\'IE\\S &: ()PI�J():\ Readers Write ovember S, 1992 day that will ch n e the Detroit police department hi - tory once gain .. .It f ed new nd higher level of trug­ gle initiated by ven police . . officer th t p rticip ted directly and indirectly in the bru I beating d th of lice Green. Detroit got rude w en­ ing: police brutality, terror and murder. Shoe cd out of their lumber, city offici I nd politiclans, community nd religious le der wiftly began to put into place opportuni m, liberalism and faci m to chill the pontaneous re ponse of our alienated and im­ poverl hed Si ten and nd Brothers who have been con­ fronted nd will continue to be confronted with Police Ter­ rorism. We understand that the law of thi land is exploitation and oppre sion ... a legal system that defends and advocates property rights and personal interest over human rights. A legal system de igned to protect the social and economic reality that - by definition - excludes poor people in particular and the working class in general. We are going to expo e the hypocrisy of this system that says on one hand, that America is a Democracy and on the other institutionalies hi-tech Nazi police tactics against us. We are going to expose and isolate those bankrupt hustling preachers, bootlicking politicians and Urban League povertician-types who calion us to pray and have faith in the executive, legislative and jurisdictional branches of government through the legal and justice ystem. It is clear by the'! and groveling to .�-� the power structure that they have no analysis of what is happening and no objective program to move us forward and stop the poUce brutality, terror and murder on us. Their only concern is to po ition themselves to receive wh t comes out of the tail of a donkey or' an elephant or to desperately catch the crumbs from their master's tables. In spite of the daily process of dehumanization, the Nation looks on in anticipation, unity and resistance ... By any Means Necessary! We have no faith in a sys­ tem that for 500 years has al­ ways schemed on a global scales. And we - especially our youth - are not afraid to fight for revolutionary change ! � Justice for Malice Green Coalition meets every Wed­ nesday - 6 P:M. Yunu. Collin. Every ucce ful merle n pre identi I c ndid te ee "mand " for hi polici , d 100 to hi popular nd electo I vote total to j ti hi future objecti Yet on of th enuin gedi in th 1992 presidenti I election w failure of Clinton d B h I to really ddre ho t of critical public policy decisions. For example, neith r Clinton nor Bush di cus ed n w law taking effect in December, 1992, which would require the Feder I Government to seize control of many financially troubled or b nkrupt bank . Total cleanup co t could reach $100 billion-yet bec use Republican nd Democrat ere equally responsible for the mes , no one wa willing to di cu the problem. On urban policy, both major candidate were silent. Bu h muzzled his Housing Secretary, Jac Kemp, from discus ing new antipoverty initiatives," because one ource explained, the President didn't want to "rai e expectations that could not be met and help mobilize constituencies that typically vote Democratic." Although more than two million rican vot rs, Clinton crificed ny coherent reform progr m in f vor of t ctic I m neuver to achieve electoral victory. On can b t view Clinton' dilemma from the vantage point of recent American history. "mand te." Clinton con t nUy preached "change", but few knew w t kind of change we could e peel victory i t Democratic Party . m t perm nently repudiat it im ge being too concerned" bout African ri tin I bor, th unemployed d th poor. ew Yor Tim reporter Steven Holmes 0 :rved, millio of hi " ee Demoaa king them to p y-either through t xe or by giving up a job or promotion - for programs to compe te for history of di crimination th t they had nothing to do with." White liberal guilt I dead. The Democratic Party of Clinton-Gore i eager to please the white middle cl t the expe of :Bl c ,labor and other traditionally Democratic con tituencie . And what lies cad i fundamental conflict to define the genda of the next four years. . TV OU time during th campaign, Clinton emb ced "free trade", nd then criticized th recent orth American trade ccord; he called for middle cl cu nd e pan ion in ocial program , without dequately explaining how "more" could be provided. with "le s"; he appealed for universal health insurance, but hi propo fell far short of the progre ive, ingle-payer healthcare y tem used in Canada, and which the United States hould also adopt, Behind th attractive call for "change", Clinton' real quest was the pursuit of power. Bush' frequently-repeated warnings that a Clinton presidency would be like the unpopular admini tration of Democrat Jimmy Carter from 1977-1981 could easily become true. Neither Carter in 1976 nor Clinton in 1992 consolidated coherent program for government-and Carter never achieved a national conscns around any of his best policies. The major lesson which could easily be duwn from Clinton's In 1964, the victory of Democratic Pre ident Lyndon John on wa interpreted by the electorate a "mandate" for a et of coherent policie : civil rights and racial integration, Medicare, federal initiatives for public job , housing and education, nd a domestic "War on Poverty." When Ronald Reagan wa elected in 1980, everyone realized what his victory repre ented: lower taxes for corpora tions and wealthy individuals, governmental deregula tion, opposition to affirmative action, women's rights and civil rights laws, extreme anti-Communism, anti-labor policie , and sharp- reductio in the welfare state. Both Johnson and Reagan were "succe ful" in establishing a clear policy agenda even before they assumed office. Clinton's failure is that his victory does not translate into any ort of G ,more than on hundred m mbers of the Hous of Representative were fie hmen. The nation i plagued by doubt, yearning for effective solutions. About one hundred thou and Americans are now losing their health insurance coverage and benefits every month. R ganomics spelled di aster for millions of wor ing cla people, and they desperately want new leadership. Clinton a tutely poke to this profound desire for new initiatives in government, by orienting his entire campaign effort around the theme of "change." But in his effort to hift his party away from "tax-and-spend" liberalism, renouncing close links wi th trade union and African Dr. Manning Marable is Professor of Political Science and History, University of Colorado Boulder. "Along the Color LiM­ appears in over 250 publications, and is broadcast by more than 60 radio stations intenuJtionally. T's Squa e AFRICAN �ERICAN OWNED PUBLISHERS INC. AFROCENTRIC PRODUCTS SINCE 1980 BIG TIME MAGAZINE CONGLOMERATE 'INC Introduces A Br net New Concept In Publl hln Ain1t those the same Advertlsera and Di6tributora who told U6 there's no tria rkBt for o l:J" ".. , .. ; I:, roduct 'I r. I ,.'1) Sup r f l e l eI BLACK SUPE�HE. 0 Comics GUirclIdeed Thought Of Before CoIectOl 5 Items of the 9()Is .. . . \ BI�ckCops Continued from A·1 Newsome relying on second-hand accounts, said that four youths were punched, cursed and choked while they followed the victim in an am­ bulance to Tulsa Regional Medical Center. A 240-page internal affairs inves­ tigation found no evidence of police misconduct. in whit r Newsome was disciplined for violating department policy by going By JAMES E. ALSBROOK to the media with his a�unt before For many months I have been Palmer, who.becamechiefinAugust, wondering what goes into the ha� enough time to examine the com-· thinking of Black people who voted plaint, . . for Richard Nixon Ronald Reagan He also was disciplined for im- and rge Bush. ' , pedi�g th� department's oper_ation by Th ame people seem to be the uttering mOammatory public state- ones who a plauded the nomination ments, inc��ding �fe�g to T� of Clarence Thomas to the Supreme officers as terro�ts With badges. Court. Some have said Civil Rights Palmer said he viewed Laws' are not necessary and that Newsome 's a�tio� as nothing more segregated schools are always better. tha? a clear Violation of department One such person is a teacher and policy, high school counselor. Although I "It's obvious to me that everyone have known her for many years, only won't like everything I do. I have to recently did she tell. me that she live with myself on these issues, and would never be seen socially with a I think I made the right decision,' , he man whose skin was "darker than a said. , brown paper bag" because she would "The discipline given to Officer know that he had no white blood. New orne was not a message of up- Amazed as I was, I questioned her port (of police brutality).lt is wrong further and she sal white blood has to say that is the issue. It' more on been needed "to lighten the race" and to make Blac �eople "more Black Co.,., Page A·10 his wife' o�ections. She would simply go to the professor' home and begin doing house work. When she went back "down home" for a weekend, she would return to the professor's home with cakes, pies, cookies or other sweets made by her or her mother. When this woman received her degree, her parents were on hand and had dinner with thi good professor and his wife. I was invited. While we ate, the father said, "where I come from, you go with the flow. " Then he grinned at the professor and hi wife, saying, "I trained my daughter not to make any trouble for white folks. She reall y is a good girl." The "daughter-girl"! 45 years old. , Another Black person I know uffer from white uperiority delu ion . He apparently owns several pitiably mall and unkept stores and calls them a chain. It barely urvives, but thi fellow struts could lighten up the race." She looked around the room and said, "Old massa done made several trips to the slave quarters." Some laughed politely, but others did not like the comment. Another person in that group of graduate-degree teachers said Booker T. Washington evldently agreed with this college president's wife because "Booker T. wa half-white, had two wives and both looked whi te." around identifying himself with the • Vanderbilts, the R fellers, and . other rich "persons, He constantly laments "government Interference in business," spouts the latest squeals of the multi-millionaire barons of greed, and sounds like a deranged far-right demagogue with extravagant delusions of grandeur. All of these persons are Blac Republicans. I realize that some Blacks vote Republican locally becau e of long-time per onal or family connections with job patronage. But I cannot unde land why a Black person would support any national ticket that for 24 years bas tried to kill civil rights laws that protect 'voting right, equal educational opportuni ty, equal employment opportuni ty, equal housing and other measure that guarantee first-cl citizenship for all. intelligent. " WHEN I ASKED her about the million of low-achieving white people - those blue-collar workers, marginally existing laborers and welfare recipients, she said those people had "wasted white skin" - white skin that gave them no advantage: "But a little bit of white i better than nooe," she added. "My grandfather was a white man, " he aid. "Whatever brains I have I got- through him, a lawyer. African ancestors gave me nothing." I wondered how much be had damaged the thousands of students who had been in her classroom or in her counseling office over the years. Later, I heard similar comments from the wife of the president of a Black COllege. At reception in the president' home, be jokingly but eriously told a group that "Some of us would look a little better if we . LATER, I taught at a predominantly white �versity that offered doctoral programs. One candidate for an advanced degree came to the school, worked hard and made good grades. Soon, however, she gravitated to the kitchen of her dvisor' wife and in effect became an unpaid maid. The kind advisor did not want her doing this, but be laughed off his and I /