EDITORAL - - - The VA riot There's a riot going on in Americ . It started on the ban s of the Potomac in Washington, D.C. and it has spread aero the land leaving devastation in its wake. Ronald Reag n began it 11 when he pulled the air tr ffic controller from their tower. ongress watched as the triking controller, th n the Ea. tern Airlines pilots, then meal cutler fell under the feet of the scab replace­ ment. ru hin in through th • door to the work place flung open by Rea n. ongress ucled th mayhem and added to the mob hysteria when they fell in behind Re g n/Bu hand rewrote the tax law looting the poor people's prOll'am and sta hing the wealth in the home of the ricb. Corporations caught the fever and rampaged with vengeance. They looted jobs and took the booty to Mexico, China, Poland and Taiwan. In their ake tand empty, burned out, boarded up, crumbling fac ory hells. Surrounding the blight are the ravaged houses, now har­ boring crack heads where jobless families can no longer afford to stay. . Junk bond king tore up Wan Street while their bud­ die looted the avings and Loan in titutions. And it's a riot that still feed on its own greedy frenzy, yet to be played out. From the GM plant in Willow Run to the Caterpillar plant in Peoria, the violence continues. The most recent incident is in Detroit where the Veteran Administration hospital is providing the cronies of George Bush anew looting opportunity. . The Texas insider have pried open the VA 'coffers, eizing the $229 million constructi n job and the Bush adminstration keeps their night sticks in their belts, their gun holsters snapped and their heads turned, The VA has tied the hands of the Black contractors while inflicting blow after blow, Refusing to release the minority participation pi n, the Black contractors can't defend themselve again t the job lock out. The ugly scars on the kyline of Los Angeles pale in comparison to the blight on the soul of Detroit, on the spirit f America, Llte most preCiOI�$ !Jjs thClt pm-ents clm�ive P. rhihf is time rod cotlsistent_3ui d Uti ce. VIEWS 'OPINIONS tired." succeeded Gerald Ford in Hence the battle cry hich i on' fall from reverbe d throughout thi nation ntiall y told Blac and the orld w Ii, "no j tice, no downpl y BI c i u pe ce." con rns. In th f of the growin I popularity of th lac A nd th ord from Jimmy Carter to BI Americ w "tru t me." ce relation nd th plight 0 Blac p ople b d al 0 fallen from grace with white America. RonaldRea n w notinterested in gaining the tru t of BI ck America .. The Reagan enda w clear: promote and exploit racial fears and ntagoni IDS a of advancing tb intercs t of the rich and th super-rich. Ronald Reagan unapologeticaUy aunched an era of race politi calcul ted to plit off a tantial number of white middJe c1 and working cla voter from the o 2Sy and it' continuing im ct on th pirations ofBI Ameri not been major priority on th public policy agenda. Once the wall of outhern ap rtheld crumbled under the relentle onslaught of the Civil Righ Revolution in the hite America see to have grown weary of the dvil rigb movement. With the removal of the "white only" . gns from ater ountains, restroo , I h counte ,beac and other public ccommodatio and conveya.rces, nd with the p ge of the Voting Righ Act of 1965, the perception in much 0 white America w that these trides towards freedom ere ufficient White America had given enough. But the rebellion in Watt , Newark, Detroit, Washignton, D.C. and cores of other urban ghettos in the mid to late ent warning that the p ge of a fe and the eradication of the mo t vi ible indignities not sufficient. There was the crucial t r of economic equity and parity for a people whose free labor helped to build this nation; a people who e free labor has never been rewarded with reparation or a ub tantial endowment or stake to undergird our status a "emancipated" African "ci tizens." ' t t- tr t gy hi Dem tc P 0 become " Oemocra ." To their di credit, the tion I D lIti not only retreated m it' commitment to civil righ nd ffinn live crion, the D 0 ere majority in both the Ho of p n tiv and the Senate, voted the "Reagan Revolution" into I revolution which de troyed social nd economic upport progr IDS for minoriti , poor nd orking people , and the urban center while imultaneou ly Incre ing military/War pending and providing gaping tax loopholes for the wealthy. By 1988, it w leade from the moderate-co rvati e Democratic Leade p q>nference ithin the De tic Party like Governor Bill Clinton ho ere urgi g the Democra c Party to become more " e ane que" in order to in eieeuo . ' Presidential candidates like J Jackson ere shunned for being too liber 1 on racial i ue and ocial-economic policy. Lester's World@1992KDGINc. ,­ ,. ,. , IT WAS THESE questio of equality and parity which Martin Luther King was beginnIng to rai when he was felled by an assassin's bullet in Memphis in 1968. The Kerner Commission which studied the rebellions of tbe 60s, including the violent reaction to King's assassination, concJuded, in es ence, that there was two Americas, one white, one Black, separate and unequal. The cold fact i that in 1992 for the MASSES of Black people very RO o IE , " " , " , ,. '. , " " ," " ,. , ow the bitter harv t of lIC· m, ., abandonment and neglect has come : _ to fruition and the verdict rendered ' by the masse at the gras roots is that I America is guilty of massive human . rights violations and aim against I humanity. :: The entence is "no justice, no :: pe eel" ,. , Ron DllIIkls serves as President of the Institute for Community Organization and D�lopment ill Youngstown, Ohio. He may be' conmcted at (216) 746-5747. . , I I DON'T KNOW ... I JUST PULLED HIM OVER FOR A MISSING TAIL LIGHT AND THE GUY SAYS THAT'S OKAY. HE'LL DO IT HIMSELF. • COfOV'UGHT 1002 KiAN DIDION GROUP INC. All. ",QH1't III DEfNED precipitated a national outrage. The verdict and aftermath of the trial of the officers accused in the boating of Rodney King in Los Angeles will be viewed by many as another test case on the capacity of the criminal justice system "to police" the police. THE OU CEl\{ENT by the city of Los Angles that Willie 1... Williams, an African American, is to be the new Chief of Police of Los Angeles follows the current national trend. William, who is the Police Commis ioner of the City of Philadelphia, an outstandiD& record of effective la enforcement and a demo ttated 'commitment to improving police and community relations. We note that Los Angeles Police Chief Daryl F. Gates refused to attend the pres conference in Los Angeles that presented Police Chief-to-be Williams. The pe on in cbar of the police department in any city help to set the tone and character of the department. Police officers are in fact influenced by their chain of command and key leadership. So much of the negative police/commUDl relA in el , city ,: diIedlya:tti1bWDd views and eli Chief Williams will, therefore, Afr· can-Am rican I ...... de hip: c lIing 0 chi f f lic t " , BENJA IN CHAVIS It is historically noteworthy that 25 years after the U.S. Kerner Commission called for a substantive change in police and law enforcement .pracnces and attitudes toward the nation's "minority" communitie the largest cltie in the United States increasingly are now calling on African Americans to be Chiefs of Police. As the demographic characteristics of the major metropolitan areas continue to become more multiracial, the demands for racial ju tice in municipal 1. enforcement are beiD made tbrenewed vigor. Although th overwhelmi g number of the rant aDd file; police officers ac the nation are not persons of color, the fact that a significant number of the' "top brass" leaders of metropolitan police departments are DOW African Americans and other persons of color i an important dynamic to monitor. Unfortunately, much of the pasthi tory of relationships between people of color communities and police departments, urban and rural, bas been a history of antagonism, unbridled police brutality and utter diatruat. Lat year the videotaped ep of the Icio racially-motivated beating of an African-American motori t by hite officers of the Los Angeles Police Department, come into a situation that has been racially polarized for years. It will not be easy, but we believe that Williams has both the competence and compassion necessary to rise to meet this critical challenge. Hopefully, all of the citizens of Los An8eles will benefit from baving the police department head in a new direction. No one seems to be paying attention to the progress that Police Commissioner Lee Brown has made since he became head of the' nation's largest police force. To be sure there are still problem between the Afric n-AlD rican, and HI panic.-Amcr1can communitie police in ork City. BUT, IT IS also true that there has been a decrease in the number of cases of the kind of brutal and violent racially-motivated police misconduct that were disturbingly evident in Ne York City prior to Lee Brown' administration. Brown's effective leadership in law enforcement is internationally recognized. The undergirding issue is that African-�erican leadership of police cle a i .•. , li1DR1lW11lC in African Chief or Pollce Commi ioner ill in i elf liberate people of color communities from • years of oppression and exploitation. The positive difference is that having a person from the Black community, which has historically been victimized by the police, get into the position of leading a police t department will at least make the police potentially more sensitive to ' the diverse needs of different racial and ethnic communities. ALL COMMUNITIES are entitled to ,falme , justice and re pect a ell as prudent nd e .YO law enforcement. There direct correlation between the stability and empowerment of a community and the presence of economic and racial justice equitably distributed to all. A police department cannot enforce judicial j tice onto a community in the , b ence of racial and economic justice. All this means is that the truggle for freedom and justice must continue and in citie and communitie where African American and othor have COJJ�IIDK autlllodty over police, etta to for all S ould not be diminilhed but ocelerated.