. , ...... ia I, moral ycbologtcally �IJI.S,,-,-·ciif)e for u , . . , t oppre to °da familie ." LKlng . ( Dt to the polls in November aDd fOr their city. The vo e wu I tcb d Searl clo e up and move e that Chrysler aa Ilso pullioa predicted earlier, but all the 'Illy out. --�·-r d Searl the bulk of the tax IClIOOII. police ud fire protection. ........ I • d yel to ambling. But what could _DOI-dIY for African Americans i turning into just uploitl joa, er hal abut out all other developers. or ODe aJorified fellow from Florida with a Q)tIMc:cicut. Floridl fellow is bringing n)1hirig to the t. to pve him the land and exclusive rights _NIl ..... lblil' la ia the city oone kno whar el e has .-c.1l1Od aiD� the public has not been privy to the .. • • • trr 0 thi hope ill only become re lized when the d tructive force of raci mare e eel d eradicted. One thing . olutely clear: "We m t continue to truggle for justice on all fron imultaneo ly with re entl s vigor d lead mess of th." 1.993 is the year of rene cd struggle for economic justice, racial ju lice, oci 1 justice, and environmental j dee. Our hopes and pirations must be articulated in a manner that gives voice to tho e who are mo t oppre ed in thi nation and throughout the world. The imD1 rallty of human exploitation _.,�G Ucense StucIo Inc • ChIcago i�- nd degradation requires a tronger challenge and bolder national effort than th challeng and effo made during the 1960' . The dispariti d inequiti of thi oclety dem nd n ur ent r vitalized "Civil Ri ht Movement." e h ve to move beyond just d cribing the proble • e ve even move beyond j t analyzing the 'problem th t beset our communiti 1 93 BAS TO BE a year of effective action in terms of the formulation of public policl and the building of ound economic development program. -at the community level. A priority to be placed on youth leadership development in all academic di clplin and vocations. The n ional call to invest in America must be Ie-translated to investing in communiti in ways that help communities become self-empowered with a ustainable economic base. Job tr ining mu t be tow rd b in owne hip with th ulti te go 1 0 over 11 community de ppment. Thus, public educ on mu t receive renewed upport by all level 0 government well support from the privat ector. The bottom lin i that th hopes, pil'ltio and truggl for 1993 are imilar in content to the immediate p t years, but the I differen is there no ppe to be ne opportuni ty to expres our hope d dreams with ense th t there will be more receptiv ears in W hington with the CliDton Administration. Y , expectations are high. Some will argue that expectations are too high to pos ibly have il chance of being fulfilled. We ay, "We will make our demands known, we will hare our dreams and hopes, and we will fight with renewed determination to chieve racial and economic justice by all means �I" The brutal police bludgeoning of Black Detroit father, Malice Green, has illustrated the battle lines of the so-called "War on Drugs" could more accurately be drawn around a "War on Blacks". Published reports surfacing since the early" November flashlight beating of the westside father of five, which left him dead of head trauma, speculated on the issue of whether Green was a user of crack cocaine as police charged. So what if he was? . . 'The purported justification behind the so-called "Drug War" is to undo or lessen the damage that drugs do to people. To be sure, drugs do serious harm to people, by destroying their health and taking lives as well. • Ie Were the police so concerned with saving Green from drug's ill effects that they beat his skull in with flashlights? One is reminded of the saying that­ came out of the Vietnam War when U.S. troops ravaged and napalmed villagers-"We had to destroy the .village, in order to save it," they said. The evocative artwork of Detroit artist Bennie White, which depicts the gentle visage of a young man wi th shoulder length Afro, drooping mustache and soft, serene eyes, h been republished nationally (and perhaps internationally) as a street shrine to a man loved by his family and friends of Detroit. Did police destroy him to save him from the sickness of drugs? SO OON the high-tech brutali ty against Rodney King of LA, and the scene is repeated-this y time, fatally. The "Drug W�" is a cruel farce designed to obliterate those they claim to protect. In the U.S. alone, well over 300,000 people perish annually from that well known legal drug-cigarettes. In the U.S. alone, welJ over 20,000 people die every year from the equally popular legal drug-alcohol, As a result of cocaine an estimated 18,000 people died between 1989 and 1990. Cigarettes produce an addictive substance, nicotine, which poisons lungs causing emphysema and death. Alcohol is literally an organic poison which destroys living tissue, such as brain tissue and livers, is a timulant to crime, countl traffic accidents, suicide and death.. Will those who wield deadly (to themselves and others, through r • BUT WAS MAUCE GREEN beaten to death in his car to save him from the scourge of drugs? MUMIA ABU JAMAL FROM DEATH ROW . passive, second-hand moke inhalation) tobacco be beaten down in the streets? WILL If KE D Uzi ·pointed at their bodies when they imbibe their ne t alcoholic fix? I don't think o. So, when is a drug a "drug"? When it destroys human life, or when it fails to return a tidy profit to U.S. industrie ? Every single day, lives are shattered by police nd judicial actions which crumble careers and families, in the same of a "War on Drugs", while popular, financially respected drug continue untold social, psychic, human damage. The Mal' Green case shows how the 'state, instead of solving the problem creates an absurdity of "destroying a life-only to ave it."