October 1, 1986, Portland Observer, Page 13 Along the Color Line EDITORIAL/OPINION by Dr M anning Marable 0» Manning is professo* of sex:«rtoçy and politicai scianca st Pur due Umvarsrty Along the Certo» Lma appears m ova* 140 Reagan Continues His Support For Apartheid i >«ws(>apars internationally Reagan's lack of moral conscience about the situation in South Africa is the reason both Republican and Democratic lawmakers have put together legislation calling for stronger economic sanctions despite Reagan's veto. These lawmakers believe that the United States should take a stance against hatred, bigotry, and oppression and stand for free dom, opportunity, and dignity for all people, regardless of their skin pigmentation. It's a shame that the President of this coun try doesn't share these principles. The veto by President Ronald Reagan of legislation imposing economic sanctions against South Africa for its racial policies, once again reveals Reagan's support for apar­ theid in that repressive country. Since Reagan’s first term in office, he has defended the racist South African government through his constructive engagement policy, which has helped the most brutal regime since Hitler's Nazi Germany, denying millions of citi­ zens basic civil rights, just because they were born with black skin. O N SO U TH AFRIC A Coke Boycott Continues! money is necessary for the purchase? In light of the severe lim itation on Blacks ability to purchase pro perty and secure capital, how are they able to buy this company? 5. W hat w ill take place w ithin the six to nine m onth timetable Coca Cola has set tor disinvestment ? 6 To w hat extent does Coca Cola see this move as a change from its previous policy in South Africa? 7 How w ill this new position effectively change the lives of the m ajority of the people of South Africa? W hile we recognize this n ove by Cor a Cola as an initial step and a partial response to publu pressure we feel that congratulations may be a tut premature The above questions must be answered For as Coca Cola says, "T h e com pany w o n 't lose any money its products will still be sold thr< ugh the 15 independent Coca Cola bottlers in South A tm a Hence, Coca Cola will still be helping to finance apartheid Any corpora tion that makes a p ro fit from apartheid, regardless of the channel, participates in the destruction of the lives of the m aionty people in South A frica There < an be no reform of apartheid Total disinvestment tiy Coca Cola or any other foreign com pany must mean the cessation of all economic operations and connections, including license, trademarks, factoris, suppliers and distributors On W ednesday. September 17, 1986, the Coca Cola B ottling Company announced its intent to "disinvest' its holdings in South A frica Company President Do nald Keough states, " A decision to com plete the pro cess of disinvestm ent is a statement of our opposition to apartheid and o f our support for the econom ic aspira tions of Black S outh A frica n s ." W hile this move by the Coca Cola Company has been hailed by several political and Black leaders as a positive example, and, " It's a departure from the status quo in the disinvestment debate that set a precident for other companies " But w h a t is the real nature of the Coca Cola move? W hat is Coca Cola's real intent? It must be remembered that the object of the disinvestment campaign is not to change the color o f people who finance apartheid, whether Black or m ultiracial, but to end ail financial support for apartheid by cu ttin g o ff all corporate taxes to the South African governm ent the apartheid econo my. Before applauding Coca Cola's m ove too loudly, let us have some questions answered: 1. If Coca Cola is dismvesting, w ill Coke be re m oving its license and trademark and relinquishing claim to pro fit from its products? 2. W hat are the remaining tax liabilities of the Coca Cola Company to the S outh A frican government? 3. W hat is the position of other Coca Cola sub­ sidiaries in South Africa? W ill Coke still receive bene fits from these subsidiaries and, or the new company? 4 W hat is the com position of the new entity pur chasing the Coca Cola holding? W hat am ount of American Friends Service Committee 92 Piedmont Avenue Nf Atlanta. Georgia 30303 14041 586 0460 Letters to the Editor ---------------- : ____ — — "Black Leaders and Conservative Cults' A desperate people w ill turn to almost anything w hich promises some relief from oppression As the socio economic conditions o f black America have continued to deteriorate in the 1980s, and as Reagamsm has be come the national ideology of both major parties, some black leaders have begun to search desperately for allies A few prom inent civil rights spokesmen have gone so far as to form alliances w ith ultra right groups, w hich might give lipservrce to blacks traditional interests Consider the careers of James Bevel and Ralph Oavid Abernathy. In the 1960s Bevel was a critically impor tant figure in the desegregation campaigns W ith Marion Barry, James Lawson and John Lewis. Bevel led the successful sit in movement in Nashville Bevel was a key strategist and stalwart for King in tfie d ifficu lt Birmingham desegregation campaign of 1963 Bevel was in Memphis five years later w hen King was assas sinated Abernathy was. of course, second only to Martin as a pivotal leader of the Southern struggle from M ontgom ery to Mem phis But deprived of King's gui dance both black leaders foundered, personally and politically Atiernathy was unable to keep the Southern Christian Leadership Conference s (SCLCI m om entum going, and w ithin a few years he was overshadowed in the civil rights field by his charismatic junior lieutenant. Jesse Jackson Both Bevel and Abernathy ran unsuc cesslully for Congressional seats As King s other pro leges continued to make headlines most prom inently. Andrew Young the flow of public events increasingly byjiassed both civil rights veterans Neither leader exer C '.ed any t lout w ithin the Carter administration In tfie 1980 election. A bernattiy took a decisive step away from King s political legacy by endorsing Ronald Reagan tor the presidency He justified this unexpected at lion by accusing the Carter adm inistration of a variety of sms Coretta Scott King prom ptly attributed Aber nathy s endorsement to sinister forces" Less cfiari tably some black journalists bitterly ridiculted Aber nathy as a modern "Judas and U nde Tom Abernathy and Bevel drifted even further to the right after 1980 Bevel became a Republican party leader in Chicago blur k com m unity and soon earned the repu tation as an extremist o l the right By 1985, both former leaders had been drawn into tfie jxihtical orbit of CAUSA as anti com m unist front established by the Reverend Sun Myung Moon This April, Abernathy j, ,med Black radical turned reactionary Eldridge Cleaver it a CAUSA iaderence held in Los Angeles In May, Bevel and A bernathy were the key participants in a Two day Freedom Rally and C onvention" sponsored try CAUSA and held in the impoverished Lawndale section of Che ago west side C AU SA was created si» yeais ago by supporters o f tfie U m fit ation Church, in an effort to build conservative links to educators, clergy and local elected officials Tfie sad conversion of Abernathy and Bevel to CAUSA s agenda highlights the expanding role of the U nification Church inside the black com m unity nation ally. For more than a decade. M oon and his follow ers have pursued policies totally at odds With black inter ests The church has donated hundreds of thousands o f dollars to rightw ing groups such as the National Con servative Political Action Com m ittee, w hich optxises affirm ative action legislation and civil n g fits M oon s previously public statements on race relations also appear to have more in com m on w ith M>giegationist Lester Maddox than King In 1974 tor instance M oon claimed that each racial group held specific character istics: Orientals can contribute in tfie spiritual aspect, w hite people can contribute in tfie analytical. scientific aspect, while black people can contribute in tfie physi cal area The actual number of black converts to the M oonies" remains small Yet C AU SA recently re printed an early speech by King critical of C om m unism , w hich in turn provides a suitable ideological cover for their growing activities w itti blacks U n w ittin g ly per haps. Abernathy and Bevel have become key paw ns in this strategy Tfie right w ing sect of Lyndon la R o u t he has also ini tiated a campaign to recruit black supporters As in the case of tfie U nification Church, tfie LaRouchites w ork primarily through several fronts, tfie Schiller Institute and the National Democratic Policy Committee Again, tfie LaRouchites have been linked to a number of racist and extremist groups, including tfie Liberty Lobby tfie Kian and neo Nazis Currently, tfie I aRouchites are vigorously opposing sanctions against S outh A frican apartheid The most prom inent black leader close to LaRouche is Roy Innis, w ho heads the remnants of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) Innis denies mem bership in tfie cult, but recently acknowledged an ongoing colla b o ra tio n ." This fall, Inins ran an unsuccessful cam paign in the Democratic primary against progressive Rep Major Owens of Brooklyn Innis received support in his effort from tfie National Rifle Association and was endorsed by Bernhardt Goetz, tfie controversial sub way vigilante " Since tfie mid 1970s. Innis has etiam pioned the cause of Jonas Savimbi. the apartheid supported terrorist and leader o f the Angolan rebel group UNIT A W hat Abernattiy, Bevel and Innis all sfiare is a vir tual lack of accountability to any significant w orking class constituency inside the black com m unity O pjxir tunism and clientage is nothing new in black politics, and these former civil rights leaders have found it con venient to advance conservative dogma in a conserva live climate But what is more significant is tfio failure of most progressive to liberal black leaders and orgam zations to expos«! and critique their behavior am i allian ces w ith ultra rightists They have continued to take for granted a unity of political purpose and coller live vision w hich lias ceased to exist am ong black activists As Ma|or Owens finally recognized. CORf has 'becom e a vehicle for tfie opposition, and Innis is an agent of tfie opposition We ve been silent for too long in the name of black unity I W as Touched The Lord touched my heart when I heard Proverbs 21 v. 13: "W h o so stoppeth his ears at the cry of the poor, he also shall cry himself, but shall not be heard I wish to publicly confess that I did not represent the interests o f our neighbors most in need I represent King N eighborhood on the Steering C om m ittee for but thousands and thousands of our m ost needy neigh bors w ill not be helped at all This has been called HCD (poverty) funds I voted our entire $180,000 yearly budget tow ard an excellent project helping a number of unem ployed Ft home seekers, and also fix up housing. Jim A nderson "cream skim m ing" I repent, and ask your forgiveness, and promise to w ork harder to use our money to touch more poor especially those most bruised 4904 NE 12th Portland, OR 97211 The A .M A H eadstart P rogram 's Cascade C enter held an open house Friday, Sept 26. 1986, for staff and the parents of children w h o a tte n d the C enter An enjoyable evening w as had by all and included a gum bo dinner, salads, and desserts The event w as coordinated by Elaine Harrison (2nd from L) Photo by Richard J Brown Portland Observer ii [Oregon N ew gi.il>*' Publishers Asso, ihon í MEMBER Founded 1ttS fly Steven Bailey. N D. The use of gamma globulins in western medicine has been increasing dramatically over tfie past few de cades These com ponents of our serum represent the major antibodies w ithin our humoral immune system Spei die globulin antibodies have been used to effect im m unity to many form s o f contagious diseases (va< i im-, against tfie flu, etc I M ore recently, gamma globulin therapy has been used to assist the immune system in such diseases as hepatitis A lthough it lias been know n for over a century that antibodies (im m unoglobulins! are soluable serum com ponents. they were not isolated as proteins until the w ork of Tiselius and Kabat in 1937 Their specific »true turns anti mechanisms of action have been elucidated in the more recent years Today we have the ability to isolate specific fractions of the im m unoglobulin» and to use these products in the care and treatm ent of many conditions Yet a new concern lias been raised in cur rent gamma globulin therapy Last week I was given a copy of a newsletter out of the South that quoted a Donald Steel. M D , of New port Beach. California, as stating that the Center for Disease Control (CDCI and the FDA had inform ed him that all sa m p le s o f g a m m a g lo b u lin te s te d posi tiv e fo r th e H T V V v iru s o f A ID S W hether this means that recipients of gamma globulin therapy could develop AIDS from this therapy remains to be seen, but the potential of this occurance has caused some laboratories to cease marketing their supplies of gam ma globulin A supplier of mine told me tins past week end that Arm or had found all their batches of this drug to be contam inated, and tfie product is no longer avail able until an uncontam inated batch has been produr ed. Mr Dave Chesney, Branch Head of the Portland office of the FDA remembered the April 19. 1986, FDA bulletin of this subject and is in tfie process of trat king dow n the current status of pharmaceutical supplies of globulins Tfie main concern now is that tfie jiublir tie aware of the current questions concerning gamma globulin tfie rajiy The problem has arisen primarily tiei arise (jam ma globulins are extracted from pooled supplies of up to 1,000 doners’ , and if only one person in tfie jxmi I escapes A ID S detection, the entire pool is contam ina ted Hopefully, w ith the current tests for A ID S , the potential for tfie future contam inated gamma globulin» is reduced Studies of past lots of gamma globulins have shown that up to tw o thirds of HBIG (tfie globu tins used in hepatitis! were contam inated ’ Fortunately, tfie FDA labs have not isolated any live A ID S viruses in the samples, and the current governm ent statem ents suggest that the fears of rer eiving AIDS from g lo bulin injection are unwarranted W hile much about the A ID S progress and transmission remains moderately uncloar, the FDA feels that the chance of infection from imrnu mzation is extremely low For tfie present, if you are possibly going to receive isolated im m unoglobulins as an injection, you should question your doctor as to their awareness of this new concern S om etim es the treatment can be more harm ful than the disease. ’ Commun»c«trt»» OtlMM Summary Vo! 3*> Mo 7 • Ibwl ’** * M* »• rXM rnw IUSPS 9 » « 0 i a puWWiad wary ~ tx i* PuUahaxi Cwnpanv. Inc . I « N * 1 X *n ça Hand Oaoon 97211. Poal Offtca Bo« 3137 P W r r t OB Sacond claa» t * d * P o la n d Oraçon «I «SPS*«« el The F^filand O iitrn w we» eeieMahad m 1970 ( ! * * » » » « » < • ■ 1- Healthwatch Sutacnprxjne »15 00 pe» yea. * the Tn County wee Poet maeter Sand edrtnm changae to the Pt^Uead rjfcierw» P O ; 288 0033 Box 3137 Portland. Oregon 9720» Alfred L Henderson. Editor/Publisher A! Williams. General Manager National Advertising Repreeentetlve Am algam ated Publlehe.e. Inc N ew York 1 M ~ e ' • . • ' • 'A' ‘ * * i * iw« . v ; •