14 THE CAROLINA TIMES SAT., NOVEMBER 28. 1981 ' WE SHALL OVERCOME Of t .Av; Q hTb Be Equal i The Private Sector's Role By Vernon E. Jordan, Jiv; Affirmative Action: Reagan and Anti-Black Violence By Gerald C. Horned Esquire Groups active on military bases include the KjiKIux Klan, the white Gestapo, the white Activist Militant Society. Tarver warned the U.S. Array VII Corps of these groups' activities in detail but their response has been silence. In one case they reported a cross burning as "destruction of govern ment property." More ominous was the involvement of the Klan in an attempt to overthrow the government of the black island in the Caribbean, Dominica. After setting up a puppet government there, they intended to move next against the neighboring black island of Grenada. Unfortunately, the child slayings in Atlanta have left the public eye and all of the green ribbons have been removed. But the fact is that the young man ar rested, Wayne Williams, has not been charged with all of those slayings, which once again raises the question of. whether police officers have been asleep at the switch because black victims are involved. The fact is that, in addition to the child murders, between November 1980 and February of this year, eight black women were brutally murdered in Atlanta through strangulation,, stabbings and shootings. The victims, ranging in age from 1 5 to 38 have been primarily from low-income communities. These slayings underscore Georgia's role as a hell on earth for blacks. In tiny Willacoochee, Georgia, four months of hate letters, cross burnings and shotgun blasts into houses and automobiles, caused a target of this criminal' harassment o flee. No one has been arrested and the Federal Bureau of In-" vestigation began an inquiry only weeks ago. Julian Bond, State Senator, and president-of the Georgia NAACP, alleges ; , The Reagan Administration is commit-, ted, on philosophical, political and economic grounds, to private sector solu tions for our nation's problems. By overselling the capacity of the private sector to meet fhose challenges, the Administration strains its credibility, 'raises public expectations, and weakens , the nation's ability to act constructively. , . For there are limits to what the private sector can do. Voluntarism can never be a 'substitute for welfare, food stamps, and many other vital forms of income sup ports. NoTNEhould it supplant-government's proper role in meeting national needs. . Just as no one in his right mind would , . want to see national defense turned over to a private, profit-making venture, so; too it is wrong to turn public functions; such as education, police and many social ' services to the private sector. But if the central thrust of dealing with social problems must come from govern ment, there is still a vitally important role for the private sector. Instead of looking . to the private sector to replace govern-, ment, the Administration should imple- ment a public-private partnership that will make a difference in peoples' lives. For its part, the business community will have to understand what many of its leaders have been saying that without a t stable social framework, business cannot 'survive. That means a top priority for the private sector should be job creation a determined effort to hire and train disad vantaged people. That effort cannot wait, until the long-promised prosperity comes' about.' The Administration's policies are leading to another recession and higher unemployment. Business should be urged, perhaps with -targeted financial incentives from govern ment, to hire and train the disadvantaged,, recession or no recession. Business got1 . lavish tax breaks for capital investments! and for transferring otherwise unusable tx credits and depreciation allowances. Indeed, the tax legislation might have bet ter been labelled the "Corporate Welfare Act of 1981." That suggests a corporate responsibility to invest some of its tax savings in training and hiring the disadvantaged jobless. And it also suggests that the tax system might ; be better used to encourage investments in our long-neglected human capital. The private sector can also plug some of , the gaps opened by the Administration's ruthless cuts in social programs. By aiding community groups i and non-profit social welfare agencies, it can alleviate some of the pain caused by ' the cuts. The most enlightened sectors of cor- ' porate America will respond creatively to these ew challenges. . Indeed, there are - signs of real concern on the part of business leadership.' v ; -r,- A , 1 The prestigious Business . Roundtable : y't has recently called for increased corporate contributions , to. charities. The life in-" 4, surance industry has formally announced a campaign to help create jobs. Many companies plan to increase their activities : . in the social arena. ; ' One concrete idea that should be acted : on was made by David Mahoney, chair Iman of Norton Simon, Inc. He recently .. called on large national and regional com panies to pursue a "one per cent plan" of adding one per cent to their budgeted manpower costs to hire and train the; disadvantaged for entry level jobs. i So it is likely that increased business ac tivism is in the cards.' But it is also likely ' that oivpn ihp linrrv rwnrA rimnilH hu large parts of the corporate community in the past, the private sector will fail to' meet the public's needs and expectations. But even if the private sector's deeds surprise the skeptics, it can do no more than alleviate some of the pain caused by the budget cuts. Without a strong federal commitment to restore government's i responsibility to meet national social pro-: blems, those problems will continue to fester. Meanwhile, Americans will be looking to business to do what it can to meet its social obligations. The Power of the Black Vote Congressman Augustus F. Hawkins Though politicos will be mulling over the results of the recent off year elections for some time to come, one satisfying fact comes shining through: the growing power and effectiveness of the black vote. Perhaps nowhere is this more clearly demonstrated than in the Virginia guber- natorial race. Considered to be a close and hotly contested race from the start, and one in which President Reagan active ly campaigned for the Republican con tender, the large turn ur of black voters for the winner rdemohstratefe to Republicans and ,rmbcratsiue5t;hat fell on deaf ears in communities which are vitally concerned with the actions of a President who has remained unsupportive of the full arid unweakened extension of the Voting Rights Act of 1965; who would considerably shrink the size and enforce mentpower of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; who has already begun a major onslaught to weaken and nullify affirmative action re quirements for government contractors; who is in opposition to the ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment; who has decreed that the Federal government will that suBcfer;(jcUfing alfeover ttwwouatry. Wcyfjll& ihaj sacism 4s'sjjl and complaints about similar incidents in Virginia, South fcratitfafijt poTS:aj?Ific&;S .- . A .i - - i L "i e L.m ' . ....'it A.r a and Louisiana Christopher Coates, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union, says the actions and attitudes of the Supreme Court under Chief Justice Warren E. Burger encourage local judges, law officers and politicians to ignore the rights of oppressed blacks. ' Tyrone Brooks, State Representative from Atlanta, alleges that those who would ride roughshod over the rights of others are encouraged by the views of the Reagan Administration which seeks to reduce federal intervention by all branches of Government, including the Justice Department. It is not surprising that the finger would be pointed at the government, which has been derelict in protecting black rights and aggressive in placing blacks behind bars. But perhaps the most spine-tingling and ominous development of all is the recent revelation of the government's involvement in ethnic warfare. Documents released under the Freedom of Information Act reveal that beginn ing thirty years ago, originating at the Mechanicsburg, Pa. Naval Supply Depot, the government experimented with a fungus that infected black people while leaving whites relatively unaffected. The fungus is "Aspergillus Fumigatus Mutant C-2" which stimulates coc cidioides (Valley Fever) among blacks; allegedly blacks are "more susceptible" to cocci than whites. The Long Island (NY) newspaper Newsday broke aspects of this story as early as 1976. When a bfyck security guard at the Naval Biosciences Laboratory contracted cocci while employed at the West Oakland naval facility recenlty, this troublesome issue arose once again. The Navy denied that he received this disease in the lab. but it was undeniable that cocci was one of several infectious agenis being researched. On the Greek Island of Corfu in the Spring of 1980. a "U.S.-NATO forces" conference on skin diseases took place which, allegedly, took up the issue once nuke of ethnic warfare methodology. One doe not have to be a raving paranoid to be quite concerned about such activity. Its ipplicabiliiy in Namibia and South Africa not to mention Harlem. Wajts and black communities nationally is clear. Moreover; a government that could build a neutron bomb, that kills people and leaves buildings intact is capable of such. It is just a short step from a government! hat ignores racist violence against blacks to initiate it. I'onunately. the light back against all forms of racist violence is proceeding rapidly. Th1 National Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression has been quite active in this regard, especially in monitoring the situation at the Naval Biosciences laboratory. Legislation against paramilitary camps a particular KKK activity has been passed in Connecticut. Both Klan Watch and the National Anti-Klan Network have been diligent in filing lawsuits and engaging in mass actions aya:n. the racist right-wing. Yet. clearly if these Nai fantasies and dreams are l bv ' ncau'if back, 'more mass action by all people of good will is required. I'll fact that it Costs more to jail a black youth than send him to Princeton lias Ifiir been known, Equally familiar is the fact that the flames of unemploy ment fanned by Rcaganomics will be sending more black youths behind bars. Every day more and more blacks are consigned to a life in prison that rivals Dante's Inferno for degradation. Already blacks are disproportionately on Death Row. Though 1 1 of the U.S. population is black, a staggering 40 of the inmates on Death Row arc black. 43-;.; iv-:-';- '' " ' ' : Blacks who kill whites arc far more likely to be sentenced to death than other racial combinations of murderer and victim. It is estimated that 60 of the victims of homicide in this country arc black, yet over 80 of the people who are sentenced to death had white victims. . ' . ; Blacks arc disproportionately located in the Deep South and, not surprising ly, f his is where the largest number of Death Row inmates arc located. Florida. Texas", Georgia and Alabama lead the count ry in this grisly category. Seventy-' five percent of those on Death Row are in the Deep South. , The small minds that run this country fully intend to continue their policy of jailing black's. The planned conversion of the dormitories used for athletes at the 1980 1 4ke Placid (NY) Winter Olympics into prison facilities that will mostly house blacks speaks volumes. " Striking is the fact that the value of contracts awarded annually for con struction, expansion, and renovation of jails and prisons increased 60 dur ing the last ten years, from $73.9 million in 1970 to $529 million in 1979. In dicative is that 370 jails are being buill or expanded right now and you can expect more black faces staring out from behind bars Though police authorities act like Sherlock Holmes when it comes to track ing down blacks, thcy: revert to Rip Van Winkle when it comes to arresting racist whites. ' , Thus emboldened, the KKK, the' Nazis and their ilk have decided lo go inter national. There, have been sharp increases in anti-black activities on U.S. military bases in West Germany, according to a study conducted by Sgt. First Ciass Jawe 1 an a of Philadelphia. ' Consider the surprising!., admission of Richard Richards, GOP national chair man: "Any Republican who runs in an area with a substantial blick vote is in jeopardy of being defeated by that black vote." The Virginia election demonstrated that the black vote is increasingly being recognized as a force that must be reckon ed with - and by both partiesThis idea is . given support when one considers that in the face of a Republican spending spree which, in this case, outpaced Democratic expenditures by a margin of 6 to 1 , black voters were not fooled by the rhetoric and managed to deliver a strong message of their own by turning out in large numbers against a candidate who campaigned on issues hostile to their welfare. Estimates are that fully 65 of the registered blacks in Virginia voted on election day. Of this large turn out approximately 90 turned their backs on the conservative Republican candidate. Undoubtedly, the slickly-produced campaign commercials and sloganeering bat ' same with systematic solutions and who has characterized the recent jump in the overall unemployment rate as "a con sequence, of unwinding the deeply rooted inflation that is embedded in the American economy" in regard to which the Administration has decided to do nothing. It is clear that in a community which is plagued by high unemployment and where many are the victims of the "last hired, first fired" syndrome there could be no support, even vicariously, of a man who once called unemployment in surance, ". . . .a prepaid vacation plan for freeloaders." Persons who must literally tighten their belts in the wake of their loss of food stamp benefits, parents who must now dig deeper into their already ravaged pocket books to finance their children's college educations, elderly persons who have shivered in fear through the President's , nearly defeated plan to cut off the minimum Social Security benefits, union ' "members who have seen one of their own organizations crushed by the Reagan Ad ministration and many others who have been adversely impacted by the budget cuts and a tax package, which literally takes from the poor to give to the rich, rose up to give the President a startling vote of no confidence' in his programs. It seems that after all the years of mar ching, being beaten and clubbed, jailed and mauled by police dogs, black people are beginning to realize some tangible results from their efforts to gain and keep the right to vote. . As the days of the Virginia guber- nptotaUafRpqigr dvpndle.down. issues Such,,-asrippsjjcard, voter, rj WWnJlofr, ' I I . Yt If I 1 v. a poseu oy me itepuoiican canaiaaiej anq of course, the extension of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 began to be the decisive issues for black Virginians. There is a lesson to be learned from the recent Virginia gubernatorial election. That is, if not for the existence of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, fewer black persons would have been registered to vote. Clearly, each time a black voter goes to the polls, especially in one of the covered jurisdictions, they have to thank the existence and enforcement of the Voting Rights Act. As stated, the Reagan Administration and its supporters in the U.S. Senate are ' not committed to the full and undiluted extension of the Act. We cannot allow the Act to be weakened in any way. Concern ed citizens across the country must write '.directly to the President and the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Strom Thurman, to register their support for this vital bill. The law works just take a look at the recent governor's race in Virginia! Coping 7 Racism: An Over view When I began to write this scries of columns on the Psychological Dynamics of Racism, my intention was to write only five columns on this issue. It became clear after having written the first three columns of this series that many, many more would be needed in order to present a reasonable insight. If you have followed my column the last two years, you will know that I focus on basic human problems without regard to race. This issue of racism suggests the magnanimity of the problem. As a human bchaviorist and philosopher, I desire to im prove our society by pro viding advice to all people, black, .while, yellow and brown. .Yet. I was called upon to black existence in this coun try. The life expectancy for blacks in America is ten years shorter than it is for whites. The psychological trauma of racism makes the very life that is lived by blacks tor tuous, demeaning and emo tionally punishing. But. racism is not likely to disappear in the foreseeable future; certainly not in our life-time. The kind hearts that broke through the racial barrier in the I960's are no longer present. The loud voices of black and white dissent in response to an unfair system are silenced, it is now "every man for himself." It is a system in which it appears that the oppressed ge poorer and the rich get richer. uiacks must torse new focus on the specific issue of alliances with open-minded racism because of the cnor- and open-hearted whites who roity of the ---problem. Until view the American way of this issue is properly address-; ,lifc from the same perspec ed and resolved, none of us, jive as they. Blacks must black white, brown or yellow work hand-in-hand with will be able to endure and other oppressed minorities in progress as decent human be- order to make their presence : ings with a clear conscience. , felt and their voices heard. t Racism overwhelms us.. It 1 The strong alliances of the is the leading factor that 1960's are not likely to be determines the nature of reborn. In a society in which everyone is seeking sbme specific return for his or her endeavors, blacks must . search deeply to see what it is that they have to offer socie ty in return for its help. The current status of blacks in dicates that society feels that r blacks have little to offer to those who can change things. Blacks have almost been beaten to a psychological ' pulp. ; Yet, we are not dead. There is still life in the body' of the sleeping black giant.. Perhaps this giant will some-, day awaken. One thing is cer-! tairi, however: Blacks must! throw down the gauntlet and do it themselves rather than1 wait for a mystical angel of incrcy and goodness to awaken this slumbering black giant, take it by the hand and lead it to freedom. By Dr. Charles W. Faulkner fliTVnthl'TBy L.E. AUSTIN Editor-Publisher 1927-1971 USPS 091-380 T- Published mry Thursday (dated Saturday) at Durham, N.C., by United Publishers. Incorporated. Mailing address: R.O. Box 3825, Durham, NX. 27702-3825. Office located at 923 Old FayetteviHe Street, Durham, NX. 27701. Second Class Postaoe paid at Durham, North Carolina 27702. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE CAROLINA TIMES, P.O. Box 3825, Durham, NX. 27702. . - i SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One year. S12 Off (plus 48l sates tax tor North Carolina residents). Single copy 30s. Postal regulations RE0UIRE advance pay ment en subscriptions. 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