examined a Black college student w ho had come to him c o m p la in in g o f a cough and fe ver, a headache, dizziness and The real problems of the minority population will be viewed and presented from the perspective of their causality unrestrained ano chronoically en trenched racism N ational and international arrangements that prolong and increase the oppression of Third World peoples shall be considered m the context of the.r ex p'oitation and manipulation by the colonial nations, including the United States and their relationship to this nation s historical treatment of its Black population 283 2486 N ational A dvertising R epresentative A m a lg a m ated Publishers Inc N ew York C. Eddie Edmondson 1st Place Community Service ONPA 1973 1st Place Best Ad Result ONPA 1973 5th Place Best Editorial ONPA 1973 Honorable Mention Herrick Editorial Award NNA ,973 2nd Place Best Editorial 3rd Place Community Leade ship ONPA 1975 3rd Place Community Leadership ONPA 1978 3rd Place In depth -.overage ONPA 1979 ..o ’“ - N ,» i» . ' S tò ffe ' At a number o f levels, the election o f Ronald Reagan presents serious theorectical and practical questions to the forces o f Progressive Am erica. The Right W ing in white LJ.S. politics clearly believes that it has re a listic so lu tio n s to the co n ­ tin u in g burden o f in fla tio n , high taxes, and high u n e m p lo ym e n t. W hether to da y’ s solutions become to m o rro w 's illusions — as I believe they w ill — can only be determined by h isto ry. M eanw hile, the Black and H ispa nic m ovem ents, F em i­ nists, E n v iro n m e n ta lis ts , C iv il Libertarians, Anti-N uclear activists and others must begin the necessary process o f c o n s tru c tin g an a lte r ­ native national program o f pub lic policies that has the p o te n tia l fo r winning m ajoritarian support. In th is lig h t, several hundred people met on January 21 in New York C ity ’ s Lotos Club to discuss a progressive response to Reagan and Reaganism. The guest speakers were W illia m W in p is in g e r, head o f the International Machinists union and one o f the m ost lib e ra l trade unionists in the c o u n try ; M ichael H arrin g to n , the chairperson o f the D em ocra tic S o cia list O rg a n iz in g C o m m itte e ; B a rry C om m on er, noted environm ental scientist and fo rm e r P residential candidate fo r the Citizens’ Party; Carol Bellamy, the President o f the New York C ity C o u n c il; and m yself. V ic to r N avasky, e d ito r o f The N a tio n , America’ s oldest magazine o f public o p in io n and social th o u g h t, moderated the conversation. We were a ll asked a sim ple question: What now? Although the audience was somewhat in fo rm a l and o v e rw h e lm in g ly lib e ra l in p o litic a l o p in io n , there was sbme tension in the air. M y brief remarks that evening, in which a small sec­ tio n appears below , were designed to push progressives from a defen­ sive strategy against the New Right to w a rd an u n q u a lifie d p o lic y o f constructive resistance and political empowerment: “ In the past seven days, there have been tw o public events which in m any ways are sym bolic o f the fu tu re p o litic a l d ire c tio n o f Am erica. One event represented the best in us, the other, the worst in us. One spoke to the h is to ric struggle for civil rights and human liberation over the restrictive legal constraints o f Jim Crow and racial in ju s tic e ; and the o th e r, a cerem ony advan­ cing the selfish interests o f big cor­ porations at the expense o f unem­ ployed, blue collar workers, Blacks, Hispanics, and other oppressed sec­ tors o f American society. The first event was, o f course, the demonstrations held throughout the n a tio n in h on or o f D r. M a rtin L u th e r K in g, J r., the second, was the inauguration o f a form er movie a cto r whose sole claim to p u b lic fame was his performance in “ Bed­ time fo r B onzo." This is a man who declared th a t 85 percent o f A m e ric a ’ s p o llu tio n “ comes from tre e s ." T his is a man w ho th in k s th a t we can meet the econom ic challenges o f the 1980s bv rushing blindly backward into the 18th cen­ tu ry w o rld o f A dam S m ith — Ronald Reagan. Ronald Reagan is fond o f quoting F ranklin Roosevelt. The reason for th is can be fo u n d in elem entary science te xtb o o ks -- opposites a t­ tra c t. Reagan is e ve ryth in g Roosevelt was not. Reagan's “ New B e g in n in g s " are s im p ly w arm ed- o v e r-W a rre n G. H a rd in g : the politics that says “ W hat’ s good for G eneral M o to rs is good fo r A m erica." In his inaugural address, Reagan called fo r re d u ctio n s in p u b lic spendings - without mentioning the c ritic a l hum an im pact th a t these reductions would have in the social services and edu catio n. He called fo r “ rem oving the roadblocks that have slowed o u r econom y and reduced p r o d u c tiv ity ,” by an across-the-board tax cut that favors private enterprise more than the in ­ terests o f the p u b lic generally. Reagan has prom ised to p ro tect freedom across the w o rld - and does th is by b rin g in g in to his a d ­ m in is tra tio n men lik e R ichard A lle n , w ho served as a paid a po lo gist fo r Portuguese c o lo n ia l interests in A fric a ; and by appoint­ ing women like Jean K irkp a trick at the United Nations who in a recent Commentary article implied that we ought to support L a tin Am erican a u th orita rian regimes that oppress the human rights o f their citizens. So the new President calls fo r m ore freedom -fre e do m fo r the corporations to fatten-up their bot­ tom lines at the expense o f unem­ p lo ym e n t lines; freedom fro m b e n e fic ia l federal gove rn m e ntal re g u la tio n s on the e n v iro n m e n t; freedom from what Reaganites call the so-called e x p lo ita tio n o f labor over c a p ita l, o f w e lfa re m others over c o rp o ra te executives, o f government over m ultina tio na l cor­ porations, o f Blacks and Hispanics over w hites, o f wom en over men. T o R onald Reagan, th is “ New B e g in n in g ” represents a neo­ co n se rva tive version o f the New Deal. To the rest o f us, it represents a raw deal. Reagan also likes to quote K a rl M a rx . Som etim e ago he asserted that the federal incom e tax was a creation o f Karl Marx. As steeped in h is to ric a l m ate ria lism as o u r new c h ie f executive is, he m ust su re ly reca ll w hat M a rx w ro te in The Eighteenth Brumaire. A ll historical persons and events “ appear twice, the first time as tragedy, the second time as fa rc e ." Because i f F .D .R .’ s u n fu ll fille d legacy o f social change and progress is trag ic, then surely R onald Reagan’ s R ight W in g parody o f Roosevelt is a farce. Many on the left are asking: What comes next? Ronald Reagan sits in the Oval O ffice; James W att is busy th in k in g up ways to s trip m ine the entire state o f Wyoming; A l Haig is conjuring up a Com m unist Menace in G renada and El S a lvad or to ju s t if y U .S ., o vert o p e ra tio n s in these co u n trie s . Keynesian econom ics is dead; can the New Deal-W elfare state be far behind? L ib e ra lis m has been at a dead end, p o litic a lly , since the re p u d ia tio n o f the Johnson A d ­ m in istratio n in the 1960s. We must stop d efe nd ing those social program s we know w ill not w o rk , and begin by pushing the legitimate d ia lo g u e on p u b lic p o lic y issues to w a rd the d e m o cra tic le ft. We must stop re s p o n d )^ to the public- in itia tiv e s o f the R ig h t, and a r­ ticulate a principled agenda that is roo ted in c u ltu ra l p lu ra lis m and so cia lism , in a com m on sense language that A m e rican w o rk in g people can understand and support. W c must a rtic u la te a domestic- agenda fo r fu ll e m p lo y m e n t, fo r tough environment regulations, for restrictions on the Hight o f capital from innercities. fo r a ffirm a tive ac­ tio n fo r wom en and ethnic- m inorities. This w ill be no simple task in an era o f low ered e xpectations and even low er p o litic a l m orale. M any have already said that the time is not (Please turn to Page 3 col 3)