I � 1 : . \ -, y u When we talk 'or hear about Black power, e u ually think in political. terms. e will li ten to corwersations or interview in the media' with poli­ tic ian , maY.,0rs pr congressmen, about politic 1 ction. Organizational spokes­ person or community activists will _ talk about registering people to vote, voter education or voter turnout .. This is fine . . . as far as it goe . But there is anot kind of power, dollar power, Black power in a green pper. eldon hear conversation out thi kind of power. We never hear interview in the media with Black busine eople or ecopomists. Organ­ iztional . spoke ersons or community activists rarely talk bout money, capital or cash flow. They never talk about production distrib tion and sale . Yet· virtually every Black person has some dollar power. Some Blacks have a lot of it. And virtually every Blac person, poor or rich alike has more dollar power I capital or cash than voting or p litical p wer. oreover dollar po er delivers - • more p wer action or capability that tisfies our interests or need than political power. For e ample Japan s politi I p wer i si nificant though' prim rily limited to its 0 n national bound rie hile it dollar power '. overwhelm in and felt throughout the orld. Yet e give r thro away our don r power faster, ith Ie • thought, and le per unit return than our v ting p litical) power. nd unle we control and multi­ ply our dollar I power, we on't be able to improve our ommunity. , ,e et ,ali ns come into our com­ munitie and take all of our dollars and charge u 20 cent . extra (the Black t on every dollar that e pend on food and drugstore items at the corner tore. If white politicians did this (that i , treated u like we get treated in -these lien' teres �e • ould never vote for them. But we let white merchants over­ charge u , insult and cur us, provide oddy merchandise, rarely provide u . job in their tores fail to dverti in our community papers, and then take their profit out oft our community, d e till patronize them. . e Rodney Dangerfield we can't et 0 re ect, but in ur case, it's no joke. To complain about the situation is not the an er. Answers there are, the . are difficult. They take thought, . , cooperation, discipline and p tience. Still, we must t� to put solu­ tions into practice. First, e must talk about money, capital or doll r power. Like what we're doing now with me writing and you reading thi article. e've got to talk about money a lot, whole lot. And then some more. I Because after a lot of talk, we'll take a iitt ction. h re's no use arguing tha th t shouldn't be. It' the way it , e get ide-tracked with ego problems, with lac of data, with social problems, with emotional problems. Our problems surface with expres­ on of extreme financial individual­ ism nd f examples of fmancW .co- operation. e value autonomy even if it guarantee poverty. Vie lack data 'about our consumer habits and motivation. WE have few Black economists, and littl research about us i being done. Most of the data that is gathered . used to exploit us rather than to develop our economy. We need research. Food co-op are difficult to develop in the Black community. While business co-ops (collective purcha s of supplies by group of Black busmesse like record stores barbershops, etc. ) are non exi - tanto The obstable delay u, confu us and thus we require more money talk to accomplish what others can do more efficiently with le input. ext, we mu t understand that every dollar that comes into our posse ion repre ent power that can/fuust be used, not only to buy. goods or ervices, but leveraged for the best interest of the Black community. Thi means buying where Black, people own the business, or buying where Blac people ar em­ ployed, or bu ing th e product and from those tore who advertise in the Bla media. hen we thin 'of the e consider - tion, before' we pend our dollar p wer our ommunity would look thin act and feel better. e need to think before we buy. The' cash flo int� our community is not a maj r problem. We have a a people in this country, an income of 150 billion annually. That i the tenth largest income of any group of people on this planet. However we pend about 2 cents of ery dollar in our community. Then e as why our community 100 s the way it doe. .. e don't suggest that we should spend 50 cents of every dollar of lour income in our community but it would be prudent to see that a nic el or a dime of every dollar' stays a little while in our community. Then over a period of ye increa that amount. Unle we stem the dollar hemorr­ haging in our community we will never develop our neighborhood or raise our standard of living. e have the capacity, and the opport nity is waiting for us to , seize it. The time i now. (About the author. David Rambeau is the dire tor of Project BAIT, a national .BlJzCk edia organization, and producer of For My People, a NewS and public affairs program that air, on' WKBD­ TV, Ch. 50 Sunday nights at 11:30 1I.m., and No Claim On Tomorrow, a Block soap opera now available for cable.) , , p EW YORK - President Ronald Reagan has only Je Jack n to fear among hi� emocratic presidential oppo­ nents in 19 ,a�cording to an ancient Chinese Astrological calendar. Jack n was born in 1941, the Year of the 'Snake, while Reagan was born in 1911', the Year of the Pig. "The only thing (Reagan has to ') watch for is the Snake who has the ability to urround the Pig in coils and squeeze him to death," said author Emil Prager in the February is ue of Penthouse magazine. ., JANUARY 11-24,11,13 T E CITIZE 7 . 1 Published by o.y Enterpr. in Street - Benton �r. Mich Ph0!M: 616/927-1527 I O -.\ ,. n VI , I "But I'll sit briefly upon r. T' great p� "And put a new feather in Ronnie' po tical cap. "Maiden I am, skin an fair and so white "I epitomize the day r. � is the night. .. On , \ I, "It's so com sitting he 4 "With TV cameras tu "It' so nice to be en t ith the TV lights burning.' Dear ancy' not aware to­ day's Black know alot They can see through very tritel political plot. Black are no Ion er e sily r impres ed . They're thinkin and derna - ding the Fir t Family' . best. They're learning to re ister to get out the vote . They're learning to watch to I c efully note T ey've begun to put their thinking cap on Dr. King taught bondage would one day be Shorn. I With all this new knowledge Dear ancy's concern d. She' wants to help ROMie without getting burned .. " y goodne , oh gracious, what shallldo?" Breathlessly cried out you know who) "I'm desperate, I'll give Mr. T a big ki , "That trick will fool them, it urely can't mi " "After all, I'm ancy, the nation's fir lady, I'm number one, not a mere maid named Sadie, The things that I do, they set the p ce So fondling Mr. T, wi!! help Ronnie' race." Today's marching Blacks have freed up their minds Away with self-hatred, they say with their signs, They now call for d�ty, respect for one's self, I They insist they're entitled to part of our wealth . They demand first cl , they must be involved , They say they'll fight, till the' problems are solved . They say they'll stand tall, the act like new men And the "girls" among them, will be women again. � Oh goodne , oh gracious; hat shall we do?" Tearfully sobs ancy, along with her crew "They're waking up now, boo hoo, boo hoo Ronnie's out running, but we're all in a tew." "Je Jackson's coming on, everyone know that He's made it so difficult by tossing his hat Ronnie's opponent was that Dear Mr. Fritz But Je in Syria tore our great plans to bits!" "My goodness," frets ancy, "oh my dear," "I've got to do somethin, 01'11 take a at here On wonderful, animal, big . T ," Loveable, laughable, sterotypical he!" . r. rs. ,\ Toni I Toni Nash is a Philadelphia pub icist, a free-lance writer and a careful observer of the political scene. "View of Nancy It was reprinted {rom The Nationol Leader. · I'