J uly 26, 1995 • T he P ortland O bserver P age A2 y .. • Editorial Articles Do Not Necessarily Reflect Or Represent The View's Of The ^ o r tla n h ffibseruer ! y F J ( T W ' here have been three £ | recent civil rights deci- sions handed down by this Supreme Court. In the Adarand decision, the Court made the standard for affirma­ tive inclusion o f people o f color in the American dream and society more narrow, difficult and costly There­ fore, the just goal o f racial inclusive­ ness was made more distant for those who need it most. In the Jenkins decision, the Court laid the predicate for separate but unequal schools. Today’s Miller v. Johnson deci­ sion, the most devastating ofthe three decisions, signals the legal end of what should be called the period of the second reconstruction, 1954-to- 1995. Today’s decision is disastrous because it strikes at the very heart and soul o f the 1965 Voting Rights Act, the most important piece o f so­ cial legislation o f this century for people o f color. Miller v. Johnson is critical because political rights are preservative of all other rights. The political order writes the laws that determine the distribution o f goods and services produced by the economic order. It determines who, gets what, when, where, how, and what it is called. This ruling will reduce African American, Latino and Asian American representation in C O A L IT IO N Court Ends 2nd Reconstruction against the forces that have moved the nation forward and made his po­ sition on the Court possible. Miller v. Johnson continues to shift the burden o f proof from “ef­ fect” to "intent.’ The Court restricts remedies and relief for past and present racial exclusion. It will be broadly applied, not just limited to the Congress. Ultimately, it will af­ fect every facet of American life. This decision, in effect, is a re­ treat to the 1896 Plessy era. It will reduce the number of African Ameri­ can, Latino and Asian officials thirty years after Selma: (1) there will be less representation; (2) there will be less access to equal education; and (3) there will be me exclusion from jobs, promotions, education and contracts. Miller v. Johnson effectively ends the attempt at a second recon- legislatures all across America from top to bottom By 1996, or 1998 at the latest, nearly half of all African American and Latino members of Congress will likely be gone The impact will not be limited to Con­ gress. This decision will affect every state legislative district, every coun­ ty and city council, every school board and every judicially drawn district. The Court has authorized the country to unravel the legal fabric o f social justice and inclusion which has been woven together over the last forty-one years. It is especially pain­ ful that a descendent o f slaves, in effect, stabbed Dr. King and the oth­ er civil rights and social justice mar­ tyrs in the back, and is lay ing the legal foundation to pave the way back toward slavery. This is a brutally violent act struction. The new lines o f inclusion were drawn in 1992-tw enty-seven years after Selma. Essentially all white judges had found proof o f race discrimination. The courts outlawed the use o f gerrymandering, annex­ ation, at-large, role purging, inacces­ sible registrars and other schemes to politically disenfranchise people. Political lines have never been sym­ metrical. They have been based on incumbency, party affiliation, geog­ raphy, industry and racial exclusion. This C ourt’s rejection of race as a factor in remedy for inclusion, ef­ fectively removes protection for the minority from tyranny by the major­ ity. This is a national day o f shame. Ironically, this decision comes the day after trade negotiations with Japan were completed. In those ne­ gotiations we defined fairness as in­ clusion. We focused on specific tar­ gets, demanded goals and timetables and, in some instances, quotas. Un­ like our civil rights laws, these are to be strictly enforced. We demanded that Japan reduce its tariffs—or face sanctions. We de­ manded open markets and two-way trade We demanded that Japan open up and be inclusive. The Bible asks a basic question: “How can you see a speck in someone else’s eye with a log in your own?” THIS WAY FOR BLACK EMPOWERMENT The Sudan Needs Our Help m D I t ><>R* F > 1 1 * 1 r ' • . ■ 15 1 ne of the greatest tragedies on the Afri­ can continent is the civil war in Sudan. f f i A military regime, the National Islamic Front (NIF), is waging a war o f annihilation against all Sudanese citizens-Arab and Black, Muslim, Christian or adherents o f traditional religions -- who oppose the govern­ ment’s agenda. The most prominent o f its vic­ tims, however, have been Black Af­ rican Sudanese, who live in the po­ tentially rich but economically un­ derdeveloped south of the country. In the past twelve years, the civil war has claimed over one million lives. Four million people are dis­ placed, and these face the constant risk o f death from war-induced fam­ ine, or from the routine bombing raids that the Khartoum-based re­ gime conducts over refugee camps. This reality demands the urgent at­ tention ofthe African American com­ munity. In surveying the Sudanese cri­ sis, some have focused on the en­ slavement o f Black Sudanese by Sudanese government uaanese g u v c iiu n v i« troops. This has provoked some in the Nation of Islam to come forth and raise con­ cerns about attacks being made against the N IF regime, in an attempt to defend an Islamic government from the usual Western slanders. But while this debate is battled out on the air­ waves and on the pages of our news­ papers, the larger point is being lost - as are many thousands o f African Lives. The larger point is that there is in Sudan a Black - led liberation move­ ment - the Sudanese Peoples Liber­ ation Army - which desperately needs our political support. The lead­ er ofthe SPLA - Col. John Garang - - has created a movement that is not just for the liberation of the Black African peoples o f the south, but for all the people o f Sudan, Black and Arab. Muslim, Christian and follow­ ers o f indigenous religions. His vi­ sion o f a new Sudan is of a pluralistic, multi-party democracy, which re­ spects human rights, religious free­ dom and the rule o f law, and prohib­ its all forms o f discrimination - the antithesis o f the current regime. The fight for democracy in Sudan has been desperate and bitter and many times almost lost. The SPLA has had to confront not only the on­ slaught o fth e NIF, but also its own disunity, and the conflicts that rage among the many southern ethnic groups that make up its ranks. Moreover, Garang’s efforts to link up with the northern Muslim opposition parties in the fight for a unified, democratic Sudan have an­ tagonized those in his movement whose believe that southern self-de­ termination can only be achieved by the secession ofthe south By insist­ ing that the SPLA make common cause with all o f Sudan's oppressed peoples, Col. Garang has taken con­ siderable political risks. We should be doing everything possible to pressure our government s foreign policy-makers to provide af­ firmative support for the democracy forces in Sudan . There are some signs that the United States, after several years o f provocatively condemning the SPLA as vociferously as it has the Khartoum regime, has begun to soft­ en its position toward the SPLA. This opening must be extended Some members ofthe Congressional Black Caucus, like its chairman Congress­ man Donald Payne (D-NJ), have demonstrated their commitment to this issue by going on fact-finding tours to Sudan, and initiating legisla­ tion condemning the Khartoum re­ gime, urging the United States gov­ ernment to provide more humanitar­ ian support to civil war victims and recommending President Clinton take strong diplom atic and economic measures against the Sudanese gov­ ernment. We must direct our attention to pressuring the Clinton Administra­ tion and the State department to pub­ licly recognize the positive role of the SPLA is playing in the fight for democracy, and thereby assist the Sudanese people in determiningtheir own political and cultural future. The struggle against apartheid enjoyed the passionate support of African Americans. The struggle is not over. To quote Col. Garang, “It is hard to see either the political or moral difference between the racist delirium known as apartheid and the abhorrent policies o f the Khartoum Government... It is not religion that inspires this regime, but a mixture of fanaticism, intolerance and the lust for power. What we have here is a new apartheid, from which Africa must be liberated." ------✓ Civil Rights Journal: govem m ent’s ability to assist busi­ nesses owned by women and persons he title of Dr. Martin o f color, some o f us feel abandoned Luther King Jr.’s last and under assault. As we begin the book was Where Do We budget cuts o f the Con­ Go From Here: Chaos draconian or tract with America, some o f us won­ Community? That question is der how poor women and their fam­ just as relevant for America ilies will survive and whether we as a today as it was 27 years ago. nation really believe that hungry, Our country is at that proverbial angry, isolated people just will dis­ crossroad, where we must make dif­ appear quietly. As bright, articulate ficult choices about how we live as a and committed African American society; indeed, some would say the leaders like Dr Lani Guinier and Dr choice is whether we live as a soci­ Henry Foster are not even allowed to ety For many Americans -- for many have their nominations voted upon people o f color, for many women, for by the Senate, some o f us wonder if many o f the poor - it feels that we as there is increasingly only room for a nation are choosing to close doors, the Clarence Thomases o f the world rather than open them. to serve in the public sector. I, feels As we begin to dismantle affir­ that we are closing doors in America, mative action, as we limit the federal rather than opening them. court’s jurisdiction in dealing with Martin Luther King, Jr. argued discrimination in education and vot­ o f course, that we as a nation must ing rights and as we limit the federal ® .. . a 1-* build community rather than let cha­ os reign. He suggested that we must address the problem o f economic injustice as well as racial justice if we are ever to become a community-. He challenged us all to live up to our nation’s ideals and to be actively involved in opening doors for the poor and the oppressed. Nearly three decades after Dr. King wrote the book, we as a nation still have not addressed the problems he forced us to face. In many ways economic injustice has worsened. Today, the Children’s Defense Fund estimates that one in every four chil­ dren in America is poor and that number is likely to increase to one in every three with the budget cuts. Today’s poor - nearly 40 million strong -- have never been poorer, while the rich have never been rich­ er. Indeed, the top one fifth o f Amer- tinn\ ica oomc earns rtoarkz nearly half half rtf o f thf» the nA nation’s income while the bottom fifth earns less than 4 percent. As more and more unskilled la­ bor jobs are eliminated or leave the country, as government and business downsizes, a large pool o f untrained, disaffected workers -- white as well as people o f color - grows. As we end this century, we are facing a job revolution just as earth-shaking as the Industrial Revolution was at the century’s beginning. Meanwhile, many o f the job training programs and even some unemployment compensation funds are scheduled to be cut. Martin Luther King Jr.’s ques­ tion must still be reckoned with if we are to survive as a nation. Where do we go from here - chaos or commu­ nity? T hat’s the question we must all ask -- and then answer. V c m fo g e P o in t : Chavannes Jean Baptiste: Haitian Leader Extraordinaire ba R on D w in s , he nation of Haiti negot- iates its way through a round of elections lead­ ing up to the election of a new President in December. Chavannes Jean Baptiste, a pop­ ular peasant leader little known to African Americans, may emerge as a prime contender to succeed President Jean Bertrand Aristide. I first me, Chavannes through the renowned in­ ternational human rights activist Michael Ratner, volunteer attorney a, the Center for Constitutional Rights. When we met, I was immediately impressed by Chavannes analysis of U S policy towards Haiti and his strat­ egy and commitment for building gen- uine democracy in his native land. In his view the Haitian masses through popular organizations of peasants, workers, women, youth and students must be the backbone of democracy . T his new dem o cracy m ust be undergirded with an economy whose firs, goal is self-reliance and self-suf­ ficiency in the vital areas of food, clothing and shelter for the Haitian people Haiti’s development must be based on self-development and self- determination as opposed to neo-colo­ nialism and foreign domination As an outgrowth of our meet­ ings and discussions I extended and invitation for Chavannes to speak a, the National State o f the Race Con­ ference held in Baltimore in Novem­ I c t i v e s “The Oregonian” Shakes Up Black Community ('TiT'' rom Benefit Benefit To To «•I rom ' j j j Burden” Burden” was was the the title title *J|| I of of a a full-page full-page ’ News News Focus* article in last Thurs­ day’s issue of Portland’s daily newspaper (P.A14). The big bold’ lead was, “Affir­ mative Action In Public - S ecto r Jobs May Damage Blacks.” T he w hite male investigative reporter for Newhouse News Ser­ vice lost no time in getting right down to cases; the opening line was “ If America’s public sector reflect­ ed the nation’s racial makeup, near­ ly one o f every two blacks working for the government would be out o f a job.” A warning? A veiled threat? Or just good news reporting spiced with an attention-getting punch I ine? From the rash o f relevant phone calls that have besieged my elec­ tronics, one would conclude that most readers chose the first inter­ pretation. If I didn't have a comput­ erized answering system many of the very concerned inquiries would have been lost. Let me address just one o f the consistent themes ‘tick­ ing o f f many o f the callers. “Born yesterday!” is a phrase frequently used by those who dispar age (resent) the' see-it-now’ approach to journalism. Several respondents were horrified that the news service writer spent 99 percent of his word budget trying to make the case that Affirmative Action was the caus­ ative factor for the concentration ot blacks in the public sector. Only one sentence addresses the crucial one hundred-year time-line that under-* writes the phenomenon. “But for the black community, says Oliver, the post office and the public sector generally have histori­ cally and in the cultural memory that gets recorded from generation to gen­ eration become known as the places you go to and find a good job.” Everybody knows that — ex­ cept white media, text book pub­ lishers and the university schools that dominate urban studies and sociology. My maternal grandfa­ ther was a Spanish-American war veteran (1898) who entered the postal service right after the turn- of-the-century. And his father be­ fore him was a civil servant in the Recorder o f Deeds office in a south­ ern state. His daughter, my mother and aunt, graduated from teachers colleges, and this pattern was re- peated throughout the country The main pressure exerted upon blacks this early on to force’ them into the public sector came from the newly-formed American Fed­ eration o f Labor Sy (S a m u e l Professor g o m p e r s , Mckinley |g 9 0 ’s). The Burt constitution o f --- -------------- 1 the new union for the crafts and skilled labor read “for white males only”. The hun­ dreds o f thousands o f black crafts­ men described by the famed histori­ an. W E B. Dubois, were ‘econom­ ically’ disenfranchised by this vi­ cious fiat, enforced by lynching and other forms o f intimidation. And if you were “born yester­ day”, or brainwashed in most o f our universities, you would ignore the reality o f several million newly freed’ black families with 200 years o f slavery -based technological ex­ perience maintaining the plantation physical infrastructure, buildingthe railroads, constructing the planta­ tion mansions, warehouses and fac­ tories. Thats the background o f those thousands o f black innovators and geniuses portrayed in my book and others I've cited in this column (Black Inventors o f America). And this was a hundred years ago. White politicians and unionists were frightened out of their wits; the racists began to whip up the hysteria of “white subjugation”—calling for increased European immigration to maintain white superiority. Only the advent of German submarine war­ fare in 1915 cut off a massive influx of poor, unskilled Europeans which would soon have seen the blacks rel­ egated to reservations like the Indi­ ans. Where else but to the Public Sector were the blacks to go--facing a certain genocide as they were? Affirmative Action my foot! the likes o f Newt Gingrich, Phil Gramm, Bob Dole and the Gover­ nor ofCalifornia have reached back into history for a surefire scape goat to cover up the horrible corporate greed and theft that has brought America to the brink o f destitution with more layoffspending. The Sav­ ings and Loan, or Junk Bond thefts were only the tip of the iceberg. Like Nixon said, “you’ve got me to kick around”. Next week do we have a black leadership that can save the situation? Do they have a clue? ___________________ _____________ W here Do We Go From Here? m B m 'i< i P o w n i J ac kson p e r s p e ber o f 1994 I saw Chavannes’ pres­ ence a, the SORC as an opportunity to promote African American-Afri­ can Haitian solidarity . Equally com­ mitted to this goal, Chavannes in turn invited me to bring a delegation to visit Haiti. Since President Aristide's return to Haiti Chavannes has dedi­ cated him self to rebuilding MPP and fortifying the popular movement for democracy A man o f deep principle and conviction, he has offered con­ structive criticism o f the government in defense o f the interests o f peasants and workers inspite o f his friendship with President Aristide Chavannes is clear that the U S. government is no, really interested in genuine de­ mocracy, development for the Haiti Hence he is committed to empower­ ing the Haitian masses to promote and defend their own interests through organized popular structures. Whether he runs for President or not, Chavannes Jean Baptiste is a man that African Americans need to meet Accordingly, Campaign for a New T om orrow ’s Haiti Support Project will organize a nationwide tour this fall to introduce Chavannes to African communities in the U.S. The goal is to mobilize grassroots support for the popular movements as an expression o f our solidarity with our brothers and sisters in Haiti. In Chavannes you will see a man who is destined to play a decisive role in shaping the future o f Haiti. JjJartlanfr (©bseruer (USPS 959-680) OREGON’S OLDEST AFRICAN AMERICAN PUBLICATION Established in 1970 by Alfred L. Henderson Joyce W ashington-P ublisher The PORTLAND OBSERVER is located at 4747 NE Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. Portland, Oregon 97211 503-288-0033 * Fax 503-288-0015 Deadline for all submitted materials: Articles:Friday, 5 :0 0 pm Ads: M onday Noon POSTMASTER: Send Address Changes to: Portland Observer, P.O. Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208. 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