4 Portland Ob—rye,, April 8,1963 EDITORIAL/OPINION Racism: A national disgrace There is a m ajor effo rt by the national news media to label Congressman H arold Washing­ ton, Democratic Party candidate for M ayor of Chicago, a racist. Sure, Bernie E p to n , the Republican Party candidate, is appealing to the racism o f white Chicagoans they say. But Washington— in his call for un ity and his heavy cam paigning to black voters— is also appealing to racism, they add. Yes, it is understandable that black Demo­ crats would support a black D em o crat, they concede. It also is normal that whites might pre­ fer a white candidate, they continue. The important fact that many national (and Chicago) news sources fail to mention is that black Democrats are supporting the Democratic Party nominee— while thousands o f whites will abandon their party and vote for Epton— prob­ ably the first Republican they ever voted for in their lives. They are not voting for Epton because he holds to the same political philosophy as they do; they arc not voting for his background and experience. They are voting solely because of his color. On the fifteenth anniversary of the assassina­ tion of Dr. M artin Luther King, Jr., we cannot fail to note that Chicago was King’s most d iffi­ cult campaign. It was in Chicago that he said: “ In the North there are brothers and sisters who are suffering discrimination even more agoniz­ ing, in a sense, than in the South. In the South, at least, the Negro can see some progress, where in the North all he sees is retrogression.” Chicago’s reaction to Washington’s campaign for M ayor is not just a Chicago affair or a re­ flection on the Democrats. It is a national dis­ grace and it is perpetuated by the government functionaries and the national press. Tax reform should be priority The House Revenue Committee has held a se­ ries of public hearings around the state to hear citizens’ suggestions on how the legislature can increase or shift taxes fro m one group to another. A t the P o rtlan d hearing C h airm an To m Throop attempted to prevent speakers from ad­ dressing the sales tax because Oregon now has no sales tax, even though sales tax options are before the legislature and may well appear on the ballot. He lectured the large audience to sit back and relax and admonished them to express their own ideas and not criticize the ideas o f others. Throop’s attempt to avoid opposition to the sales tax disintegrated when Russ Farrell out- shouted him in a long defiant attack on the sales tax and its promoters. Businessmen extolled the attributes o f the sales tax. The Portland Association of Teachers made a long presentation on the need for more money but did not address the method of raising (hat money. Office building managers wanted to shift the taxes to consumers; old-timers said they couldn’t pay more. None o f the stop-gap measures being dis­ cussed by the legislature— each with its refunds or exemptions for the poor and loopholes for the rich — w ill provide a long-term answer. Rather than patchwork, Oregon needs a new tax structure. The corporate and personnel income taxes and property tax need to be restructured to ensure that taxes are based on ability to pay, and they should be the prime source o f income for the state. I f the Revenue C om m ittee can’ t develop a simple and equitable plan perhaps it should hire a consutant to do so. The continuous hassle over who will pay for state services cannot go on for­ ever. Letters to the Editor W e share the sorrow o f the family o f Trina Hunter at her untimely and unnecessary death. We share the an­ ger o f her fam ily and friends at the way the case is being handled by the police. I t ’s clear that police negli­ gence— their failure to take her fam ­ ily's and T r im 's own pleas for help seriously and th eir to ta lly in a d e ­ quate search for her— was responsi­ ble for Trina's death. H er fam ily and friends tell how their pleas for help fell on deaf ears because T r in a was black and had been arrested for prostitution. Law enforcement officials have made it c le a r, tim e and tim e ag ain , that women's lives are worth nothing to them and that if you’ re black a n d / or you've been a prostitute, you de­ serve what you get. In Seattle, the murder o f a dozen women over the last year, many o f them involved in prostitution, still remains unsolved. In th eir a n ti-p ro s titu tio n c a m ­ paign last year, M ay o r Ivancie and Police C h ief S till tried to foment a vigilante atmosphere against prosti­ tutes. They invited individual men and the police to have free reign to harass any w om an w alkin g the street at night. The prostitution laws used in this kin d o f cam paign against women and the prejudice in the police force were responsible for (T h e Observer welcomes Letters to the Editor. They must be signed and include the writer's address. We reserve the right to edit for length.) •*« M«» • the inhuman behavior o f police in a situation like T rin a 's . W e'd like to know why harassing prostitutes is a police priority yet when they could save a woman's life they do nothing. The issue of whether or not Trina Hunter was a prostitute, voluntarily or not, is totally irrelevant to whe­ ther or not she deserved police pro­ tection and assistance. Y et, police officials are quoted as saying that it was not clear w hether she was forced into prostitution or involved ••willingly.” Are they saying she de­ served her fate? The m ajority o f prostitute w om ­ en, like T rin a H u n ter, are mothers struggling to bring up their children. When women turn to prostitution becaue it is the o n ly way to feed their families, who can say that they are doing it voluntarily. It is unusual to be cam paigning for an o u t-o f-s ta te candidate, but we are outraged at the turn o f events surrounding the candidacy o f Dem ­ ocrat H a ro ld W ashington o f C h i­ cago! H o w e v e r, as o f M arch 24, Jane Byrne has withdrawn from the cam paign, not on principle but on technical difficulties. I perceive it to be racism at its highest fo rm and want to speak out against it as force­ fully as possible. I believe you agree, that we in Oregon want to support Democratic M a y o ra l cand idate W ashington m o ra lly and fin a n c ia lly . Please m ake your c o n trib u to n , in any It is fo r these reasons th at the U.S. Prostitutes Collective has been organizing nationally for the aboli­ tion o f all laws against prostitutes, They are also campaigning for v i­ able altern a tives fo r w om en who w ant to leave p ro s titu tio n , fo r money to be diverted fro m costly prostitution crackdowns toward the protection o f all women fro m vio­ lent crimes o f (his k in d . W e want the police to be made accountable fo r their actions to w ard a ll w om ­ en, black and p ro stitu te women a lik e . They should be made ac­ countable for their gross negligencr in Trina's case. U.S. PROS (U .S . Prostitute? Collective) Support Croup Sonya Avison am ount, to O regon Democrats for Washington, 3415 N .E . 19th Street, Portland, O R 97212. Checks should be made to Citizens for Washington Campaign. W e w ill collect the con­ tributions and send them directly to the H aro ld W ashington campaign. The election in Chicago is April 12. There w ill be a reception on F ri­ day, A pril 8th, from 5:30 p.m . to 7 p .m . at the P o rtla n d P la za Party Room, 1500 S .W . F ifth , Portland. O R . Please jo in me. B ill, A rn o ld and Rosie Biskar, other elected o ffi­ cials, and Dem ocrats fo r refresh­ ments and conversation. Gladys McCoy, Chairperson, Oregon Democrats for Washington Portland Observer T h e P o n la n d O b t t r v t r IU S P S 959 680) it pu blished every Thursday by E»e Publishing Company. Inc . 2201 North Killings worth. Portland. Oregon 97217. Post Office Bow 3137. Portland. Oregon 97208 Second class postage paid at Portland Oregon ¿ a te .* » art « * » « » » • * ~ R * 0 4 Í The Portland O h w v + r wan established m 1970 MEMBER NW Aw ÂMoeiatton - rounded I8M Subscriptions 110 00 per year in the Tn County area P ost m as te r Send address changes to the P ortland O b 'p rv rr P 0 Bow 3137. Portland Oregon 97208 A lfre d L. Henderson, Editor/Publisher A ! Williams, Advertising Manager W hether they are fo r or against what Jesse Jackson calls the "P ro p ­ osition.” a number o f blacks across the country who have been involved in discussions o f the p o litic al p ri­ maries and the 1984 elections are being queried, or chided, or lectured to by whites and other blacks on one question: " W h y consider a black presidential candidacy?” Since the m edia generally has tended eith er to present the nega­ tives or to q u o te one w ell-k n o w n p ers o n a lity in o p p o sitio n to another, perhaps it might be useful to note some o f the reasons why the p o s sib ility o f sup po rtin g a black candidate in the Democratic prim ar­ ies is under very active consideration by a good m any people w ho are neither on ego trips nor candidates for straitjackets. Some o f the reasons go back as far as conversations about a C a rl Stokes candidacy in 1972 even be­ fo re S h irley C h ish o lm made her run. Some o f them fed into the in ­ formal discussions o f issues and tac­ tics over many months in 1982 and 1983 p rio r to the first flo a tin g o f this latest version o f such an initia­ tive. What follows is an admittedly in­ complete rendering o f some o f the ideas and feelings that have given rise to increasingly serious consider­ ation o f this "Proposition.” M a n y blacks f e e l they have not fa re d too well at the hands o f white candidates an d o f a p a rty th at has been long on promises and short on regards f o r loyal support. For some it was the short sh rift given the Congressional Black C au­ cus budget last year even by c o l­ leagues w ho p riva te ly ad m itted it made sense; o r the M e-to o is m o f D em o cratic members o f Congress on votes harm ful to blacks, Hispan­ ics, cities and the p o o r. O r fo r others it was w hat was seen as the anti-m inority bias o f the Hunt Com ­ m ission's delegate rules; or the crum bs o rig in a lly a llo tte d by the Democratic National Committee for black voter registration. Even those black Democrats with strong ties to w hite cand idates a c tu a lly began voicing their unhappiness long be­ fore the notion o f a black candidacy took form. One o f the minor rites of the pre- presidential primary season over the past several campaigns has been the rapid-recruitment d rill as white lib­ eral and moderate candidates hasten to acq u ire black s ta ff. Some o f these, like their Hispanic and female counterparts, serve reasonably well. But past history suggests th at a black candidate could hardly be less sensitive regarding black and other m in o rity constguencies than some earlier white candidates have been. Veterans o f past campaigns were reminded at one meeting (his winter that a black candidate would be un­ lik ely to repeat the fiasco that re­ portedly occurred some years ago. A white candidate, appearing before a special convocation o f black p oli­ tical and civic leaders, discarded his original text and treated the aston­ ished group to a speech designed to please the white ethnic voters o f the region. Some are convinced that no while candidate is likely to be able to fe e l and to articulate the objective needs and the pain o f blacks as keenly and insistently as would any one o f the potential black candidates who have been suggested. C ertainly some Of the white can­ didates now in the field are regarded as friends by several black leaders and have civil rights records ranging fro m very good to fa ir. But th eir trumpets so far have sounded an un­ certain note, or have been totally si­ lent on concerns critical to blacks. A black ca nd idate, it is argued, w ill need no in terp reter to express the ache and anger o f a black Am erica ravaged by lost jo b s, homes and businesses, fo o d fo r fam ilies and schooling o p p o rtu n itie s fo r the young. As has been true f o r other racial and ethnic groups, the presence o f a black candidate has alm ost always served as a ca talys t to b ring o u t black voters— especially among the ranks o f those who do not usually register and vote. A t a time when population shifts and rule changes have made voter and the poor more critical than ever, many feel that the stimulus a black candidate could provide is a poten­ tial lever not to be discarded lightly, In weighing the possibilities o f a black presidential candidacy, it has been considered understandable and appropriate that both political lead­ ers an d n on -p o litician s be consid­ ered. The rationale fo r interest in such political leaders as Richard Hatcher, W a lte r F a u n tro y , A n d y Young (w ho has said he is not interested), Louis Stokes and other elected o ffi­ cials seems self-evident. Jesse Jack- son, the most cited non-politician, lik e W en dell W illk ie , has not o f ­ fered before for public office. Like Adam Powell and some o f the other not under consideration, he would be a political standard bearer with strong roots in civil rights and reli­ gion. N ot that the basic issue is being reduced to personalities alone. Strategies, regional and local con­ cerns, m oney, tim in g and a great many other factors w ill be playing themselves out as the ultimate deci­ sion develops in the course o f the se­ ries o f meetings now going on around the country. Perhaps the most pow erful m oti­ vating fo rc e o f a ll is the often sup­ pressed but persistent urge to lake se­ riously the possibility o f something other than second-class citizenship f o r blacks in the political arena. In p a rt, the healthy differences between and am ong equally co m ­ mitted leaders on either side o f the question revolve around the hard choices blacks have had to m ake fro m the tim e o f the m urderous m id dle passage to these shores, through the slave revolts, the tumul­ tuous Sixties, the retrogressive Seventies and the present. Today, as in times pat, there is m u tu ally re­ spectful debate between those who contend that the tim e is not right and those who feel that the time has somehow never been right for m i­ norities to challenge the demeaning dou b le standard that keeps them fractional Americans. p articip ation by blacks, Hispanics by Dr. M anning M arable Support Washington campaign To the editor: by M . C a rl Holman, President, N ational Urban Coalition The politics o f the arms race Prostitution rap excuse for police neglect To the editor: W hy a black presidential candidate? 283 2486 N atio n a l A d v e r t í ng R epraaantattva A m a lg a m a te d Publishers. Inc N a w VorA It is clear that a m ajority o f A m ­ ericans favor a massive reduction in expenditures fo r nuclear weapons. W hat has not yet been placed firmly on the public agenda is a general de­ bate to reallocate billions o f dollars in federal money from both conven­ tional and nuclear arms into spend­ ing fo r hum an needs— housing, health care, jobs, and necessary so­ cial services. Economic Notes, a publication of the New Y o rk-b as ed L a b o r R e­ search Association, makes this point quite clear in its January, 1983 issue on " L a b o r fo r P e a c e .” Last N o ­ vem b er, over 1 1.6 m illio n A m e r­ icans voted in fa v o r o f a nuclear freeze betw een the U .S . and U .S .S .R . In cities w ith sizeable black p o p u la tio n s , the m argin o f v ic to ry was between 3-1 and 4 -1 . W a s h in g to n , D .C . . fo r exam ple, cast 77,521 voles in favor o f a nu­ clear freeze, with only 23,369 votes against. In P h ila d e lp h ia , the vote was 231,787 to 75,149; in Chicago, 404,173 to 135,325. 276 C ity Coun­ cils across the nation passed freeze re­ so lutio ns, and both cham bers o f eleven state legislatures. Last June, about one m illio n people dem on­ strated to halt the arms race. This upsurge in the streets and legisla­ tures forces Congress to refuse a Reagan-backed proposal for $1 b il­ lion for the production o f the M X missile last December. The day afte r this historic vote, however, the House voted by a mas­ sive m argin o f 346-68 to accept a m ilitary appropriations bill o f $230 b illion. This amount included $2.5 billion for the research and develop­ ment o f the M X missile. T h e obvious c o n tra d ic tio n be­ tween m illio n s o f A m erican s d e­ monstrating for peace and a nuclear freeze vs. the adoption o f a $230 bil­ lion war budget by the House was attacked by d em o cratic socialist Ronald V. Dellums. “ It is very sexy, it is very attractive now to be for the freeze; but how do you translate that commitment into the budget?” Representatives were guilty o f the most b la ta n t fo rm o f hypocrisy when they proclaimed their support for arms reductions and then "vote fo r all (he w eapons th at deny the fre eze— the M X , Pershing I I , the T rid e n t su b m arine and the B -l b o m b e r," Congressm an Dellum s declared. Several months before, Dellums introduced an alternative A ppropri­ ations B ill ( H R -6 6 9 6 ), w hich re ­ duced by more than $50 billion the current m ilitary budget. M oney for the Cruise and M X missiles, the Per­ shing I I and Trident I I would slop. Dellums* bill was defeated by a mar- ging o f 55 yes, 348 no, 31 not vo t­ ing. Last M a y , the Congressional Black Caucus proposed an alterna five budget which demanded spend­ ing for human needs and reductions in w ar p ro gram s. It too was trounced: 86 yes, 322 no, and 24 not voting. W h y the p o w e rfu l m andate fo r m ilita ry expen diture? P art o f the reason lies in the political economy o f m ilita ry spending. Defense de­ p artm en t co n tracts w ith m a jo r c o rp o ra tio n s ju m p e d fro m $7 6.8 b illio n in 1980 to $9 7.4 b illio n in I $981. The top five defense contrac­ tors in 1981 were Boeing, $2.7 b il­ lion; G eneral E lec tric, $3 b illio n ; G en eral D y n a m ics , $3 .4 b illio n ; U nited Technologies, $3.8 b illio n ; and M cD on n cl Douglass, $4 4 b il­ lion. The entire process is a kind of corporate welfare from top to bot­ tom . Generals (notably form er Se­ creta ry o f S late A lex an d er H a ig ) and bureaucrats at the Pentagon slip and slide between posh, w ell-p aid jobs in defense-related industries and the fe d e ra l govern m en t. Sources ind icate that " p ro fits be­ fo re taxes were 56 percent fo r de­ fense contractors— higher than any in the civilian sector. A ll research and development costs are paid by the government so that contracting firms stake relatively little capital of th eir o w n . P ra c tic a lly a ll defense contracts are let on a non -co m p e­ titive cost-plus basis, insuring high p ro fits .” For companies with a his­ tory o f bad management, a lucrative defense contract can bail them out o f fiscal d iffic u lty . F o r instance, C h ry sler received $ 1 .4 b illio n in Pentagon contracts in 1981 alone — the 10th largest defense supplier in the U .S . But the merchants o f war also in­ sure their profits in other ways. The Friends C o m m itte e on N a tio n a l L eg is la tio n , a Q u a k e r lob b ying group, monitored the legislative ac­ tivities o f twelve m a jo r contractors in the first eight months o f 1982— M cC o n n el D ouglas. U n ited T ech ­ nologies, G en eral D ynam ics, Boeing, Lockheed, litto n , Hughes A ir c r a ft, G ru m m a n , R ayth eo n, M a rtin M a rie tta , R o ckw ell In te r­ national, and F M C . In this period, these 12 co rp o ratio n s spent $1.2 million to Congressional candidates in the pre-election period. This was an increase o f 250 percent over their expenditures during the entire 1978 election year. M ost o f the House and Senate members w ho received these c o r­ porate gifts were on the Armed Ser­ vices C om m ittee and Defense and M ilita ry C onstruction A p p ro p ria ­ tions Subcommittees. Key Senators received between $ 1 1 ,0 0 0 to $38,500. In fact, three Senators who were not even up for reelection until 1986 were given healthy c o n trib u ­ tions. Is it any wonder (hat the votes against the D ellum s b ill and the Black C aucus' in itiatives to slash m ilitary welfare were so large? Thg "b e s t Congress th at m oney cah buy” cannot afford to turn its back« on its c o rp o ra te p atro n s, w ho in tu rn escalate the p ro b a b ility o f a general nuclear or c o n ve n tio n al war. Receive your Observer by mail Call 283-2487