EDITORAL on' c . i ory don't·m I br e I c on h if you an it There are a whole lot of Bl c History Celebrations going on. rything from concerts to dramatizations to readings to movies lect to special worship services ... whatever your thing is, re is Black History Celebration organized around it. Even the hite press, the major media, the television tations and radio tio have jumped on the Bl ck History Band Wagon. Uke Dr. rtin Luther King ,Holiday, the white pariticipation Is a sign of how far we've come and yet how far we hav to go . . From our viewpoint, too many of the celebratio • Black History observances are pure entertainment as miIlldJe. : the last NBA game you at through or it-com you watcbec1 OD .• television. An hour of your life that means nothiDa 10 you or to : anyone else. Think about the history of Africans in America. It is one of the .. greatest epics every lived. Think of it! Built a country, made it the : richest in the world and all the time in chains. Think of it. Tom from • mother and father, deprived of name, religion, 1 oguage, famlly, : history, culture, If- NOT �E 1=R\)\'T. ' � O�\G\� �-rEt> \N\\l\OOT WlNt)\N& U� �\\N& '(OV '�t-tD N\E . " .' � MA LCO L.- "" )<. VIEWS OPINIONS SKILL ULLY OSTERING aoo exploi n hat rtin Luther Kin called a "morbid anti-com­ muni In," the cold war became the pretext for the militarization of the U.S. economy. 1be government aM thi nation' "free mar et" economy bas always been guided by the dictum, "the busi­ n of government i busin ." Hence the anna race and the U.S. rivalry with the Soviet Union w as much bout maldn the odd (par­ dc:uIady the Third World) fe for U.S. corporate investments it w to promote "democracy" over com­ munism. U.S. mUftary power forged a paternalistic protective shield over tern Europe and Japan and an offe tve that would be ed time time again to thwart social revolution in Third World countries. Y co pi - Cam i pendin for earch and develop- ment a being llocated for military/ earch. While the U.S. w emerging the unq tioned m cleman mong the w tern democ cles, America' potential economic competito were inve ting in the growth nd development of their civfli n economies. Japan and Germany, t 0 countri which have risen from ruin to economic uperpower tatus, re excellent examples of the resul of investment in the civilian opposed to the military/war economy. J p n pends j t fourcen outof every national tax doll r on the military, while Germany pend about fourteen een out of every na­ tional tax dollar on the military (compared to fifty cents for the U.s., based on the fiscal 1990 budget). Both Japan and Germany pend the v t majority of their research aDd development dollars for civilian Industries and commerce. In other words, th e two economic giants invest their national tax revenues on developing better products in order to be mote economically competi­ tive and prosperous . OAMOU TofJapanb hing or capegoaung of the poor ill change the hard reality oftbese fae . The United States m t drastically cut the military/w r budget (50-75 percent) and �iately emb rk on a planned transi tion to a peace economy. The conver ion to a peace economy must include greater economic democracy in the U.S. with a priority emphasis on com­ munity economic development, , community/worker-owned enterpri es, worker-owned enterpris , a greater utilization of community development corpora­ tions, and substantially increased public allocations for non-profits to enga e in hou ing rehabilitation, rm h proclamation of the triumph of "the undisputed leader of the age:" the United States of America. There was no humility at all, just another glorification of U.S. im­ perialism, militarism and arrogance toward the rest of the world. BUSH STATED, "But the big­ gest thing that bas happened in the world in my life, in our lives, is this: By the grace of