A pril 2 4 , 1 9 9 6 • T he P ori land O bserver P age A 2 / ? 7 la s t, a corporate downsizing we can cele­ brate! After 25 years of bi demeaning and degrading Afri­ can Americans and Latinos, WABC-AM talk radio host Bob Grant “has been terminated by mutual agreement,” according to the official release by Capital Cities/ABC. Yeah, right. Translation: he was fired, by mutual agreement among 99% o f the human race Those o f us in the JaxFax world know that the National Rainbow Coalition has been a leading critic of Bob Grant's hate talk for years U s­ ing the research o f the media watch­ dog group F A IR , the N R C highlight­ ed a complete series o f Grant’ s most malicious radio comments in the 11/ 17/94 JaxFax Reverend Jackson led picket lines at W A B C , and the N R C organized a protest o f the corporate sponsors ofGrant's show, which led to numerous withdrawals Then last week, in the wake o f Grant's despicable comments about the death o f Commerce Secretary Ron Brown, the N R C launched a new campaign calling for Grant’s dismissal Step one--In last week’s JaxFax (4/11), we strongly criticized Grant’s ugly remarks about Ron Brown Step two--The next day, Reverend Jack- son wrote a letter to Michael Ovitz, President o f the Walt Disney Com- Ai nr" Editorial Articles Do Not Necessarily Reflect Or Represent The Views O f The ^Iortlanh © bseruer N A T IO N A L K U IhuBaW C O A L IT IO N The Thrill Of Victory... The Agony Of Defeat pany, parent corporation to A B C , calling Grant’s comments a “dis­ grace," and urging Disney to “take action...immediately.” Step three- The N R C organized and announced apicket line for A B C . Step fo ur-Th e N R C began planning for another corporate sponsorship boycott. Step five—Victory! A B C ’s pa­ tience was exhausted, the heat was on, and a moral judgement was de­ manded Result: Bob Grant is histo­ ry. Thanks to all the Rainbow family who fought his mean spirit over the years. Sad to say, we can't win'em all— and what the Voting Rights Act giveth, the black-robed crowd taketh away. The courts struck down yet another majority-minority district, Florida’s 3rd, currently held by Con­ gresswoman Corrine Brown. Apparently it’s a “judge thing”- wecertainly don't understand. A court system which sat by complacently for centuries while every single dis­ trict and voting rule in Am erica was gerry mandered to insure white dom­ ination, now seems determined to guarantee that “geography” and “compactness’ o f districts take full precedence o ve r “ ra ce ” and “ethnicity" in political redistricting The court’s logic is fraudulent. It is based on a wish, a world that never w as-a world where race is supposed to play no role in politics. These judges apparently believe, centuries o f evidence to the contrary, that A f­ rican American candidates have an equal chance to win majority white districts. They imagine a color-blind world, pretend that the severe hang­ over effects o f slavery have been erased, and then issue court rulings based on that fantasy We have an alternate fantasy for them—try to imagine Newt G ingrich winning election in any majority- minority district in America! The Florida Courts' own language makes their guilty feelings crystal clear "the decision should not be interpreted as turning back the clo ck' on gains made by African American voters, and other racial and ethnic minorities. Nor should the decision be interpreted as cut­ ting back on he continued viability o f the Voting Rights Act as a means to remedy discrim inatory voting practices.” Today we expect the court to issue an opinion that longer days, warmer weather, budding flowers, and spring rain should not be interpreted as turn­ ing back the clock on winter. What do these court rulings really mean? That every African American and Latino candidate-for city coun­ cil, state legislature, county com m is­ sion, or U .S. Congress—w ill face a stacked deck for the foreseeable fu­ ture. T o pretend otherwise is a farce, a travesty Unfortunately, this is the third time the courts have weakened the Voting Rights Act in recent months, in Louisiana, in Georgia, and now in Florida. The end is not in sight, and Am erica is a weaker, d i­ minished democracy as a result. V a n t a g e P o in t: The People’s Lawyer i first two weeks of Ap- have been difficult tim times for Black America. W ith in a span of ten days the B lack Nation was rocked by the loss of three o f its finest sons: Ronald H. Brown, C arl B Stokes, and W Haywood Bums, perhaps, the least well known o f these outstanding fig­ ures, but a man who made and in­ credible mark within the civ il rights/ human rights and progressive move­ ment in this country and the world I first became aware o f Haywood Burns in the late 60’s. I kept hearing about these bad attorney brothers named Lennox Hinds, Haywood Bum sand VictorGoode who were at the service o f the Black liberation movement, counseling brothers and sisters on how to use the law as a weapon in the struggle for social change and defending Black free­ dom fighters and political prisoners against the intimidation and repres­ sion ofthe U.S. government. I subse­ quently learned that these brothers were a part o f a organization that viewed itself as the “ legal arm o f the B lack Revolution,” the National C o n fe re n ce o f B la c k L aw yers (N C B L ). These brothers, and there were many sisters among them too, had chosen to use their legal skills and talents to serve the people On April 2, 1996 W Haywood I f you h a v e “s u g a r ” y o u h av e diabetes. Bum s was killed in a tragic accident in his beloved South Africa along with Shinara Gilbert another N C B L stalwart. They were attending a con­ ference on democracy and the law in South Africa. On April 8. thousands gathered at the historic Abyssinian Baptist Church to mourn the passing o f a man that Dr C alvin O. Butts, pastor o f Abyssinian, eulogized as the "people’s lawyer.” The outpour­ ing o f people, their tributes, love and affection was a living testimony to the legacy of a human being, a son of Africa who had made his mark with and on behalf o f African people and oppressed humanity. As a young up and coming lawyer who graduated with honors from Harvard College and earned a law degree from Yale, Haywood Bum s could easily have chosen to simply be a “successful" member ofthe Black bourgeoisie. True to the teachings o f one o f his African heroes, Am ilcar Cabral, however, Haywood made a conscious decision to “return to the source,” to immerse him self in the struggles o f a battered and oppressed people, to be an instrument o f human A-i better liberation. Q u ickly recognized as a young man with an agile legal mind and exceptional comm itment to the strug­ gle for social justice and social change, he was called upon to serve as the Assistant Counsel to the N A A C P Legal Defense and Educa­ tion Fund and he later went on to become general counsel to Martin Luther K in g ’s Poor People’s Cam ­ paign. Convinced that the B lack Free­ dom Struggle urgently needed cad­ res o f committed B lack Freedom Struggle B lack attorneys to develop offensive and defensive legal strate­ gies to advance the civ il rights/hu- man rights movement, Haywood Bum s was one o f the founders o f the National Conference o f Black Law ­ yers in 1969, and served as its first Director He later became the first African American President o f the National Lawyers G uild, an organi­ zation o f radical, progressive law­ yers and activists who m obilized hundreds o f la w ye rs to go to M ississippi as a part o f the Freedom Summer in 1964 to challenge south­ ern apartheid. P h y lie ia R a sh a d , H on orary S p o k esp erso n A frica n A m erica n P rogram I want you to know that diabetes is serious and life threatening. If left unchecked, diabetes can cause blindness, kidney failure, heart attacks, foot and leg amputations...even early death. But there’s hope. By eating smart, exercising and taking the right medicine, you can control this serious disease. Take charge of your diabetes. Call the American Diabetes Association today. ^ .A m e r ic a n Diabetes Association. t < by P rof . M c K inley B i rt «p' *| | J V * ast week's promise to “exam ine particular remedies" served to elicit some rather impassioned responses from the citizenry, generally, we could say the range was from the zealous to the embittered, if not from the ole “sublime to the ridiculous." I though it best to step back from the highly emotional onslaughts and take refuge in a strictly analytic posture. That was at first, but then I realized that this has become a wide­ ly-practiced intellectual game — and constitutes most o f the problem. On the other had, neither is our cause to be advanced by virtue o f snappy one-liners from our governor, “Not a case o f how much, but for what?” Now, he knew that was a tautolo- g y ’- In respect to my reference to the “ o fte n -d e ­ m o nized sales tax”, let me make one thing perfect­ ly c le a r ’ as a former president would preface statements (before being demon­ ized himself) - it would seem that there is no other proposition more likely to enrage Oregonians, poor or rich, labor or business communi­ ty, native or foreign-bom, right­ winger or liberal, educated or illit­ erate. But-let-me-say-this’ (in the manner o f pol itic ians who are quick to hedge their bets after making a particularly forthright statement), in all probability it w ill be the con­ cept o f a state-wide sales tax dedi­ cated to education which w ill win out over all the other proposals be­ ing thrown in the hopper. A s regressive and u n fair a burden to the poor as it is said to be, nevertheless th is p ro p o si­ tion p ro b ab ly w ill pass muster because in the exp e rien ce o f most states the p ro ce ss soon becom es ignored i f not p ain le ss to most tax-p ayers; more o f a /lu isan ce than an ythin g to c u s­ tomer and vendor a lik e (so rt o f like bridge to lls - one year be­ com es decades.) The question o f a over-burdened taxpayer has prompted a related comment from several readers. And it is a concept to which I have given considerable thought over the years That i s , “the only person who actu­ ally pays any taxes is the wage earn­ er, the shopper and those who own their places o f residence. A ll others the store owner, the processors, the manufacturers and the landlords treat their taxes as part o f the cost o f doing business and pass them on to the consumer. They pay only when consumers themselves. This con­ sideration quite often arises when people are discussing school fund ing and someone advances a new proposition for taxing business and industry. Cries o f frustration are evoked when it becomes obvious that there are definite constraints to be taken into account here. “ In the end we’ w ill pay, or, horrors, we may drive firms out o f the state A t this time By there are spirited Professor discussions go ­ Mcklnley ing on concern Burt ing a possible in crease in the Ore gon State Incom e T a x w ith a dedicated percentage “ reserved’ for education. T h is b rin g s up an interesting question; ju st how do you go about “ d ed icatin g or reservin g m onies for a p a rticu ­ lar purpose. We a ll are aware o f the co n stantly e xpan ding d e fi­ nition o f “ E co n o m ic D e v e lo p ­ ment” — sheer gen iu s in vo lve d in these p o litic ize d sem antics. One reader (I th in k se rio u s) suggests that the licen ses for casin o g a m b lin g by the In dian s be revoked and that this lu cra ­ tive revenue be e x c lu s iv e ly fun- neled into a “ State Edu catio n F u n d ” . O thers lo u d ly resent the “ short-term ” , m ulti m illio n d o l­ lar scho o l bail out by the M ayor o f Portland. And there are those who object to putting a “ short­ term bite” on lo cal industry. The many seem u n w illin g to accept less than reg io n -w id e , long-term so lutio ns — and c a ll for more studies, more focus groups, more th in k tanks. Per­ haps we can get “ P o g o ” to edu­ cate our kid s. O r in du stry, it­ self. (©Hseruer (USPS 959-680) J OREGON’S OLDEST AFRICAN AMERICAN PUBLICATION Affirmative Action Update A ffirm ative action supporters “waiting to exhale”, had been warned not to wait as the anti-affirmative action California C iv il Rights Initia­ tive signature drive brought in an astounding L I m illion signatures, more than enough to put the issue on the ballot. Then on March 7, 1996, President Clinton gave supporters a “heart flutter” by announcing a 3 year moratorium on the Federal set- aside program that brought the Con­ gressional Black Caucus immediate­ ly to the White House. “That was a mischaracterization” according to White House Public Liaison D irec­ tor, A lixis Herman, an A frican Amer­ ican, attesting to the President’s com­ mitment to affirmative action The President was in the Middle East. The S B A has approximately 634 firms on the set-aside program in California in an attempt to provide entry in business areas that minori­ ties and women have been excluded from in the past. Meanwhile, in California, Assem­ blyw om an M arilyn Brew er (R , Irvine) introduced A B -33 07 (293 pages) which abolishes Affirm ative Action in state procurement for mi­ norities and women (not disabled vets) under the guise o f State Pro­ curement Reform Revisions. Assem­ bly Committee hearing was set for April 23, 1996 at 9:00 a m., State Capital, Room #447, Sacramento, C A . The California Business Coun­ Which Road To An Effective Structure For School Funding, II r£he (SJditor (Ultc Send your letters to the Editor to: Editor, PO Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208 -......... ..... , .... ................. „ —............... , .......... bv F rederick E. J ordan ,C hair , C alifornia B usiness C ouncil F or E qi al O pportunity p e r s p e c tiv e s Established in 1970 cil for Equal Opportunity ( C B C E O ) has indicated concern over the pop­ ularity o f reform revisions among Republicans and Democrats alike as it prepares to testify against the bill. However, Senator Richard Polanco, Senate Minority Leader, on the other hand has introduced SB286, C alifo r­ nia Procurement Act, Which w ill re­ tain affirmative action and small busi­ ness provisions currently in place, but make other changes. C B C E O is also preparing to testi­ fy against the Senate confirmation o f Peter Stamison, who has been nom­ inated as Director o f the California Department o f General Services. The hearing on Stamison, who is consid­ ered the mastermind o f AB-3307, was set for Ap ril 15, 1996 at 1:30 p.m., in Room #113 o f the State C a p ita l. R ecen tly, Senator R ay Haynes, (R , C h ico ) and A C A 1 0 , Kopp, (I, San Francisco) deleting affirmative action from contracting, employment and education A hear­ ing date has not been set. Governor Pete Wilson also be­ came outraged when asked by the media if his appointment to the State Supreme court o f Appellate Court Judge Janice Rogers Brown, an A fri­ can Am erican, was an example o f affirmative action. Those who know Justice Brown say the Governor may be surprised that he will get a bright, fair and competent j udge with a sense o f personal integrity and not the likes o f a Supreme Court Justice Clarence T h o m as or U .C . Regent W ard Connerly. Charles Washington—Publisher 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. 5:00 pm Ads: M onday Noon POSTMASTER: Send Address Changes to: Portland Observer, P.O. 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