4A EDITORIAL AND OPINION/ Hit Cisrlstte ^o« Thursday, September 22, 2005 tClje Cljarlotte ^o£it The Voice of the Black Community 1531 Camden Road Charlotte. N.C. 28203 Gerald O. Johnson ceo/publisher Robert L Johnson CaPUBLISHER/GENERAL MANAGER Herbert L White editor in chief OUR VIEW CttyCound disirici and at-laide campaigns We recommend Turner and Eaves in Districts 3 and 4 Election season is well on the way and normally we do not do endorsements for pri mary elections. However, this primary season has some very interesting races. District 4 City Council Malcolm Graham’s depar ture from city politics to become a state senator left District 4 open for the taking. Several very good candidates are dueling for that seat. We feel Maxine Eaves’ experi ence as a bridesmaid of poli tics but never a bride has earned her a place at the table. She has been politically active for years including for midable roles with the League of Women Voters. We feel she will do well repre senting this district, which is wrestling with issues sur rounding explosive growth around University City as well as how to best strength en fragile inner city nei^ibor- hoods like the Hidden Valley community District 4 is fortunate to have several community-ori ented candidates interested in serving, as evidenced by the nimiber of people who expressed interest in being appointed to the seat when Mr. Graham resigned last year. Among those running for a place at the council table, we heartily endorse Mrs. Eaves, who has an inti mate knowledge of the dis trict as well as Charlotte gov ernment. District 3 City Council Warren Ihmer has had his moments of controversy on LETTERS MATTERS OF OPINION President Bush is no LBJ in deeds Burgess Turner coimcil (such as the Confederate flag over Elmwood Cemetery, which isn’t in his district), but as it relates to District 3, he has been effective helping to over see a rapidly changing area that covers south and west Charlotte. We have seen Mr. Thmer exhibit growth in his first term on the coimdl and as a longtime district resident, has exhibited a clear grasp of issues affecting District 3 as well as the city as a whole. While Joel Ford is an articu late and worthy candidate with the potential to be an outstanding city leader, we feel District 3 can best be served by Mr. T\imer, who has proven to be a quick study to the intricacies of city government and has proven to be an honest steward of his district’s interests. City Council at-large Only four Republicans are running in the at-laige cam paign, leaving five Democrats to compete for four seats. Our recommendation is Anthony Foxx, David Erdman, Susan Burgess and Darrell Bonapart. Mrs. Burgess is an incumbent and Mr. Erdman served on council briefly in the late 1990s to fill an unex pired term. George E. Curry After stumbling miserably out of the gate, George W. Bush has finally caught up with the American public and now realizes that there is widespread support for rebuilding New Orleans. He has finally struck the right rhetorical chords, pledg ing to “renew our promise as a land of equality and decen cy” He went on to say, “As we clear away the debris of a hurricane, let us also clear away the legacy of inequali ty” With Bush, it is always bet- t^ to ignore the language and examine his record. He has made some sweeping endorsements of diversity that would have made even Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. proud. But he used Dr. King’s birthday to announce his opposition to a pair of University of Michigan afSr- mative action cases that went before the Supreme CJouit. Over Bush’s objection, the conservative court upheld Michigan’s law school admis sions program while invali dating a more numbers-ori- ented undergraduate plan. There ai^ already troubling signs that the Bush adminis tration plans to use this nat ural disaster to recycle some old Bush plans that were pre viously rejected. All of the water hadn’t been drained fi:x)m Canal Street in New Orleans before Bush pro posed $5,000 “Worker Recovery Accounts” to assist victims of Hurricane Katrina and the subsequent flooding. Under the plan, those left unemployed by Katrina can use the one-time grant for job training, day care, trans portation, education or any thing else that will help them land a job. The administration pro posed a similar program two years ago, but Congress rejected the $3.6 billion plan. If a person found a job within 13 weeks, und^ the plan he or she could keep up to $ 1,000 left in the accoimt. Liberals opposed the plan because they thought it would be the first step in replacing un^n- ployment insurance. Conservative, on the other hand, objected because they did not want to create anoth er layer of bureaucracy Even more disturbing is Bush’s determination to use public funds to subsidize pri vate education. The Department of Education announced a pro posal that would provide nearly $500 million in federal flmding to help students enrolled in private schools in the disaster area relocate to private schools elsewhere. This is a variation of Bush’s voucher plan and would use limited public funds to subsi dize private education. The flawed plan calls for each stu dent receiving up to $7,500. Some conservatives, fearing growing deficits and an uncomfortable federal role in the relief efibrts, are calling for across-lhe-board cuts in ord^ to fund the recovery and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Others are chal- lei^ing Congress to remove pork projects fix)i5i recently enacted legislation. Bush says he has no plans to raise taxes or do away with previously enacted tax cuts that mostly benefit the wealthy Former President Bill CHinton, in an interview on the Ibday Show, said it would be “crazy” to maintain those tax cuts in view of the imex- pected new expenses, dhnton and former presid^t Geoige H.W Bush are heading up private relief effoils to help the victims of Katrina. Expenses associated with recovering from Hurricane Katrina, estimated to be $ 150 to $200 billion, should not be used to distort the serious deficit problems the nation was facing before the disas ter. The Congressional Budget Office had projected that the federal deficit would exceed $300 billion a year for the next decade, totaling nearly $4.5 trillion by 2015. And that was long before Katrina came ashore. An analysis by the Center on Budget and PoHcy Priorities shows that the repeal of some of the previ ously enacted tax cuts would more than offset expenses associated with Hurricane Katrina. “The tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003 cost more each year than the total amount likely to be spent on Katrina,” the center said. “The cost of tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003 is $225 bilhon this year alone and will rlimb to hi^er levels each year in the future, as more of the tax cuts enact ed in 2001 take full effect...The cost of the tax cuts in a single year exceeds the total anticipated costs of all expenses related to the hurricane over the years to come.” Rather than making the ‘Tx>ld” decision that he promised by repealing at least one of the tax cuts, George W. Bush will inflict even more cuts in programs designed to help the very peo ple displaced by Hurricane Katrina. Bush’s words may sound like fellow Tfexan Lyndon B. Johnson’s Great Society Programs, but they are not matched by similar action. GEORGE E. CURRY is editor- in-chief of the National Newspaper • Publishers Association News Service He appears on National Public Radio as part of "News and Notes with Ed Gordon.” Anti-war movement is alive and well Low-income have right to counel before courts In 1963, the U S. Supreme Court issued its landmark ruling in Gideon vs Wainright, establishing a constitutional right to counsel in criminal cases. The rig^t to counsel deserves to be broadened to include civil cases involving fundamental rights and basic human needs. In Gideon vs Wainri^t, tlie court believed that counsel was required when an individual was placed in danger of losing their own liberty Yet there are other scenarios which are just as egregious and must be addressed, such as a parent’s loss of custody and con trol of their own children, loss of income, or d^iial to proper health care The 107th (Congress found there is a need to encour age the proviskai of hi^ quality legal assistance for p«^ns who would otherwise be unable to afford legal counsd, and for years federal resources available to the local Legal S^vices Corporation have eroded. Gene Nichol, Dean of the University of North Carolina Sdbool of Law reported we have one lawyer for every 380 people gen erally, and one Legal Serices lawyer for every 4,3(X) persons liv ing in poverty Equal justice under the law doesn’t approximate the way the system operates in jH*actice, and ordinary citizens are priced out of the system. Our basic fundamental ri^ts do not lie just in criminal statutes, but within the basic limits to family, health, emj^oy- ment, education, eind other ri^ts needed to live and prosper. We’re not asking for handouts, but assurance that our govern^ ment will be there fcr citizens ne^ected and not protected under the laws. The state of Ncarth Carolina has an opportunity of becoming the first state in American history by amending the state constitutiofi giving indigent peoj^e the right to equal access to justice. Howard J McClure Jr Charlotte At a moment when President Bush’s public approval ratings are lower than Richard Nixon’s at the time of his resignation in 1974 - and that was before he was pilloried for mishandling rescue efforts associated with Hurricane Katrina - it is iron ic to hear supporters of the Bush administration dismiss the anti-war movement. As you know, these dis missals all increased in tempo as greater attention was paid to the quest of Cindy Sheehan, mother of a U S. soldier killed in Iraq, to meet with President Bush himself Bush refused to meet with her, continued his vaca tion, ran off to Idaho to get away fium protesters; and then allowed his supporters to specifically condemn Sheehan and to challenge other opponents of the Iraq war as allegedly being extremists or ^mething close to traitors. Allowed, you ask? Sure. All President Bush had to do was publicly and loudly condemn such ihetoric as inflammato ry and dmiagogic just as he should have done afl^ Pat Robertson’s outrageous call for the assassination of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. Yet, in neither the attacks on Sheehan; the attacks on other opponents of the Iraq war/occupation; nor in ree^nse to Robertson did the President of the United And it’s more likely to gain strength and influence as Iraq takes a heavier toll on U.S. Bill Fletcher States of America feel that it was necessary to set the ri^t moral [there is that word again...] tone. What makes this entire sit uation nothing short of amaz ing is that public disenchant ment with the war continues to grow, despite the pro-Bush attacks on the anti-war movan^t. It has also been made amaz- ing how the media wishes to dismiss pop ular criticisms and growing finstration about the war. This is what raises the impor tance of the anti-war demon strations, scheduled for Sept. 24 in Washington, D C. Convened by United For Peace & Justice and the A.N.S.WE.R Coalition, it is projected that the march and rally will tap into this grow ing anguish and ango* over the convoluted policies of this administration that show no end in si^t to a war and occupation that the U.S. media refuses to acknowl edge as having been and con tinuing to be, illegal. I think that it is worth emphasizing this point so that we do not fall prey to the ri^t-wing slander that claim that these of us who oppose the war and occupation are not supporting the troops. It is now firmly established that the people of the USA were lied to about the situation in Iraq. There were no weapons of mass destruction and the intell^ence about Iraq was manipulated in order to manipulate us. There was no threat fix)m Iraq and the only terrorist presence in Iraq was in a region controlled by the Kurds, that is, by allies of the USA. Since there was no justifica tion for this war, and as such it was a dear violation of international law, there can therefore be no question of “...staying the course...” Think about it for a second. Let’s just suppose that the police broke into your house and destroyed your property based on a “tip” that you were trafficking in narcotics. Let’s further suppose that it turns out that the tip was orches trated by someone who sim ply did not like you. Can the police stay in your house and take over your affairs? Can they start changing your bank accoimt, put your children into differ ent schools, or rebuilding your house to conform to their idea of how you should live? The answ^ is obvioxis: No! Instead, you would be owed compensation for the destruc tion of your property and the chaos into which your life had been Ihrown. So, too, it is with Iraq. There is no “...stay ing the course...” because the course was charted by people whese intentions were not to protect us fix)m terror, but instead to remake the Middle East in a manner that served their interests rather than the interests of the people of the Middle East. The anti-war movemait is far fium dead. In fact, it grows each day as one indi vidual after another asks himself/herself the same question that Cindy Sheehan has asked; why did anyone have to die for a lie? BILL FLETCHER is president of Trans Africa Forum, a Washington, D.C.-based non profit educational and organizing center formed to raise awareness in the United States about issues facing the nations and peoples of Africa, the Caribbean and Latin America. He also is co-chair of the anti-war coalition. United for Peace and Justice. He can be reached at bfietcher& transafricaforum org.