EDITORAL , I VIEWS/OPINIONS There is in fact n tiona! "drug crisis. " Crack, cocaine, heroin and other drug are more prevalent in 1992 than in 1972. The n gative health impact attribut d n tionally to the drug epidemic.alone h co t thi society billions of dollars. , But b yond the deva tation on the national economy is the devastation on millions of human lives. Entire families have been wiped out du to drug addiction. Importing, distributing, and selling drugs is big business in the United States. This multi-billion dollar illegal enterprise , is thriving today with impunity. r on dru r on Dru "h become only orro ful 0 t i given voice to . fy political e pediency. Pre ident Bu b ' record of e of thi brl ted term b need to review. The ew Yor Times did n y i 0 th P ident' record on "fighting" th o-called dru ar. Reporter ]0 eph T ter ob erved, "Mr B h oft n poken of the valu of education, treatment and prevention programs to taunch the de ire for drug . But di reg rding th ne r-un nimou dvice of indep ndent experts as well ome White House aid who y the e are th mo t effective weapons, Mr. Bush has consistently subordinated heal th and education to law enforcement. These tatic have ometime been proven to be quick, vi ible and politically useful ... but the bene fi t have u ually been eph meral at best." Remember President Bush ordered the invasion of Panama in 1989 as part of the war on drugs. It w only later to be revealed that General Manuel Noriega was Lester's World@1992KDGwc. re le ming what many umed to be true, and that . the active involvement of police of cers in many of the large clti with th upport of drug trafficking under th color of the law. Sadly all of thi lead to an indirect nctioning of the de truction of millions of lives through drug ab e. The official policy of tre ing "law enforcement" over treatment, education, and prevention of drug abuse is a policy that has miserably failed. Current public poll ,however, do not show that the nation's drug crisis is a high priority during this presidential campaign. We believe that the issue of the eradication of drug abuse should be a top priority i ue in this election year. Am ric n ..,.,u.",-wOO ...... ,r con erv - teen. Add to the BI cess, looming height, heavy build, physical conditioning. You'd expect the three young men to be snatched up almo t immediately by tho local uthoritie . But not 0, when we're in the twisted world of sports. Three young BI ck males did rrive in Holland last wee end, but the City of Tulips welcomed them with open rm . And while you might wish that en e of common hum nity had eized the notoriously raci t west Michigan community, inspiring them to invite the young men to help on a common cause, it was not so. It was in fact, another chapter in the on-going sag of sports prostitution that corrupts our young people. The athletes were there simply because they are money generating machines. ' Three basketball players from the University of Michigan-Chris Webber, Jalen Ro e and Eric Riley­ participated in a fund-raiser. The three young men were' used as a drawing card to raise money for a four-year old in Holland in need of funds for an ear operation. In exchange for their participation judging a slam-dunk con­ test, signing autographs and giving some talks, the three I were paid $300 each to cover expenses. Now the NCAA is trying 10 figure out whether the $300 is "for work performed at the going rate or simply because they are athletes." While the NCAA and U-M officials nit pick their way through the rules to explain away- the situa­ tion, everyone in America realizes that without the glamor of the prime time, national-title contending basketball 'careers of the three young men, that west Michigan hotbed of racism would no more want three Black male teens in their midst than an AIDS epidemic. , The entire episode exposes how sports, as practiced in America, corrupts our young. Teaches them prostitution, early on and well. , Weare idealistic enough to believe that the parents, coach s, the young men themselves should be willing to donal n afternoon for a cau e if they believe-in tbe c us . Why hould they, or anyone, be paid to raise money for a needy kid? Obviously, the whole thing was arranged through the college. How else would Weber and Rose, who live in Detroit, even know about a kid clear across the state who needs ear surgery? The athletes arrived in a limo. They were 'supposed' to stay until 3 p.m., and an argument with the organizer over his demand that they stay until 5 p.m without additional expense money led to the public revela­ tion of the deal. If the details sicken you, they are not isolated events. In the proces of recruitment, media hype, nationally televised games and big bucks for the colleges, young Black athletes are being taught everything has a price; that noth­ ing but money has value. Just as these three were used in the Holland incident, so all star athletes spend their college careers, living apart from the student body in special townhouses; using cars supplied them; taking 'jobs' for pay that aren't jobs. Athletic stars learn early and young that there is a double standard. Rules are in place for appearances, not because they are a standard of behavior. , If there were a standard of behavior, a moral standard, then the athletes would share in the millions they earn for the colleges. The young men would be free to make ap­ pearances at charitable events when they were motivated - not paid or pressured - to attend. The young people would be expected to do good, not offered money for appearing to do good. If the colleges were about educating rather than ex­ ploiting the athletes, then the young men would develop and not forget their own humanity. They would become something more that a marketable piece ,of meat for sale to the' highest bidder, learning to put a price on every­ thinleven charitable causes. �he Holland incident helps us realize why Black ath­ letes turn their backs on the community. They've learned their college lessons well. You do it for money. Q Campaign to con erve in an age of change CIVIL HT JOUR AL , I I IJ Yet, e ow th t thi i ue ould be viewed not olely a political camp . gn i u but 0 fundamental moral i u f cin the nation. The profitability of illicit dru e m t be ch Henged by removing the economic vulnerabilitie of millions of persons ho re literally hut out of the national economy. Our ociety cannot afford t� be tri ed by false rhetoric concerning ar on drugs that never exi ted. Altern tively we call upon every person in every community to take greater respo ibility in playing a direct role in comb ting drug abuse. ITISAnational and international problem, but until we mobilize, around this issue at the grassroo and community level, it will be increasingly difficult to stem thi huge tide. The struggle against drug abuse has to engender our support in the ame manner our struggle against raci m because these two evils are inextricably linked, both in history and in our present realities. .�vbl n G&� IVI. .,' .' fJ: 'Ii: . NOW REMEMBER SON, THINGS AREN'T ALWAYS WHAT THEY SEEM. . , As presidential campaign fever begins to die down, and the season comes to a close, the national mood is clearly one of emptiness and ennui. ,. In this post-Watergate age, the term "politicians" remains a nasty slur, a taint that politicians are ever eager to rid themselves of. There has ari sen the anti-politician-politician, who claim that as "outsiders," they can cleanse the system. That was much of Reagan's appeal, and of Carter's, but the ystem remains besmirched, and more people opt to forego the 4-year electio meaningless. Tb.e councils of govemmen t, comprised of two heads of one party (Democans? Republicrats?), are perceived as toadies to the rich, who could care I about the burdens on , the working cl , or the poor. INCREASINGLY, the campaign has acquired a conservative cast, in an age aching for fundamental change. In essence, both major parties are but agents of U.S. corporate power, and the man named as an "outsider," a Texas computer magnate and multi-billionaire, would merely substitute himself, as a de facto bu i nessman, for those elected previously to do the bidding of big busines . The growing degradation of the environmenf the soiling of the seas, the poisoning of the air, the growing ozone depletion, the waste plaguing Mother Earth, the widening chasm between rich and poor, class and class, race and race, tribe and tribe beckons for the most urgent change, not the crippling status quo of conservatism. As in the not-so-great Depression of the '30s, millions are aware that the system simply does not work, or, if at all, only for � privileged few. The solution? A third party? The most nearly analogous German experience is not promising on that score. SEVERAL yEARs ago, the Green Party, an offshoot of the environmental movement of the '80s, emerged as a force in the German Parliament, taking several seats in government. , After years of the political process however, battling for ystemic respect and incl ion into the halls of political power, the Greens are "in", but business goes on, as the Black Forest continues to choke to death in a sulphuric mist. They have "won" � the game of political power and parliamentary compromise, but not achieving its program. 'FROM DEATH ROW MUMIA 'ABU JAMAL Government may be able to regulate busines (and that, only very sparingly) but it cannot stop the inj urious effect and enormou profits of industry. Indeed, futurist theorist Alvin Tomer (The Third Wave) notes today's multinational' corporations are more powerful, more widely dispersed, and possess more resources, than mere governments. The global forces of the market leads governments, not the other way around. Witness the ex-Soviet Union' genuflection to the power of the dollar, the pound, the almighty yen. The sy tem itself cannot save itself, when it i , itself the problem. ., .