Page 4 Portland Observer, October 13, 1982 Mississippi racism EDITORIAL/OPINION By Dr. Manning Marable ' 'From The Grassroots ” Arms race extends to space Tw enty-five years ago the U .S .S .R .’s Sputnik opened the door to space. The benefits o f space exploration have been le gio n— com puter tech­ n o lo g y , m edicine, p a cka g in g , b u ild in g m a­ terials, com m unications, etc. B ut there is also a dangerous aspect to space e x p lo ra tio n — the spread o f the arms race to space. Already the U.S. has spent over $60 b illio n on m ilita ry space research. Caspar W einberger re­ cently ordered the A ir Force to develop by 1985 weapons capable o f destroying a ll Soviet satel­ lites. G eneral Lew A lle n , head o f the A ir F orce General S ta ff, on June 21 announced the crea­ tion o f a U.S. m ilita ry Space Com m and that w ill coordinate all U.S. m ilita ry activités in space, in­ cluding the spaceship C olum bia. A lle n also an­ nounced the establishment o f three new research laboratories whose task w ill be to develop the “ k ille r satellite.” The A ir Force hopes to have k ille r satellites— satellites designed to d estroy other satellites— which can be launched fro m F- 15 fig h te r jets by 1987. The A ir Force w ill also Part I o f a two-part series b u ild a space c o n tro l center at P eterson A ir Force Base near C o lo ra d o Springs, w here the Space Comm and is located. The C olum bia o ffic ia lly started the exploita­ tio n o f outer space fo r m ilita ry use. Its fo u rth flig h t, in July, included secret experiments p ro ­ gram m ed by the Pentagon. These included an improved telescope designed to detect missiles or other objects in outer space. T w enty-five o f the 70 planned spaceflights o f the C o lu m b ia and sim ilar ships through 1987 w ill be under the con­ tro l o f the Pentagon, while nearly 50 per cent o f those th ro u g h 1994 w ill have a secret m ilita ry purpose. W hen Ronald Reagan welcomed the C o lu m ­ bia home fro m its fo u rth voyage he announced that the C olum bia is part o f the nation’s plans to develop better satellites. W h ile the people o f the n a tio n and o f the w orld are pleading fo r an end to the arms race, a nuclear freeze, the U .S . is p re p a rin g to take these deadly weapons in to space. Thug? Ronald Reagan called the P olish banned the S o lid a rity u n io n and workers cannot strike against their “ thugs.” N o t lo n g ago Reagan had th e leaders w ho said P o lis h government w orkers Fired and th e ir leaders arrested, had th e ir u n io n d e c e rtifie d and said g o ve rn m e n t workers cannot strike. W ho is the “ thug” ? a ir c o n tr o l For millions o f blacks living in the rural counties and small (owns o f the "N ew South, the political terror of Jim Crow and racial exploitation which sparked the C iv il Rights M ovem ent o f the 1950s still exist. Nowhere is this more vivid than in the sovereign state o f Mississippi. The root o f black poverty and po­ litical powerlessness in Mississippi is found in the economics o f racism. Perhaps the best way to analyze the dynamics o f econom ic underde­ velopment is be reviewing data on black agriculture in the region since World W ar II. In 1949, black farm ­ ers owned 80,842 commercial cotton- producing farm s in M ississippi’ s Black Belt region, about 66 per cent of all cotton farms in the state. D ur­ ing the 1950s and 1960s, "agribusi­ ness” — corpo ratio ns which went into agricu ltu ral p ro d u ctio n — ag­ gressively pushed thousands o f small rural farmers out o f business. By 1964, the num ber o f black- owned cotton farm s declined to 21,939 in the state. O nly five years later, the fig u re dropped to only 1,000 black-ow ned cotton farm s. Since the C iv il Rights M ovem ent, the number o f black farm residences has fallen still further, both in M is­ sissippi and across the country. N a­ tionally, between 1970 and 1980, the black farm population declined by 65 per cent com pared to a 22 per cent drop am ong w hite farm ers. Part o f the reason for the process is the extreme d iffic u lty which black farmers have in obtaining capital. A ccording to a 1982 U .S . C iv il Rights Commission report, “ Many insurance companies, which finance the bulk o f farm loans, require loans to be at least $100,000. While com m ercial banks lend lesser amounts, they often require repay­ ment w ith in 5 years, a term too short fo r the average black land owner. Federal land banks tend to require amounts o f collateral that are too great for blacks to q u alify." The federal government has done little to reverse the decline in black farming. For example, the Farmers H om e A d m in is tra tio n (F m H A ) which is the principal public lending agency for farmers, lent $6.3 billion in fiscal year 1980 and almost $7 bil­ lion in fiscal year 1981 to farmers nationwide, l oans to blacks were so few, however, that in March, 1981, black M ississippi farm ers helped stage a 21-day sit-in at one F m H A county office to protest discrimina­ tion. From 1979 to 1980, the num­ ber o f black F m H A com m ittee members nationally dropped from 427 to 257, while total com mittee membership rose 5,863 to 5,966. In M ississippi, (he num ber o f black F m H A com m ittee members de­ clined 53 per cent, 48 to 21, from 1979 to 1980. Between 1980 and 1981, not surprisingly, the number o f farm ownership loans to blacks in Mississippi fell from 101 to 30. U n ­ der intense criticism, the Carter ad­ ministration authorized the F m H A in 1980 to initiate a project especial­ ly "geared to reach small farm en­ terprises w ith gross annual in ­ comes as low as $3,000.” in Missis­ sippi and in six other Southern states. However, no loans were ever made under the p ro je ct, and few black p o te n tial borrow ers ever learned about the p ro je ct's exist­ ence. Under Reagan, in December, 1981, the F m H A discontinued the program. Losing their lan d, many ru ral black merchants and potential busi­ nesspersons tried to in itia te com ­ mercial establishments in Jackson, Greenville, and smaller Mississippi cities. W ith rare exceptions, they were unable to compete with larger, white-owned firnu and quickly went out o f business. In G reenville, for instance, a middle-sized city with about 38,000 black residents in 1977, 179 o f the town's 247 black- owned firms do not possess a single paid em ployee. G re en ville's 24 black-owned construction compan­ ies w ith o u t paid employees earn annual average gross receipts o f $7,790. The five black-owned real estate firms in the city have average gross receipts o f $ 5 ,0 0 0 . T he 68 black selective services without em­ ployees collected an average gross of $11,320 in 1977, according to the Bureau o f the Census. The process of underdevelopment, therefore, a f­ flicts (he nascent urban black m id­ dle class as well as all farmers, and their collective economic plight has actually become worse with desegre­ gation. The current economic difficulties of rural Mississippe"blacks are sym­ bolized by Mound Bayou. By 1979 the a ll-b lac k tow n was over $133,(XX) in debt. W hen the town lost a c ivil lawsuit ju d g m en t that year which totalled an a d d itio n a l $59,(MX), bankruptcy seemed em i­ nent. Banks froze the c ity 's ac­ counts, and the 19 acres o f city propery, including a park, the city's public swimming pool, and its mu­ nicipal building, were sold at auc­ tion. Southern Bell cut o ff the city’s telephones because o f an unpaid $1.700 bill, and Mississippi Power and Light threatened to halt city ser­ vices. In April, 1982, a Memphis ra dio station helped to raise $120,000 to pay o f some o f M ound Bayou's bills But without adequate stale or federal assistance, the status o f this town o f 2,900 people seems bleak. White Mississippi politicians fre­ quently now describe their state as the most "progressive” in the na­ tion as far as electing black officials. Superficially, this assertion appears true. As o f July, 1977, M is s is s ip p i had a total o f 295 black elected o ffi­ cials, the highest number in the U.S. A detailed analysis o f this figure, which exceeds by more than 100 per cent the total number o f black offi cials in the entire country in 1965, reveals some incongruencies. Only 4 o f Mississippi's 98 state represen­ tatives and state senators are black. 138 are mayors or city councilper- sons in small rural, m ajority-black towns. 116 are law enforcement o f­ ficers or have posts on m unicipal school boards. None are Congres­ sional representatives. PDC recycles homes COOULD YOU FUND STANDING ON TH £ 0TH6R SI0C 0FTH 6 STRCÇT p c e ^ s e ? Letters to the Editor In civilizations such as those o f B abylon and E g y p t, the Tem ple prostitute performed a sacred func­ tion and was held in high regard; even later, in Greece and Rome, the courtesan was a woman o f esteem, often the honored com panion and in s p iratio n o f great philosophers and artists. W hen Saint Paul introduced pru d ery in to W estern consciousness, all this changed and the whore became an object o f con­ tempt and the victim o f persecution. Prostition is a crime without vic­ tims— a totally voluntary relation­ ship that would not be a crime at all in a rational society. In this country, the plutocrats make it a crime but also they enforce their law selective­ ly: Except in rare cases, where the police or D .A . is trying to make headlines, the customers are never arrested or harassed, but the prosti­ tutes are subjected to these indigni­ ties constantly. •4» MB» K In my opinion, these ladies prob­ ably do more than all the M .D .s and psychiatrists in the country to re­ duce rape, prevent neuroses and ul­ cers, relieve the body, calm the mind and generally slow down our de­ scent into mass hysteria. I f there’s any truth in the hypothesis that sex­ ual fru s tra tio n leads to violence, sexual freedom m ight be the one thing that can save our society from collapse. Poor and working people cannot afford to build prisons, that we may end up in. It's time that the honest people o f Portland saw the light and joined the trend o f legalizing prosti­ tutio n . M an y European countries have legalized the w o rld ’ s oldest profession. Require all prostitutes to register w ith the local board o f health, to give each registered woman an identification card and to require a weekly checkup by a board o f health doctor. M andatory regis­ tra tio n w ould allo w the C ity to control professional standards and A ll o f the houses have new kitch­ ens and baths, new carpeting, exter­ ior paint, and new electrical wiring. Four o f the houses have two bed­ rooms, one has three bedrooms. Sale prices range from $36,000 to $44,000 and only 5 per cent is re­ quired for a down p aym ent. One year o f tax and insurance reserves and other closing costs arc also the responsibility o f the purchaser. M o n th ly payments on the house, which include taxes and insurance, are usually under $400 with the ef­ fective interest rate at 8'/i per cent. Persons interested in viewing any of the Recycled houses should come to the open houses. Houses are lo­ cated at 3932 N .E . Grand. 419 N .E . Mason, 4838 N. W illiam s, 4840 N. Williams and 4137 N. Albina. {Continued fro m page ! column 6) an identification card would give the customer certain health guarantees. The laws suppressing p ro s titu ­ tion are, indeed, contradictory and, in my o p in io n , ra th e r ridiculous. Prostitution is a fact in this country (as any clergyman or social worker who has ever worked in any city will attest but one which o ffic ia ld o m seems to think will "go away" if it is ignored o r i f it is rigorously sup­ pressed by ill-th o u g h t-o u t legisla­ tion. T he selling o f one’ s body fo r monetary gain is rather innocuous when compared with the daily com­ promising o f principles and integrity that most people indulge in (and for no gain or pleasure whatsoever). So why all the uproar about physical prostitution? The soul is supposedly more precious than the body; yet the soul is peddled at c u t-rate prices everywhere. D r. Jamil Cherovee _______ Field Representative, C O R E Portland Observer "A s we see it, this is not an attempt to catch up with the Soviet Union, but an attempt at superiority which we w ill never accept. W e w ill both continue to waste money, resources, and manpower to get superiority." The U .S .S .R . considers the current status o f 12,000 to 8 ,0 0 as rough parity that it can accept. The tim e to reach a reduction agreement is now, Berezhkov said. “ Some people believe that our economy w ill collapse if we must {Continued fro m page ! column 4} that the military should be cut is that their companies are the beneficiaries o f the m ilita ry budget. H a rry J. G ray o f United Technologies C o r­ poration, whose sales o f jet aircraft engines and helicopters make it the second largest m ilitary contractor, said, “ Yes, look at defense.” Regi­ nald H . Jones o f General Electric, o f life because someone doesn’t like it. You should not think that social­ ism will collapse or change in some way. We never say that the U .S . should change or that then we will ta lk . W e have to accept both so­ cieties like they are. We must talk now. " W e stand before the danger o f nuclear war and we must eliminate the danger." the fourth largest military contract­ o r, com m ented, " I just question whether we can spend the projected increase wisely.” The corporate leaders fear that the enormous deficit will fuel in fla­ tion and retard general recovery fro m the current recession. The same o p in io n is held by the opponents o f the planned m ilitary b u ild -u p who say that one o f the m ajor causes o f the federal deficit, inflation, economic stagnation, un­ employment cycle is m ilitary spend­ ing which overburdens the national budget and spends money and ener­ gy on technology that is not used and therefo re ads nothing to the economic growth of the nation. Receive your Observer by mail — Subscribe todayl Only $10°° per year. .friC S L tit, Subscriptions $10.00 per year in the Tri-County area P o st­ m aster Send address changes to the Portland Observer, P 0 Box 3137, Portland. Oregon 97208 m a in ta in an arms race. This w ill never happen. Our people will sacri­ fice; we will have a lower standard o f living. But we will be there and we will do everything we can to keep, p a rity .” The U .S . economy is hav- ing problem s, he said. "S pending money on the m ilita ry aggravates your problems o f unemployment, o f crime, etc.” Others believe the Soviet Union will change. " W e will be as we are; we are not going to change our way Leaders question military The P o rtla n d Observer (U S P S 959 6801 i t published every Thursday by Exie Publishing Company, Inc.. 2201 North Killings worth, Portland, Oregon 97217, Post Office Box 3137, Portland, Oregon 97208 Second class postage paid at Portland. Oregon MEMBER C ity b u ild in g codes, (hen otters them fo r sale to q u a lifie d p u r­ chasers. To qualify for the program, a purchaser must meet P D C ’ s in ­ come guidelines, be at least 18 years old, own no real property, and have income to make the m onthly pay­ ments. Nuclear survival a fantasy Prostitution should be legalized To the editor: Five houses are now being offered for sale through the Portland Devel­ opm ent C om m ission's Recycled Housing P rog ram , a program de­ signed to make home ownership a reality for low and moderate income families. The houses now available w ill be shown during open houses on Tuesday, October 19 from 6 to 8 p.m. Under the Recycled Housing Pro­ gram , the D eveiopm ent C o m m is­ sion purchases vacant and ab a n ­ doned houses located in the City o f Portland, rehabilitates them to meet Mail to: Portland Observer Box 3137 Portland, Oregon 97208 IHI IHJ 2832488 N a m e ________________________ __________ __ _______ A l McGilberry, Editor/Publisher Aatoc/eMon - Founded 1MS A ! Willtams, Advertising Manager National Advertising Representative Amalgamated Publishers. Inc. New York Mil My Mom and Dad read the Portland Observer why not you? Subscribe today I Address C ity_____________________ S tate_____________Zip