îlie|Jo rtk u iò © bserüer Page A4 August 30, 2006 Opinion articles do not necessarily reflect or represent the views o f The Portland Observer O pinion Anniversary is No Cause to Celebrate Sadness, one year after Katrina by Jt ix . e G reg and w ith good reason. When those levees broke and water started rush­ ing in to the c ity , we realized that at least, to the reality o f urban pov­ erty. People were saddened and outraged; support and promises residents in need is, M athis The city o f New Orleans has canceled plans fo r a comedy hour and a firew orks celebration, o rig i­ nally scheduled to mark the one- year anniversary o f H urricane Katrina. T hat’ s good news. There is nothing fun or festive about thou­ sands o f people trapped, w ithout the basics necessities o f food, wa­ ter and medical care, in the swelter­ ing heat, floodwaters rising around them. after all, the biggest tragedy o f them all. This is not a time for New Orleans-or any other c ity - to celebrate. This par­ ticular anniversary should be used as There is no jo y to be found in mass devastation or in mass ne­ glect; the federal government’ s fa il­ ure to q u ickly respond to those city. W hile Katrina affected other G u lf Coast cities, it was New Orleans that we paid the most attention to. an op p o rtu n ity to remember and re­ flect and to reaffirm the com m it­ ment to rebuild this cu ltu ra lly rich According to the Brookings In ­ need. Jazz funerals, a New Orleans stitution, an independent research tradition, w ith their slow, somber organization, the c ity ’ s public ser­ start and their upbeat endings, are vices are slow to bounce back. a nice - and appropriate - way to Kent and home prices are at mark this anniversary. an all time high. There are still But, to tru ly pay tribute to the thousands o f c ity residents men, women and children who died w ithout a permanent place to and suffered, perhaps those that call home. failed the residents o f the G u lf Coast, On the one-year anniver­ could p u b licly acknowledge the sary o f 9/1 I, this nation came collapse in leadership and reveal a to a stands! i 11. 1 n ci ties across plan fo r getting this city back on Am erica, at exactly the same track. That's a com m emorative ef­ tim e, people stopped their fo rt that w ill mean more than any lives and marked the precise m o­ poster o r concert ever w ill. ment the first plane hit the W orld Judge Greg Mathis is national Trade Center. vice president o f Rainbow PUSH K a trin a a n n iv e rs a ry events and a national board member o f should mem orialize the loss o f life the Southern Christian Leadership and m obilize support fo r those in Conference. Katrina anniversary events should memorialize the loss of life and mobilize support for those in need. many o f those left behind, w ith no means to evacuate as ordered, had tw o things in common: they were black and they were poor. On Aug. 29, 2005, the nation's eyes were opened, fo r a short time came rushing in. New Orleans, we were told, w ould be rebuilt. A year later, the city is showing signs o f rebirth. But it ’ s slow going. T oo slow. A nd more needs to be done. Lebanon Looking a Lot Like Iraq f y <•>. ‘ ■ ,C ) New thinking needed to avoid similar failures by C hristopher H e m m a n As Israel's army withdraws from Southern Lebanon, m ilita ry analysts and politicians in Tel A v iv are already asking, what happened? The Israelis sustained heavy casualties and fought to an unsatisfactory draw against a num erically inferior and outgunned enemy. The United States faces a parallel debate over our continued in a b ility toquel I the sectarian violence-a c iv il w ar to most — in Iraq. One o f the most significant causes is the m ilitary's failure to adapt to the changing nature o f warfare, despite extensive experience in previous decades in dealing w ith post-combat operations that are not easily solved by bullets or bombs. The unfortunate experience in Somalia, where a num­ ber o f American soldiers were kille d in intense urban combat, make the m ilita ry reluctant to take on additional peace making, peacekeeping and stability operations. The most advanced m ilita ry machine in the w orld does not easily deal w ith c iv il conflict. Yet it is these kinds o f missions, w hich the m ilitary refers to as "Operations Other Than W ar," that it w ill increasingly be called on Io perform rather than the traditional form o f conventional war fighting that has dominated Pentagon thinking since W orld W ar II. As a practical matter in Iraq, the m ilitary's u n w illin g ­ ness to acknowledge the shortcomings o f its methods and tactics has stymied its a b ility todevelop an effective strategy against a grow ing insurgency in Iraq. The Israelis have discovered in Lebanon what the United States has learned in Iraq: a conventional m ilitary force, not matter how strong, cannot by itse lf defeat a g u erillaarm y,quell an insurgency o r rehabilitatea failed state. The security com m unity in this country, and in fact around the world, must start thinking much more broadly about viable solutions to such problems i f we are to avoid sim ilar failures in the future. Christopher Heilman is a military policy analyst with the Center fo r Arms Control and Nonproliferation in Washington. D.C. The Unequal Treatment of Women Somehow we've all been taught in this country that race discrimination is wrong, but a little sex discrimination here and there is okay. Men Stil1 Get the Advantages by Db Transf^aC^ Cust°niers! 9 e ta t10Q ^riP>IOn& LO D G E ifetf U)z are a rectorpharm a up / V W e fill p r e s c r ip tio n s — in c lu d in g a n tib io tic s , h ig h b lo o d p r e s s u r e m e d ic a tio n s , a n ti- d e p re s s a n ts , b irth c o n tr o l, a n d m o re . W e h a v e k n o w le d g e a b le , frie n d ly p h a r m a c is ts w h o h a v e th e tim e to s h a r e in fo r m a tio n . O u r p r ic e s a re c o m p e titiv e W e a c c e p t m o s t in s u r a n c e p la n s a n d a re a d d in g o th e r s a s re q u e s te d I t W e s p e c ia liz e in c u s t o m c o m p o u n d in g M e n t y o u r F P h a rm a cist M el o d a H u ile r Y O U R L O C A L L Y O W N E D . N E IG H B O R H O O D P H A R M A C Y AT ARBOR LODGE M artha B i rk Q uick - what did we celebrate on Aug. 26? II your answer is “ uh-h- h,” you're not alone. M ost A m e ri­ cans don’t know it was the date in 1920 when women won the vote. Christened Women's Equality Day by Congress, it's usually marked by flo o r speeches on C apitol H ill, w ith women's history buffs and fe m i­ nists, but few others jo in in g in the com m em oration. And indeed we have come a long way since women couldn't vote, attend universities, hold professional jobs o r even have ownership o f their own earnings o r inheritances. But are we really there yet when it comes to equality? W orldw ide, the answer is a resounding “ no.” In the M id d le East, women are still in the veil o r head-to-toe burqas and g irls' schools are burned to the ground. The Japanese are praying fo r a male heir to the throne so the country won't face the "c ris is " o f an im perial granddaughter as the only one next in line. A ID S is ravag­ ing the women o f A frica, most often because husbands are contracting the disease through other liaisons and then forcing their wives to en­ gage in unprotected sex. Here at home, it's still big news when a woman is appointed CEO o f a large corporation. And in the "N ew Y ork T im es," we learned that a new kind o f school is d rillin g children ages 7 to 14 fo r nine hours a day, even in summer, so they can memo­ rize the Quran. The director o f the Jamaica M u slim Center says the children w ill not only become re li­ gious leaders, but doctors, and engineers (even though they do not study math and science) and they w ill bridge the gap between the M u slim w o rld and American N IN T E R S T A T E A V E N U E & P O R T L A N D E3LVD • 5 0 3 . 4 6 7 . 4 8 4 8 w w w .n e w s s a s o n s m a rk e t c o m • M O N F R I 9 a m - 7 p m • S A T 9 a m - 6 p m • S U N 1 O a m -4 p m t society. A good goal - except fo r one tin y flaw . The students are all male. Male supremacy is part o f the culture, and these kids are getting the message. It's no surprise that one student says his favorite video game in o ff- hours is Grand Theft Auto. Players get points fo r having sex w ith a prostitute, then rack upeven higher scores when they k ill her to avoid paying fo r her services. O f course we can't blame our national misogyny on this school o r these boys and their parents alone. W al-M art, that bastion o f fa m ily values, also peddles Grand T heft Auto, which m illio n s o f non- M u slim kids buy. And the U.S. Department o f Education is prais­ ing single sex schools as a way for boys to get ahead academically. “ The Education Innovator," a D OE official publication, gushed about Albany, New York's Brighter Choice Charter School for Boys and the companion schixil for girls, which have "the unique distinction as the first elementary charter schools in the nation to educate boys and girls in separate classrooms.” Isn't this what we fought against foryears when girls were consigned to home economics w hile boys got star treatment in accelerated sci­ ence classes? Somehow we've all been taught in this country that race discrim ina­ tion is wrong, but a little sex dis­ crim ination here and there is Okay. Can you imagine A lbany separat­ ing students by race and then g iv ­ ing the w hite kids a new school? E quality day? Not yet. Martha Burk is the author o f "Cult o f Power: Sex Discrimina­ tion in Corporate America and What Can Be Done About It. "