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OCR Page 1 of 3nace
PM
FICE
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P002
Back
Hermin
THE PRESIDENT HAS SEEN
11.22.95
Msonetta
EMORANDUM
curum
TO:
The Honorable Erskine Bowles
Deputy Chief of Staff to The President
FROM:
Felix G. Rohatyn for
3 is In
-------------------------
DATE:
Thursday, October 19, 1995
The Million Man March finished what the O.J. Simpson trial started: namely, it
convinced the Country that we have a serious race problem. The resulting calls
for a bipartisan commission to study race relations is a natural outcome of these
events; we are however, way beyond that. We know we have a race problem and
we can simply refer back to the Kerner Commission report to review it. What we
need to figure out is what to do about it and any remedies have to involve the
white community as well as the black community. There is no positive way to
improve race relations in this country that does not begin with a hard look at the
problems of urban America. I believe that the cancer of race problems lies with
the urban poor and unemployed, their inability to break out of their trap, and the
impact on the other communities making up urban life in America. If we wish to
focus on these issues, we should look at the problems of the American city from
the perspective both of the black and of the white communities.
Unless major changes occur soon, the situation in our major cities in the near
future will be summarized by two major trends: white flight and black despair.
Unless white taxpayers and their children remain in the cities, together with their
businesses, there will be no conceivable way of maintaining a tax base and job
opportunities adequate to the needs of the black and Hispanic populations of urban
America. The combination of advanced communications technology, which
allows more and more people and businesses to be located anywhere, and reduced
quality of life, because of issues of safety, education and taxes, is steadily driving
those who can afford it, mostly whites, out of the cities. Public officials in states
like Colorado, Montana, Wyoming, etc. are looking, with trepidation, at a
potentially enormous migration to their region over the next decade. As this
happens, opportunities for the minority population of the cities will shrink
dramatically.
Even if the totally positive objective of the March are fulfilled, namely self-
reliance, absence of violence and drugs, family support, etc., there will still be no