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- From: nyt%nyxfer%igc.apc.org@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu (NY Transfer News)
- Subject: Little Rock Marchers Demand Health Care
- Message-ID: <1992Dec19.080809.13615@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Resent-From: "Rich Winkel" <MATHRICH@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu>
- Date: Sat, 19 Dec 1992 08:08:09 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 82
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- Via The NY Transfer News Service * All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
-
- LITTLE ROCK MARCHERS DEMAND HEALTH CARE
-
- Special to Workers World
-
- Little Rock, Ark.
-
- A thousand health-care activists from 27 states converged here
- Dec. 12 to send a message to Bill Clinton: Dismantle the
- health-care-for-profit industry and institute a universal plan.
-
- They drove from around the country in a "Peoples Health
- Care-avan" to press their demands at a "Peoples Town Meeting."
- The gathering took place at the Little Rock Convention Center,
- just down the street from where Clinton's so-called economic
- summit was to begin two days later.
-
- It was a determined, multinational crowd, about a quarter African
- Americans. They weren't about to be placated by empty promises of
- vague reforms delivered by Clinton stand-ins.
-
- The restless crowd chanted health-care advisor David Wilhelm off
- the stage, shouting, "We want Bill," and, "Health care is a
- right!" Secretary of Commerce-designate Ron Brown got a similar
- reception.
-
- Finally people decided to go confront Clinton. They marched 15
- blocks to the State Capitol. The weather was bitter cold and many
- people were in wheelchairs or had serious medical problems--but
- hundreds stood outside for over three hours until Clinton finally
- emerged.
-
- All he did was shake some hands. He didn't offer any real
- answers.
-
- Before the Town Meeting took off into the streets, a dozen
- community activists spoke. Ida Bodie of North Carolina's Black
- Workers for Justice, who has carpal tunnel syndrome, talked about
- the 25 poultry workers killed last year in Hamlet, N.C. She
- brought the crowd to its felt when she declared, "There will not
- be real change in this country until we end racism!"
-
- Gerry Scoppettuolo, representing Nashville ACT UP and the
- Movement for a Peoples Assembly, urged everyone to continue the
- struggle after the conference, and to join with the MPA in
- coast-to-coast April demonstrations for jobs and justice.
-
- Organized labor was well represented. So were community groups.
-
- Brenda Scott, vice president of the Communications Workers
- Mississippi Alliance of State Employees, told Workers World, "Our
- state is 50th in the nation in income, and until we get real
- leadership of the people we will have no real program for
- change."
-
- "This was the first large protest of the Clinton era," Movement
- for a Peoples Assembly organizer Johnnie Stevens of New Orleans
- told Workers World. "And it shows that people aren't going to sit
- back and wait to see what Clinton is going to do. We're going to
- get out into the streets and demand jobs and justice now!"
-
- The conference was organized by Georgians for a Common Sense
- Health Plan and the Universal Healthcare Access Network of
- Cleveland. At a Dec. 11 news conference, Stevens had linked the
- health-care crisis to the problems of plant closings, evictions
- and unemployment.
-
- "The health-care crisis affects us all," he said. "The MPA urges
- you to participate in a week-long series of rallies and
- demonstrations April 25 to May 1, when we can intensify the
- pressure for all our demands."
-
- (Copyright Workers World Service: Permission to reprint granted if
- source is cited. For more info contact Workers World, 46 W. 21
- St., New York, NY 10010; email: ww%nyxfer@igc.apc.org; "workers"
- on PeaceNet; on Internet: "workers@mcimail.com".)
-
-
- NY Transfer News Service * All the News that Doesn't Fit
- Modem: 718-448-2358 * Internet: nytransfer@igc.apc.org
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