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- <text id=92TT1545>
- <title>
- July 06, 1992: Perot's Smart Idea
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- July 06, 1992 Pills for the Mind
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST, Page 33
- Smart Idea
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> Ross Perot, who often talks before he thinks, is currently
- in his denial mode. According to Perot, the well-sourced stories
- of his bizarre behavior and shoot-from-the-lip policy
- pronouncements are either gross distortions or outright lies,
- the product of Republican "dirty tricksters" and their
- running-dog co-conspirator, the toady press, which just
- "doesn't get it." Of the many tales Perot disputes, one in
- particular is troubling because the nub of the idea he denies
- advocating isn't so bad at all.
- </p>
- <p> During his chairmanship of the Texas War on Drugs Committee,
- Perot supported several unorthodox police procedures. None has
- generated more heat than his call for a "civil war" against
- crime and drugs. In 1988 two different journalists wrote that
- Perot encouraged Dallas cops to "go in [to high-crime
- neighborhoods], cordon off the whole area, going block by block,
- looking for guns and drugs." When the stories first appeared,
- Perot was mum -- a telling silence since no one can recall his
- having ever let a perceived inaccuracy stand uncorrected. Today,
- however, with such famous civil libertarians as Dan Quayle
- predicting that Perot would gut the Constitution, the
- un-candidate swears, "I never said it."
- </p>
- <p> As reported, Perot's scheme would probably violate any
- number of individual rights. But the basic notion is sound: no
- amount of inner-city investment will revitalize America's urban
- areas if the people who live there fear for their lives.
- Security, as all the candidates say, with varying emphasis,
- must be the first priority. All three have embraced community
- policing, the concept that would add cops to the streets on the
- theory that only intimate associations can eventually cause
- residents and officers to trust one another. But "c-pop," as it
- is known, can work only after an area is pacified -- and only
- after those who live there believe it to be thus. So Perot was
- on to something, and if he would stop to give a moment's
- thought to the problem, he would undoubtedly be on his way to
- Chicago for a photo-op with Vince Lane, one of the few public
- officials bold enough to push crime "sweeps" as an essential
- first step toward securing public safety.
- </p>
- <p> When Lane took over the Chicago Housing Authority in 1988,
- the ghetto projects he oversaw were rightly considered the
- nation's worst. The police estimated that violent gangs
- controlled 120 of the CHA'S 167 high-rises. "People were
- sleeping in bathtubs to avoid gunfire," Lane says, "and until
- that changed, you could forget the rest." Within weeks, Lane
- instituted Operation Clean Sweep, which continues to this day.
- Backed by the police, CHA officials examine apartments looking
- for places in need of repair and for "unregistered guests." If
- "by chance we uncover weapons or drugs," Lane says with a
- smile, "we complain" to the trailing cops, and arrests are made
- on the spot. The American Civil Liberties Union sued the CHA for
- its warrantless searches, but Lane negotiated a consent decree
- that has allowed his program to proceed unimpeded. The key is
- resident support, a result of the operation's startling
- success. Crime has fallen substantially, down about 30% in the
- 100 buildings swept so far.
- </p>
- <p> Lane is finally beginning to "attract back" working families
- that "can serve as role models for the 80% of our residents who
- are still on welfare. Low rents help," he concedes, "but most
- productive people wouldn't even consider living in our buildings
- if we weren't gaining a reputation for providing a safe
- environment -- and that view would be impossible if we weren't
- sweeping aggressively."
- </p>
- <p> In the person of Housing and Urban Development Secretary
- Jack Kemp, the Bush Administration has funneled more than $30
- million to Lane to continue the sweeps. "But conservatives
- believe such actions are local matters," says Lane, "so the
- President has refused to urge other cities to follow our lead --
- and most haven't because too many minority leaders are out of
- touch with the folks who live in their projects and are
- therefore afraid of being accused of sponsoring civil rights
- violations." Bill Clinton says Lane is "the greatest," but he
- too has avoided endorsing the cornerstone of Lane's success.
- </p>
- <p> Which leaves Perot. Suburban Chicago politicians fear that
- the drug gangs will simply move to what Lane calls "normal"
- neighborhoods if the projects are swept "clean.'' "But that
- would be great," he insists. "Nationally, we'll never get a
- handle on violent crime until `normal' folks feel the fear
- that's felt in the ghetto. Only then will they scream for the
- kind of law enforcement, including things like house-by-house
- searches, that gives content to all the law-and-order rhetoric.
- Ross may have gone too far, but he's on the right track." Which
- means Perot might consider saying what he says he never said,
- and this time more precisely. Or it means that Clinton or Bush
- might be wise to adopt Lane's program before Perot catches on.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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