1,1964 talk no T A L K talk t a lk no talk no talk no talk talk EDITORIAL/OPINION Oregonian wrongs Jordan The editorial board of The Oregonian newe- peper has again stuck its foot in its mouth as they continue to assail Charles Jordan during his last weak as City Commissioner. Their moat recant bumbling of the perspec­ tives behind the facts was an editorial on Sej> tember 23 They criticized Jordan for saying, if ha could, ha would appoint a Black as his suc­ cessor. 'The Oregonian's editorial board implied that if Jordan appointed a Black to his seat, ha or aha would not ba qualified. Jordan reasoned that an Afro-American would bring a much-needed perspective to an otherwise all-white City Council. A look at the city's Affirmative Action record is enough to in­ dict the city for discrimination. If Jordan did ap point a Black, ha would have made sura that parson's qualifications would ba unquestion­ able. Using the divide-and-conquer tactics of an oppressor, the editorial board said Blacks make up less than eight percent of the population in Portland. Since other minority groups form simi­ lar population numbers, the same claim could be made for the rights of their representation on the Council. Other pecplo of color can and should de mand to be represented in elected office. Very few majority politicians understand the com­ plaints and daily hassles of those darker than blue. Those who are sensitive are currently un­ der the gun to compromise away our accom­ plishments. Politicians of color would only understand that they have lived in an America where the status quo places them one step above apart­ heid. If the editorial board of The Oregonian was truly concerned about the political status of its readers of color they would sound an alarm to all the Afro-American candidates in the City COun- di race. These candidates may be cutting their noeee off to spite their faces becauee the results of these next five weeks may leave Portland with no Bieck representation at the county or city level. The all-white, male editorial board at The Oregonian has constantly exhibited a sharecrop­ per's attitude towards Jordan. Earlier, when Jordan announced hie Inten­ tions to leave for Austin, The Oregonian said he had a responsibility to the voters to stay But as Jordan said lest week in an interview, "Bectfve office is an informal contract between me and the voters. They can put me in and they can take me out. I should be free to go in and go on. 99 Jordan's desire to keep a little color on the Council is prefaced by experience. He was orig­ inally appointed to his seat on the Council and wonder if the voters ten years ego would have elected a former Medal Cities director. With the type of arrogance and narrow­ mindedness expressed in the editorial pages of Oregon's largest newspaper. Black political growth in Portland would have to run fast just to stand still before we satisfy their perceptions. All Jordan wanted to do was to give another Black the same chance he had. He knows that Blacks have been locked out of the political arena and during the next five weeks, many are destined to make mistakes. But w e have the ex­ ample of Jordan's leadership to maneuver politi­ cally in the future. The editorial board has yet to accent the posi­ tive aspects of Jordan as he packs his bags and waves good-by. Their editorial writing reflects the double standard of journalism as it observes a Black politician. This latest round of editorials makes them li­ belous for disseminating misinformation. Letters to the Editor No to prostitution than the career opportunities discussed in school; the parent whose daughter finds greeter security in a pimp than in her family, w e see them aU and seek to help them wherever we find them. Our purpose ■ to make people whole and to make neigh­ borhoods safe places in which to rear families. To lend support to the legalization of prostitution is to make our work more difficult. W e expect better from the City Club Given that proetitution is illegal in the State of Oregon, and It, Ilka other business ventures, la governed by the law of supply and demand, w e could solve the problem of proetitution If w e could muster enough support for the arrest of both the prostitute and the To The Editor: W e. the Board of Elders of the Mallory Avenue Christian Church, wish to express our disappointment with the Portland City Club’s recent vote to legalize prostitution. Perhaps you would have to spend a day or two at Mallory to understand the formidable task of ministering to the needs of individuals and families whose Uvea have bean ramshackled by the social milieu of prostitution. The school child waiting on the cor­ ner for a school bus who is mistaken for a prostitute; the elderly woman whose back yard is used instead of a motel room; the parent whose son finds pimping to be more attractive - ' •■•Hi ' /A ri/flS Avp T etu àn ero* < iW « S W K>urxAl erATtte V ------ ---- 'S client when caught in violation of the law. Our currant laws have not been vigorously upheld and enforced by elected and appointed public officials. W e challenge the Portland City Club to go on record in support of OUR public officials enforcing OUR laws. Sincerely, Dorothy L. Alexander, Chair The Board of Eldars Mallory Avenue Christian Church The Observer ivr/rornrs / eiters to rfir Editor Eetteri should he short, and must contain the w rite r\ name and address /addresses are not print ed) The Obsei ver reserves the right to edit f o r length When is a Populist a Klansman? by Dr. Manning Marable "From The Grassroots" On August 19. over 600 delegates attended the first national convention of the Populist Party in 88 years. Meeting in NaahvWe. the Populists nominated Bob Richards, an Olympic gold medebst in the 1966 end 1960 Summer Gamas, as their 1964 rreswentiai nominee, ntenaros name w * be on the baMot in forty states, and the Populists already claim to have about 300,000 members. Richards predicts that the Populists could "present a serious challenge to the Democratic and Republican can- x- _a - - ---- »» ooatm . The sudden revival of the Populist Party evokes historical reflections on its predecessor In the 1890a, the Populists nearly overturned the Democratic Party's domination of the South. The petty united poor Bieck and white farmers behind a b»-rsc«al program of economic justice and social reforms. It opposed the power ful planter dess and railroad monopolies, and in moat states fought Jim Crow laws. society-nation in which the minority wvm . in plain tngnan, maaa Populists are declaring war on aodal welfare programs, desegregation and ctv* rights, behind the partieRy-veled rhetoric of anti-Semitism and white supremacy. The summer, 1964 edition of the anti-racist publication. The Hammer, obaarvea that "the name recognition and whoiaaoma image of Richards," bast known for hie "Wheatiaa" cereal commercials, has permitted the Populist Party to mask its fascist, racist origins. The real leaders of this party are a "rogue's gaMary" of the far right. The party's major leader is Robert Weems, who in the late 1970a was Mississippi chaplain of the "In­ visible Empire" Knights of the Ku Klux Kian. As late as Labor Day, 1982, Weems spoke at a "unity" rally at Stone Mountain, Georgia. This "new " Populist Party also denounces "international parasitic capitalism" in Its program. It calls for tariffs to protect American jobs, federal spending to expend transpor tation and communication facilities, and parity for small family farmers. These policy positions are wen within the old Populist tradition. But the "heart" of the new party is its am phaais on what it terms, "respect (for) racial and cultural diversity." The new Populist program declare that "every race" must "pursue its destiny free from interference by another race." Targeting Biecks, Latinos and Jewish-Americans (not by name, but racist innuendo) the program states that Populists oppose "nodal programs which would radically modify another race's behavior, (and) demands by one race to subsidize it financially or politically as long as it remains on American soil. The Populist Party will not permit any racial minority, through control of the media, culture distortion or revolu­ tionary political activity, to divide or factionakze the minority of the \N q \ n \ The Other Populist leaders and public spokesmen have long histonee in racist, neo-fascist and anti-Semitic organizations. From the Arkansas KKK, there is Ralph Forbes, now a "promoter" for the Populists. Some may recall that Forbes was behind the Kian rally in Washington. D.C. in late 1982. From J. B. Stoner's notorious States Rights Party comes A. J. Barker, now the Vice Chairman of the North Carolina Populists Journalist Tom Valentina, a frequent writer for the viciously racist and anti-Semitic journal. The Spotlight, has emerged as Richards' presidential campaign treasurer. One of the Populists' major speakers is Jack Mohr, the national defense coordinator of the "Christian Defense League," a rightwing extremist group. Other local Populist leaders have been drawn from the John Birch Society, Poeee Comita- tus, the segregationist Southam National Party, the California- based Independence Party, the W is­ consin Constitutional Party, and other racist, anti-Semitic, and/or violence prone extremist factions. not. Another recant group « the Aryan Nation, which cads for the deportation of every Bieck. Latino and Jaw in the U .S . The Aryan Nation's headquarters in Hayden Lake, Idaho has a force of over one hundred ax-Klansman and neo-Nazis, protected by armed guards. The "Christian Identity M ovem ent," a ooalition of racist, rightwing funda­ mentalist "churches," is also acquir­ ing hundreds of new members each month. Like Ronald Reagan, these racists have learned to doek their real agenda behind the slick and subtle imegsa of Populism, patriotism, stat* » rights, and Christianity. But behiid the new facade stands the rope and the burning croaa, racism and anti-SamMem The "new Populist" is still a Klansman. Portland Women's Crisis Line A Public Sanna, of th« Portland Observer Check out JOBS in this week's Portland Observer The Populist Party is only the latest effort to unite Nazis, Klansman, and racists under one organizational ban- Observer survey: M AIL TO Portland Observer P.O. Box 3137. Portland OR 97206 Portland Observer •• M N ) • 0«“ “ ' » i . „*- M* -, t he P o rllan d Observer rU S P S 959 6801 n publiehert every Thursday by Erne Publishing Company. Inc., 2201 North Killings worth. Portland, Oregon 97217. Post Office Box 3137. Portland. 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