Page A 4 M a y 31, 2000 lije ^Inrthmò (Dbaeruer g Opinion fJurtlau ò _ A rtic le s do not necessarily reflect or represent the view s o f (EI jf |Jurthnii> (Obevrurr ■■■■■■■■■ mhhmhnbhmhnbmhhhmhnhm The growth of unequal opportunity •flortlanb COhserUcr BY J o t K lock , S h , USPS 9 5 9 -6 8 0 Established 1970 STAFF E d it o r P C in h ie f , u b l is h e r Charles H. Washington E d i T o « Larry J. Jackson, Sr. B M u s in e s s anager Gary Ann Taylor C opy E d it o r Joy Ramos C r e a t iv e D ir e c t o r Shawn Strahan 4 7 4 7 NE M a r tin L u th er King, Jr. Blvd. P o rtla n d , OR 9 7 2 1 1 5 0 3 -2 8 8 -0 0 3 3 Fax 5 0 3 -2 8 8 -0 0 1 5 e-m ail new s@ p o rtlan do b server.co m When Shakespeare wrote that “something is rotten in the state of Denmark,” he referred to the poisoning o f Hamlet’s Daddy by his Mom and her boyfriend. Something similarly rotten, albeit less violent, is threatening the state o f business here in the USA. The victims are the less-than-stinking- rich in A m erica, and the c u lp rits are a g ro w in g horde o f newly wealthy and powerful people. The poison is greed, and I know o f no available antidote. Exhibit A is that ever-widening chasm between the compensation level o f our captains o f industry and commerce and that o f the crews in their company forecastles. A couple o f decades ago, those in the executive suite might have earned 40 times as much as the file clerks and schleppers below. That multiple today could be 500 or even more, given bonuses, options, pensions, perks and, if things go badly, golden parachutes. It isn’t that I begrudge talented people a fair reward, but I find it difficult to imagine that the top guns o f today’s corporate America are w orth so m uch m ore than th e ir p re d e c e sso rs in com m and. 1 have the same reservations about the sports and entertainment figures whose incomes have soared into stratospheric orbits at growth rates almost immeasurably higher than the purchasing power o f their patrons at the box office. Getting back to the business o f big business, my problem with the high paid help at the helm is that too many o f them are doing well for themselves and a selected few others, but not doing nearly as much good for their customers, their firms and the laborers in their vineyards. For most of my life, large enterprises tended to be organizations with either a long history or a predictably long future - or both - with new competitors setting their sights on similar patterns o f stability and longevity. Today’s entrepreneurs and mover-shakers seem bent on getting in, fattening up, either going public or getting acquired, then heading for the lush, green fairways of retirement. Somewhere along the line, it became fashionable for bigger fish to gobble up littler fish, reducing competition and enhancing profits, cutting comers in customer service and putting serious squeezes on the workforce.. .always after solemnly sweari ng to do none o f the above. Enter, too, the corporate raiders who, knowing little or nothing bout the businesses they acquired, gobbled up successful enterprises, spun off the least profitable activities, dehydrated the payroll, sucked out as much loose cash as possible, and loaded the company with debt in the form o f so-called junk bonds. Then, like black-hatted Lone Rangers, they rode off into the sunset in search o f similar prey. CEOs, COOs and CFOs, besides feathering their nests and greasing their exit slides, now seem to focus on slurping up or merging with competitors, then wringing out every possible employee and mandating every possible reduction in expenditures - this to enrich mostly passive investors and favored insiders, not to mention qualifying themselves for incentive goodies. Wage controls? Price controls? Profit controls? Protective tariffs? I’m told that they’re all contrary to the precepts o f a capitalist economy and the great American system o f free enterprise. But some things are spinning OUT OF control. It’s an ongoing soap opera that poses this question: Can free enterprise and fair play woo, wed and live happily ever after? If not, we might be headed for those extremes o f wealth and poverty that keep Third World nations those two giant levels below Plateau America. Grace to lead our children home b \ M akian W hich i E delman subscripUon@portiandob9erverxom P ostmaster : Send address changes to Portland Observer PO Box 3137 Portland, OR 9 7 2 0 8 Periodical Pos tage paid in Portland, OR Subscriptions are $ 6 0 .0 0 per year D E A D L IN E S FOR ALL SUBMITTED MATERIALS: ARTICLES: Monday by 5 p . m . ADS: Friday by noon The Portland Observer welcomes freelance submissions. M anuscripts and photographs should b eclearly labeled and w ill be returned ifaccompamed by aselfaddressed envelope. A ll created design d isp la y ads become the sole properly o f the newspaper and cannot be used inother publications o r personal usage w ithout the w ritten consent o f the general manager, unless the cl lent has purchased the composition o f such ad. © 1996 T H E P O R T L A N D O B ­ SERVER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, REPRODUCTION IN W HO LE OR IN PART W ITHO UT PERMISSION IS PRO­ HIBITED. The Portland O bse rve r-O reg o n 's Oldest M ulticu ltu ra l P u b lic a tio n -is a m e m b e ro fth e National Newspaper Association-Founded in 1885, and The National Advertising Represen­ tative Amalgamated Publishers, Inc. New York, N Y , and The West Coast Black Publishers Association* Serving Portland and Vancouver I The Black Church Initiative was launched in 1997 by the Children’s D efen se Fund and the B lack Community Crusade for Children we coordinated to bring a critical mass of Black congregations together to respond to the growing crisis facing Black children. Religious institutions have always played a role in the development o f Black children and families, and we believe today’s churches and mosques must be the moral locomotives for the urgently needed m ovem ent to save our c h ild re n from the g rip o f hopelessness, violence, and the juvenile justice and prison systems. We began with a series of gatherings in cities across the country where religious leaders, advocates, judges, and young people came together to discuss the alarming statistics on the disproportionately high numbers of Black children who are victims of violence or involved in the juvenile justice system. Each gathering also fe a tu re d so lu tio n s— p a n e lists describing innovative church-based youth programs across the country making a difference in the lives o f their community’s children, because sharing positive solutions is key to change. In order to share these examples with other congregations w e have p rofiled ten o f these successful programs in a new manual, "Graceto LeadOurChildren Home". The budgets, staff sizes, number of ch ild ren served, and a ctiv ities provided by the programs described vary widely so that almost any church can find a model they can use. For example, St Augustine’s Church in Washington, D.C. Freedom Temple C h u rch in G a rn e r, N .C ., and M etropolitan Baptist Church in M emphis all run after-school or evening enrichment programs that can be sta ffe d prim arily w ith volunteers from a congregation. The Church ofSaint Adalbert in Cleveland also relies on volunteers to run two su c c e ssfu l group m entoring programs, one for boys and one for girls. Mt Pleasant M issionary Baptist Church in Kansas City, Missouri, is one o f nearly sixty sites across the country currently hosting one o f the summer Freedom Schools which DCF/ BCCC sponsor and which will serve over 5,000 children this summer. Freedom Schools' paid staffs of c o lle g e -a g e d se rv a n t-le a d e rs integrate reading, conflict resolution, and social action into a well-developed a c tiv ity -b a se d cu rriculum that prom otes cultural and historical aw areness and provides summer options for children where there are none. P arents attend w eekly parenting workshops. The Boston TenPoint Coalition, founded by three Black ministers, is a coalition o f churches from many denom inations, the police, the juvenile justice system, and many other public and private organizations who have come together to work on b e h a lf o f these program s and encourages churches across the country to follow their positive examples. Working together, the faith community can make a tremendous difference in helping to lead all o f our young people safely home. To order a copy call 1-202-662-3652. For more information call I -202-628- 8787.) Feds nail m ore dirty cops, but not violent cops Attorney General Janet Reno publicly boasts that she will do everything in her power to nail more dirty eops. She’s backed up that boast. In the seven years she has run the Justice Department, federal prosecutors have slapped more than 600 corrupt eops behind bars, an increase of nearly 600 percent. And she has told prosecutors throughout the country to be even more vigilant in cracking down on police corruption. There are plenty o f signs that they are heeding their bosses’ admonition. In big and small cities nationally more police are being arrested and indicted on bribery, racketeering, and drug peddling charges than ever before. The Los Angeles Police Department continues to be rocked almost daily with fresh allegations that LAPD officers beat, shot, planted weapons and drugs on suspects, and gave perjured testimony against them. At last count more than 70 LAPD officers are under investigation on corruption charges and more than 75 felony convictions have been overturned because of tainted evidence. Yet despite Reno’s admirable zeal to lock upcorrupt cops, she has not shown the same zeal to bag rogue cops who beat and kill mostly young African-Americans and Latinos. According to a recent report on poljce misconduct by Human Rights Watch, an international public watchdog group, in 1998 federal prosecutors brought excessive force charges against police officers in less than 1 percent ofthe cases investigated by the FBI involving allegations o f police abuse. The group also found that there wasalmost no difference in the skimpy number o f police misconduct cases prosecuted by the Justice Department under moderate Democrat Clinton than there were under conservative Republican President George Bush. When activists demand that the feds prosecute cops who gun down unarmed citizens such as the four New York City cops who riddled African Immigrant Amadou Diallo, their ritual response to them is that the shooting is under “review.” Meanwhile, months, sometimes years, pass with no word from the Justice Department on what if any action, it will take. In nearly all these cases no officers are prosecuted and the case is quietly closed. The reflexive see-no-evi 1 policy o f the Feds toward police violence comes of a time when the number o f police abuse complaints have soared nationally. The nearly 12, 000 complaints in 1996 almost matched the total number forthe entire period from 1984 and 1990. To better aid law enforcement agencies and federal prosecutors track patterns o f abuse, the Violent Crim e and Control Act of 1994 authorized the Justice Department to collect data on the frequency and types o f police abuse complaints. At the end o f 1998, it still had not issued any report on the level of police misconduct in America. Worse, the Justiee Department has long had on the books a strong arsenal o f civil rights statutes to prosecute abusive police officers. However, more often than not, it has taken major press attention, large scale protests, and even a major riot, such as the L. A. riots in 1992 following the Rodney King verdict, before it used its legal weapons. ■ Meanwhile federal prosecutors say they can’t nail more rogue cops because they are hamstrung by the lack of funds and staff, victims who aren ’t perceived as criminals, credible witnesses, and the public’s inclination to always believe police testimony. They also claim they are pinned in by the almost impossible requirement that they prove an officer had the specific intent to kill or injure a victim in order to get a conviction. These are tough obstacles to overcome and since the Justice Department is in the business o f winning cases many prosecutors are more than happy to take a hands- off attitude toward police misconduct cases. But this is no excuse for federal prosecutors not to at least' make the effort to prosecute more officers when there is' substantial evidence that they used excessive force. This is the legally and morally right thing to do. And it sends a powerful message to law enforcement agencies that the t federal government will go after lawbreakers no matter, • whether they wear a mask, or a badge. Former Attorney General Ramsey Clark understood the > importance o f prosecuting abusive officers even when • there is virtually no chance o f getting a conviction against them . He felt this acted as a “ sta b iliz in g force” to spur police and city officials to take stronger action to halt the useof excessive force in theirdepartments. Clark was right. Reno’s failure to aggressively go after cops who g u n . - down unarmed civilians will continue to feed the dangerous cycle o f more shootings and more racial turmoil, and • deepen the distrust and cynicism o f minorities toward the <■ criminal justice system. Reno should worry as much about this as she does about dirty cops. 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