READERS WRITE I EVENTUALLY, TIlE violence following the King verdict will end. The fires will bum tbemselv out. The outbursts in other cities will give in to force and time. Neverthel , the hatred, the fears will immer un­ derneath. Unemployment will con­ tinue, mt education will remain. The politicians will make promise which they cannot deliver. If ever changed, the criminal-j - nee system will not change those ills in our society that led to the verdict tn the Ki beating ease. ., I Whit peopl� must c-n.l1&e� America will then overcome its racism. HughJack on Clinton shou/o ave no fear 'T'o the editor: As a white person, who has lived in a predominantly African American city for over 20 years, I've been deeply impressed by the warmth, friendliness, and good will I received from African American people. And I do not believe Governor Clinton should fear losing many African American votes, solely be­ cause of statements he made criticiz­ ing Sister Souljah for remarks she made, which seemed to indicate sup­ port for the killing of white people. From what I have seen, most African Americans have a very strong sense of fairness and have a strong aversion to violence on the basis of race or discrimination against any group. I've been very impressed and very moved by it. . Much has been said about Gover­ nor Clinton making such remarks on Rev. Jesse Jackson's "home grounds." The organization he spoke at wa not called the Jesse Jackson Coali lion or even the African American Coalition, but the Rainbow coalition. IT WAS created in the tradition of Martin Luther King to provide a unity of all races on the basis of justice for all. It w certainly an appropriate place for white people to express their concerns as well as minorities. From wbat I have heard of Gover- nor Clinton's statements, there was nothing he said tbat Dr. King had not aid many times and would not say again bad he been alive today. If Sister Souljah's remarks were misinterpreted by the media, her rievance should be with The Washington Post and its reporters. . If Governor Clinton loses African erican votes, it will not be be- use of what he said at the Rainbow alition, but because hi actions do not match his words and he is not ready to provide j uee for all people nd make the law work for all people nd alleviate the mass destruction of poverty. VIEWS OPINIONS From e t Germ ny, the F N FUR T E R ALLEGEMEINE ZEITUNG, a conserv tive newspaper: 0 d h f decade go, the Blac of America's �iti hoped th t their prot ts ould Ie d to poli tic 1 change. And in fact civil rights I w ere enacted under Pre ident Lyndon B. Johnson, but during the T elve y of conserv tive rule under Reag d B h, the blow to the Great Society progam of Pre ident John on, and the bandonment of care for the Blac popul tion and other ethnic gro have contributed to a build-up of bitte , ger and poverty ••. All that w necessary w par to RO EGLAND'S LONDON DAILY MAIL: "God Help America," the headline creamed. President Francoi Mitterand of France aid "President B h is a generous man who is coming from ,......---- ../ nom ,r;;;:.' ':::J At a time when 37 million Americans lack medical coverage, Clinton'S initiatives don't go far enough toward comprehensive health coverage for all. By any comparison, Bush is inferior to Clinton in every possible way. The man elected by manipulating racist slogans and Willie Horton' image, the "environmental president" who just refused to slgn a crucial environmental accord at the Rio earth summit, Bush has virtually nothing to offer most Americans. The only sector of the public whieb actually will gain from Bush's possible reelection is the one percent of all U.S. households, which are worth more than 90 percent of all families. Perot benefits from an American tradition of turning to mili tary leaders and generals in times of en is. A succession of presidents have been military leaders, beginning with George Washington, and including Anc1Iew Jackson, Zachary Taylor, U.s. Grant, Teddy Roose.vel t and Dwight Elaenbower. With the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union, the political agenda -shifted from foreign policy From France, the P ARlS LE FIGARO, a conserv live DC paper: "The United Sta not yet uccceded in economically integrating 11 i BI c or i Hispani • That and nOthing e the problem. And hat is happening today could explode here tomorrow." From South Afric' THE CITIZEN, a con erv live, bite-oriented ne paper: "Our dvice to the United Slat : 'sort out your own racial problems and NOW REMEMBER, WHEN APPREHENDING BLACKS. F1RE A WARNING SHOT RIGHT HERE. h erotPh In the past two months, the American media has found a new political "poster boy," Ross Perot, the eccentric Texas billionaire. By any measure, he is a mass of contradictions and garbled homilies. Perot never tires denouncing federal deficits and big bureaucracies, yet he made his billions largely through massive federal ubsidies. Back in 1987, he argued that tax hikes were necessary to balance the budget, but today he declares any talk of tax inaeases is out of the question. Perot places himself on both sides of the abortion debate, declaring that be favors· woman's right to choose, yet be rejects the label of being "pro-abortion. " and the lack of a coherent public policy program, Peret is currently ahead of both B�h and Democratic presidential candidate Bill Clinton. Reagan's 1984 presidential campaign manager has just joined Perot's ranks, along with Hamilton Jordan, the architect of Jimmy Carter's presidential victory in 1976. The leading vice presidential candidate rumored with Perot is none other than Reagan' "Darth Vader" at the United Nations, former ambassador Jeanne Kirkpatrick. Yet the quixotic appeal of Perot extends to elements of the left. Jesse Jackson has told advisers that he feels a greater affini ty for Perot than toward Clinton. What does the Perot phenomenon mean? Part of the reason that the Texas billionaire is riding high in public opinion polls . because neither Clinton nor Bush have captured the imagination or upport of the Americcan people. PEROT ClAIMS to favor the ci� righ of all minorities, yet be would refuse to appoint homosexuals to certain government positions and would dismi them from the military. He's.an antiCommuni t "patriot" who ncverthel opposed the B h administration's murderous adventure in Iraq. Despite these major inconsistencies in ideology MANY LIBERALS and progressive question Cinton's lax attitude toward the environment during his tenure as Arkan as Govenor, his support for the death penalty, and his gene raIl y conservative economic positions. non issues to dome tic economic matters. . WITH UNEMPLOYMENT statistics still climbing despite a so-called recovery, with over one million bankruptcies this year alone, the middle class feels trapped and abandoned by those In po- .... er. Economically, American �ultinational cdrporations and huge banks feel no allegiance towards U.S. workers and communities, and .are rapidl y transferri.ng billions of dollars from thi country abroad. Smaller "national capital" firms, medium-sized corporations hieb operate solely inside the U.s., are harply frustrated ith both the Republicans and Democrats. Their leaders want a package of federal and private initiativC4 which revive domestic competitiveness, improve public education, and invest in the national infiutructure by building roads, ewage, public transportation, and other resources. They lie hostile towards unio , but favor a more liberal social pollcy than that championed by Bmh and Quayle. So from out of the west ride an "economic general," a "centri t" favoring entrepreneurial ALONGntE COLOR U E capitalism and social liberalism on many issues. The times seem to cry out for an "anti POlitical politician," and Perot seems to fill this vacuum. But as dangerous and. uqJredictable as a Perot presidency might be, he also represent one positive factor-the long overdue breakdown . and realignment of America' political system. Perot may become the wedge which plits the two party gridlock in electoral politic , inspiring other insurgent initiatives from local and state levels. A presidential election wi tbout clear winner might radically change our system of politics. Dr. Manning Marabl� is Professor of Political Scienu and History, Universlty 01 Colorado, Boulder. "Along the Color LiM" appears ill over 250 publications �17IIllionolly, and Q radio venioft is broadcast by more titan fifty StlJliolU across NorthAmeriaJ.