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About Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current | View Entire Issue (April 30, 1981)
Paga 2 Portland Observar April 30. 1961 A place called Brixton EDITORIAL/OPINION Convicting the innocent The statement of police Chief Bruce Baker that "I d o n 't know of a single case which has in vo lve d a to ta lly in n o c e n t p e rs o n ” w h ile d iscussin g the pra ctice s o f p o lice o ffic e rs p la n tin g n a rco tics on suspe cts, o b ta in in g search warrants illegally, and com m iting per jury in court to insure conviction, is extremely distressing. w n e th e r the p ra ctice was used aga inst known drug dealers, suspected drug dealers or innocent persons is of no consequence. The manufacture of evidence to convict a person - who according to our Constitution must be in nocent until proven guilty - negates not only th a t in d iv id u a l's c iv il rig h ts b u t the e n tire c rim in a l ju s tic e system . To give even the slig h e st excuse fo r th is p ra ctice aga inst anyone is to negate our entire system of laws - our entire system of government. The slo ppy p o licie s and p ra ctice s th a t allowed this abuse of power by some police of- ficers is not news. It was all b ro u g h t to lig h t over a year ago in the Christopher trial. That it has taken an entire year to make procedural changes is still a mystery. To com pound that fact by even the slighest hint that perhaps the illegal activities of the officers involved were not so bad after all cannot be tolerated. Chief Baker needs to explain his th o u g h ts m ore adequately and insure the p u b lic th a t c o n s p ira c y a g a in s t c itiz e n s w ill n o t be tolerated w ithin the police departm ent. The City will be faced w ith m ultiitude of law suits and hundreds of persons c o n v ic te d of drug crimes will seek reversals. The City needs to supply them and their attorneys w ith all per- tinant inform ation im m ediately - w ith o u t legal hassles about w h ich is and w h a t is n o t c o n fid e n tia l - so th a t in n o ce n t persons w ill n o t have to spend more m onths in jail while a tto r neys make repeated efforts to obtain records. Cutting the pie This Friday the Committee on Elections and R e p p o rtio n m e n t w ill make its fin a l re co m m e n d a tio n s on how M u ltn o m a h C o unty should be divided among thirteen legislative districts. Ten years ago the area of N orth/N ortheast Portland that includes the largest proportion of Black residents was divided, and portions of it were placed in four d iffe re n t legislative d is tricts. The theory then - and the theory now being espoused by those w h o p ro m o te a sim ilar division this tim e - is th a t Blacks w ill have more influence in Salem by having a little influence on four legislators than they would if they controlled the election of one legislator who would be responsible to them. The other im plication is that by being divided into three districts, Blacks could potentially elect three Black representatives. The history of the last ten years should refute that claim. Legislators involved in this decision m ust put aside their own interests and put aside the interests of those Blacks and whites who seek to enhance their own power by preventing the development of a strong Black voice in Port land and those Blacks and whites who seek a district that would further their own ambitions. They must look at the com m unity in light of their own rules - that no com m unity of com mon interest be divided and that the political influence of a minority group not be diluted. Associations became the nucleus of the Model C ities C itizens A d v is o ry B oard th a t w as responsible for planning and operation of the Model Cities Program. W hen Model Cities was phased out, the board was incorporated as the N ortheast C o a litio n of N e igh borhood s. The P ie d m o n t and C o n co rd ia N e ig h b o rh o o d A s s o c ia tio n s jo in e d in 1974 and 1976. The C o a litio n a lo n g w ith the N e ig h b o rh o o d A sso ciatio ns - co n tin u e s to be the p lanning body for this com m unity and is so recognized by the City of Portland. The c o m m u n ity is w o rk in g to g e th e r to re b u ild its e c o n o m ic base, p ro v id e a m ore liveable environment, meet the social needs of the residents and develop c o m m u n ity pride. The Union Avenue R edevelopm ent Program and the e ffo rts o f the In n e r N o rth e a s t Economic Development Council to attract new business developm ent are examples of these efforts. By Fungai Kumbula Th • scene could have been Watts, CLos Angeles); H arlem , (New Y o rk); L ib e rty C ity , (M ia m i); W rig h tsville , (G eorgia); Soweto, (South A fric a ) or any other such place. In fa ct, as the ruins lay smouldering after the two days o f rioting, they were referring to it as " th e new H a rle m .” The victim s were the same; the system the same; the grievances the same; the “ shock” the same and the response the same. The only thing different was the locale - a section o f London called Brixton. It also started out basically the same way; a “ m inor” incident that sparked o f f the biggest rio t and most extensive orgy o f destruction England had seen since the Nazis were bombing London in W W II. B rixto n , a spraw ling London ghetto made up mostly o f West In dian Blacks, Indians, Pakistanis and other East Asians, finally exploded as if on cue. To a country that for so long has sought to hide its racial problems or sweep them under the rug, this was a most embrassing oc curence. A nybody who knew the plight o f these immigrants was sur prised not so much that it happened but that it took this long. Like the other powder kegs throughout the USA, South A frica and other areas plagued by racial strife, Brixton was just waiting for the spark to ignite the fuse. Umemployment statistics in this section o f the capital o f England range from an o ffic ia l low o f 27- 40% to a more realistic street figure o f 67-80% . C om pounding that is the endless clash between the police and the com m unity. Incidents o f charges o f police b ru ta lity and harassment have escalated sig n ifica n tly over the past several months as Brixton has been targeted a “ high crim e” area and been assigned the largest contingent o f P°'>land. Oregon 97217 Post Office Box 3137. Portland Oregon 97208 Second class postage paid at Portland. Oregon The Portland Observer is a champion of justice, equality and liberation; an alert guard against social evils a thorough analyst and critic of discriminatory practices and policies a sentinal to warn of impending and existing racist trends and practices, and a defender against persecution and oppression. Bruce Broussard Ed i tor/Publisher = = MB • MCMKft Oregon ^H w s p a p e r ” ■ jfl ■ Publishers e»1 Association MEMBER N The real problems of the minority population will be viewed and presented from the perspective of their causality unrestrained ano chronoically entrenched racism N ational and in ternation al = 1 e W p A per arrangements that prolong and increase the oppression of Third World peoples shall be considered in the context of their ex ploitation 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 ep resentative A m algam ated Publishers. Inc N e w York Black people can never rio t on their own; they need some “ outside agitator” to tell them that they do not have a jo b , th e ir homes are (ailing apart; they are getting short changed. They need someone else to tell them that they too are entitled to freedom, justice and equality like every other citizen, right? One lesson that seems to have been missed is that while Hitler was the leader of the Nazis, he was by no means the whole movement himself. A lot o f people were just as culpable for the excesses o f Nazism as those who actually pulled the switches because they stood by and did nothing. The rio tin g in B rixton under scored one thing; that Black people are suitering not just in this country but the world over - any place where they are not in control o f their lives. On the other hand, it was en couraging that after the rioting in Brixton, a number o f white citizens stood up to condemn police harass ment and to point out some o f the real reasons for the disturbances. On the other hand, it was discouraging that these dem on strations look place on the back drop o f increasing attacks on A fte r Soweto, W atts, L ib e rty C ity, and now Brixton, we all cer tainly hope that personkind (it used to be called “ m ankind” before we were better enlightened) has learned to be more tolerant o f those o f us who do not necessarily look like us. It not, that hell that was supposed to be way out somewhere back o f beyond may be right here amongst us betore we could say, “ I ’ m not guilty.” “ For evil to triumph, it is enough that good men do n o th in g ,” Ed mond Burke. By Norman Hill A . Phillip Randolph Institute The elim ination o f the legal aid program w ill result in fewer such suits being brought to the courts and in fewer direct benefits to workers and minorities. In the distant past lawsuits were relatively straightforw ard matters and the legal system was turned to only as a m atter o f last resort. Today, w ith the increased com plexity o f government regulations and laws, access to inform ed legal advice and legal aid is an absolute necessity. I f the poor are to challenge eviction orders, or learn how legally to withhold rent from a landlord who refused to supply heat or hot water, the advice o f a lawyer is indispensable. M oreover, it the poor seek to dissolve a marriage through divorce, such procedures are often so complicated and costly as to be beyond the means o f low- income Americans. The legal aid program has also in tervened in behalf o f unemployed workers denied w elfare benefits, ille g itim a te children, and Social Security recipients who couldn’ t get cases reopened fo r government hearings. This list o f issues hardly suggests that legal aid programs are being run by ultra-leftist extremists. Rather it suggests that the legal aid system is tru ly defending the in terests o f the poor. Our system has prided itself on its basis in equal protection under the law. The unfortunate consequence o f President Reagan’ s proposed elim in a tio n o f the legal Services Corporation is that it w ill make the courts accessible only to those who are well o ff. Putting the poor o u t side the law w ill lead to greater bit- terness and alienation. It w ill serve to exacerbate class and racial ten sions. Conservatives have claimed that well-intentioned programs designed to deal with poverty have often resulted in consequences more harmful than the benefits that have been provided. What we w ill learn from the Reagan era is that the elimination of certain government programs may have consequences which are in the long-run more costly and damaging than the im m ediate budgetary savings that they bring. Roy Stubbs (C o n tin u e d fro m page 1 col. 6) Black Studies Department, George Rankins from the Urban League, and Grant H igh’ s Gospel Chorus. Everyone’ s glad that’ s happened.” Never one to be satisfied w ith what is accom plished, Stubbs is already starting on a master’s degree in music and claims, “ A fte r I get Catlin Gabel’ s music program on its feet, I ’ d like to work on a Black concert choir in Portland. I guess I ’ d like to go back south and teach in a college someday, but I ’ ve got things to do here first.” Black editor Frederick Douglass published the first issue of his abolitionist newspaper, The North Star, in Rochester, N Y , in 1847 Best Ad Result ONPA 1973 Subscriptions 1 ,0 00 per year in Tri County area P ostm aster: Send address changes to the Portland Observer, P O Box 3137, Portland, Oregon 97206 The Portland Observer was founded in October of 1970 by Alfred Lee Henderson m inorities by gangs o f neo-Nazis some o f whom are barely in their teens. The rioting also gave vent to louder calls fo r the forced re p a tria tio n o f all non-w hite B ritons. Doesn’ t that also sound disturbingly familiar? When w ill people ever learn to stop looking for scapegoats for the failures o f governments to rule and start in vo lvin g all citizens in the search fo r solutions to these failures? Let’s just suppose that the extremists succeed in their plans to repatriate all non-w hite Britons, who w ill they blame next fo r the next failures? The Irish? The Scot- ts? The Turks? The Aussies? I t ’ s been three decades since H itle r faded from the scene, but with the recent upsurge in the Kian, fascist and other racial “ supremacist” ac tiv itie s , one wonders whether another H ilter is not about to rise. Maybe in some “ more respectful” form? Denying justice to the poor While President Reagan’ s budget cuts will eliminate a number o f vital In the last couple of years a new sense of programs, few o f the cuts w ill have more far-reaching consequences com m unity has developed - largely due to the than the proposed elimination o f the w ork of the Black U nited Front. Some sm all Legal Services Corporation. battles have been w on. A school b o yco tt in Created in the 1960s in the con v o lv in g 85 p e rc e n t of the d is tr ic t's B lack text o f the Great Society, and the students, and a recent m arch in volving 1500 War on Poverty, the Legal Services C orporation has been he most sig person s, is p ro o f o f th e c o n c e rn o f B lack nificant instrument the poor possess people fo r th e ir c o m m u n ity . It is also p ro o f to insure adequate representation th a t w h en a llo w e d to com e to g e th e r fo r a before the courts. A number o f The area of N o rth /N o rth e a s t P ortland co m m o n purpo se, Black people can e ffe c t President Reagan’ s u ltra co m m o n ly referred to as " A lb in a '' or the change. conservative advisers have suggested ''Black com m unity" has a common history. It The drawing of a new legislative district will that the federally-funded legal aid is a interracial community that was formed out either enhance the e ffo rts of the Black c o m program is a hotbed o f radicalism of racism - the refusal to sell or rent to Blacks and le ftis t p o litic s . In tru th , the munity to organize, to define its own goals and program’ s 6,000 lawyers who serve in other areas of the City. It is a com m unity to w ork to g ether to atta in those goals - or it 330 com m unities througho ut the that has unique problem s: discrim ination in w ill be a move to dilute that effo rt. There are U .S ., are involved most often in education, unemployment, police harassment, those who fear allowing the Black com m unity such c ritic a l issues as landlord- redlining, neglect. It is a com m unity that has a strong voice in Salem - a voice that w ill ad tenant relations, welfare rights, and been devastated by state sponsored removal dress the deep econom ic and social problems civil rights. of its residential areas for highways, hospitals Over the years m illions o f poor facing the residents of the com m unity, to deal and w orking poor have benefited and public buildings. w ith the discrim ination that still prevades our from this legal aid netw ork. The It is also a co m m u n ity th a t is s ta rtin g to State. poor have used the system to build - a com munity that is developing a sense But if the legislators now in office are true to challenge improper dismissals from of pride. their ow n rules fo r reapportionm ent they w ill w ork, la n d lo rd harassment and This com m unity was the first in the City of find that they must draw a district that w ill in building-code violations, and dis P o rtla n d to develop a n e tw o rk of n e ig h corporate the Eliot, Boise, H u m b o ld t, P ied crimination in employment. An im p o rta n t instrum ent by borhood organizations - co m m u nity people m o n t, W o o d la w n , V e rno n and King n e ig h which m illions o f Americans have together to effect the common good. In 1968 borhoods and as much of the Irvington, Sabin indirectly benefited is the class ac the Irv in g to n , Sabin, V ernon, King, E liot, and C o n co rd ia as is po ssib le u nd er the tio n suit. In such suits, often Boise, H um boldt, W oodlaw n Neighborhood numerical restrictions. brought by legal aid lawyers, judges do not sim ply resolve a single dispute but impose remedial orders 1st Place Community Service which have the effect o f improving ONPA ,973 the lives o f large numbers o f The Portland Observer IUSPS 969 680I is published everv Thurs Americans. day by Ex« Publishing Company, Inc . 2201 North Killmgsyvorth 1st Place Portland Observer police than any other community in all o f England. Adding insult to in ju ry is the notorious “ sus” laws which empower the police to stop and search anyone “ who looks suspicious and m ight be seen as lo o kin g like he may com m it a c rim e .” C om m unity leaders and residents in Brixton charge that this law almost always is invoked only in cases in vo lvin g Black people and other minorities. Police and o ffic ia l denials o f these charges o f racism n o tw ith standing, a look at the number o f inmates in British penal institutions shows a disporportionate represent ation o f minorities. O f course to us, whether here in Oregon or in South A fric a or N aim bia, this should come as no surprise, right? Who do you think the police blame for these riots? Why, “ outside agitators” , of course, isn’t that the same thing that is mouthed every time Black people demonstrate, strike or riot? 5th Place Best Editorial ONPA 1973 Honorable Mention Herrick Editorial Award NNA 1973 2nd Place Best Editorial 3rd Place Community Leadership ONPA 1976 3rd Place Community Leadership ONPA 1978 3rd Place In depth coverage ONPA 1979 > NäTlOAtÄl Be concerned! Be informed!! know the facts!!! SUBSCRIBE TODAY! ONLY $10 PER YEAR Name......................................................................................... . 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