VIEWS/OPINIONS Unfortunat ly, President George B h 0 from pte rience how to incre e hi tanding in public opinion polls. In the face of the Clinton-Gore c ndid cy for Pre ident nd Vice-Pre ldent, Bush' ting is at an all time low. But we remember how the popul rity of the Bu h Administration oared to a record high er the decision w made to m e war on S ddam H ein and Iraq. Al though it ha n w been expo ed that the Reagan and B h Administrations ctually helped to arm Saddam prior to Iraq' inv ion of Kuwait, the sight of the United States military apparatus mercile sly bombing and attacking Iraq engendered a revitalization of this nation's spirit of "patriotism" in conte t of a growing reliance on the use of militarism to solve international problems. Now over a year later, President Bush is in another predicament in terms of low public support for his re-election. Will Saddam Hussein once again be used by the Bush Administration to divert voters' attention from the unprecendented domestic inequiti and inj ti ? WI BU once gain call upon the U.S. military m ans of arou ing public upport for American foreign policy? Wh t ppened to the war on drugs in the United States? What' the Bu h Admini tr tion really going to do in response to the 1.0 Angel "Uprising"? Will voters be ersuaded to re-elect Bush if the political n eds the Wrote House turn into another blood thirst? These questions need to be raised publicly and forcefully. In this poli tical season of campaigning, it is important for voters to put necessary questions to all of the candidates of all of the parties. In particular the Bush Administration has to be held accountable for the growing neglect of the urban centers of the nation, the increasing racial hostilities and violence in many communities and the expanding ranks of the poor and impoverished in the "richest" nation in the world. We believe that the national priorities of the United States should be changed in th interest of elpin to llevi te m ive proble of th poor and victimized. en will there be clear voice nd le de hip out of the White Ho e that call for th dismantling of Americ n apartheid, l.e. institutionalized cia! inequality in all pee of thi ociety? T 110 0 1992 offer voter choice. The Democrats would do well to avoid becoming Republican-Democrats in a cheme to attract Republican voters. The future of the nation should not be relegated olely to party affiliation or identification, but the journey to a new and better future is going to require new and committed leadershi p to envisioniug and leading th nation to becoming a truly multiracial/muticultural society where justice and economic equality are ensured for all. There was a recent sigh of relief when compromise was developed between the United Nations inspection team and Iraq concerning the U.No's inspection of the Agriculture Ministry Building in A convention ET, U w aid to be in te of "grudgingly cceptance" of the compromi t w chieved. Again, hy' Bush becoming "trigger ppy"? Why' there this need to rush b c to war with Iraq? The bedding of blood in military conflict to re ch political objective i the height of immorality and human in cency. Bush would do well to pay more attention to the profound problems inside the United States that have been ignored by the Administration for too long. Bush and Quayle are out of touch with th vast majority of the people who are yearning for social change. The White House needs to be cleaned out and we must make every effort to ee that there are no' more "blood stains" of unnecessary wars being made to satisfy the thirsts of the rutble • .. FROM DEATH ROW The mul ti-colored sea of helium-filled balloons, the red, white and blue bunting, the hundreds of placards promoting various politicians are now gone, and New York's Madison Square Garden is either dark and quiet, or hosts a new program to excite and divert the masses. The Democratic Party's show on the Hudson is now over. The tons of political gas released from thousands of speeches have dissipated like morning mist, gone who knows where? The impressions left by published reports are that African-Americans, perhaps like naughty children, are to be een and not heard, and if need be, slapped a little, to be kept in line. The recent Clinton/Sista Souljah flap shows how politics, being the art convic ion of symbols, insinuates itself into peoples' lives, for a cheap, yet dramatic effect. SINCE WHEN ARE politicians arbiters of popular culture? This year's campaign, with sophomoric. Quayle-chirping at the Murphy Brown TV show. and Clinton-slappings of raptivist Sista Souljah for her purported anti-white rantings, features a silly new low in a "profession" that generally aspires to rise to the gutter. Can we now expect the White House to issue an approved list of TV hows which are allowable? Will Democratic hopeful Clinton now take his cul ture hit parade to' rock icon, Ax! Ro e, to lecture the young white guitarist and lead singer of Guns N' Ro es on his anti-nigger and anti-fag lyrics? Incredibly, Souljah took far more heat and criticism for her silly "kill whitey" quotes, than did Clinton for his political, governmental actions, which killed several people, on Arkansas' Death Row, for real. Clinton's nakedly political attack on Souljah was a calculated slap at her host, Rainbow coalitionist Jesse Jackson, in a premeditated bid for the white racist vote, no less calculated nor political than the executions of Ricky Ray Rector; a brain-damaged Black Arkansan, and 'Stephen Douglas Hill, each accomplished by Clinton'S deadly signature. IN THE BLIND race for a "win" . for the party, Black Democrats are groveling before a politician who prays in a Black Clurc ona Sunday, MUMIA ABU JAMAL onI Y to kick Blacks in the teeth the . rest of the week. Both so-called parties are but two heads of the same beast: big business. It is to these corporate, moneyed interest that kisses were blown during the show-convention, but to those who have been loyal for generations, Blacks, and to a lesser extent, organized labor, the party extended a gloved fi t, for their kisses and genuflections. What is a "win," when the barest shreds of dignity are the cost? If Blacks, with our millions, must ki s a boot to "win," how much have we already lost? • EDITORIAL The in anity of hopping in other' people' communi ie A report w published thi week detailing the large number of Octroi rs who journey off to the uburb to do their shopping. They carry with them literally billions of dollars, according to the report. Th e shoppers offered a variety of reasons ranging from safety to lection to explain this insanity. For those readers who missed that report, then maybe they saw an example of what the report was all about. The Detroit News coverage of the grand opening of the new upper, upper ale . n Marcus store way out in suburbia showed the first person in line was an African American woman from Detroit. AOO, she was not alone as the other News pictures revealed. What is so awful is, the people who carry their money to other communities are betraying their own children. And like the drug dealers they are in pursuit of the quick fix. Putting fashion over future, style over substance, want over need, they pursue the latest, best thin tQey s�w flashed at them qn televi­ sion. An� they Ant to purchase i\ in t most luxurious ,ots�ttings. Li�'tIte'd I " these hoppers are destrdymg-tll I children. HI m. I"J V .)J.J • ..,U I. , t I - Not shopping in their own community, they cut off the creation of opportunities for their kids and their neighbor's kids. It is a total contradiction to invest in a child's education and not invest time or money in creating any opportunity in the community for that child to return to. Educated and frustrated, our grown children have to search outside the community for jobs. They find only what those other communities want to share. Many of our youth see from their grade school desks the limited future offered them by the community and end up on the street comers, and for too many, the morgue. By robbing OUf own communities of jobs and tax base, these short sighted shoppers who run to the suburbs, are killing the children; destroying the future. Another side of the same coin was reported by Michigan Citizen reporter Patricial L. Colbert, who in last week's paper told about the filthy conditions in a store on Livernois in Detroit. She is working on aoother report of similar conditions elsewhere. in the city, in an area considered among the best in Detroit. Again, rather than taking the time and energy to clean up what is at hand, Detroiters will run to the suburbs. It is time to stop blaiming others when we do ourselves in. Taking our dollars to others, putting up with les than human conditions in neighborhood stores is suicidal. ' It's time to realize that we create our own community. We must tum to each other. It may take forsaking the latest fashion, forgoing the luxuries of suburbia, but doing without those things now can help create some kind of future for the kids. . (