America under Richard Nixon: f endurance Two years o -. - -- - . 0 I wom"s I "Americans are great for remembering the dead ..." ..' IT IS NOW nearly two years to the day since I stood in Detroit and watched Richard M. Nixon put the final touches on his campaign for the presidency. In the intervening period, the most that can be said is that the American people have endured. The inner contradictions, hypocrisy, and shame- fully misguided priorities which have been the hallmarks of the first two years of the Nixon administration show no signs of leaving us. It seems clear that we will be forced to endure at least two more years. Two years ago, Nixon told Detroiters that he had a plan to end the war. It is clear now that his plan will do little more than eventually reduce the number of American troops in Vietnam. The war will continue. It is the ultimate aim of the Nixon-Laird-Rogers "plan" to assure that the South Vietnamese will continue to fight a war against their countrymen in the name of a cor- rupt and undemocratic South Vietnamese govern- ment. Meanwhile, American involvement in the rest of Southeast Asia has become more apparent - especially Laos and Thailand. The invasion, and subsequent destruction of large areas of Cambodia in the name of a just peace has left thousands dead and homeless. And in Paris, Nixon continues to take the position that this country has the right to nego- tiate the future of Vietnam. NIXON'S WAR policies continue to have disas- trous effects. More than 44,000 Americans havebeen killed in Vietnam thus far. The Nixon administration has taken great pride in the fact that it has reduced American casualties. S t i1l, nearly 60 American soldiers who were alive when Michigan beat MSU last Saturday are dead today. The toll of Americans wounded also continues -290,000 thus far, about 400 per week, most of them draftees. And 28 per cent of the wounded will have a limb amputated. About 15 per cent will have a sense organ impaired. In this light, Congress attempted to appropriate an additional $105 million specifically for Veter- ans Administration hospitals. The bill was vetoed by Nixon as part of his war on inflation. IN THE area of civil liberties, the record of the Nixon Administration is frightening. Nixon tried not only once, but twice to appoint to the Supreme Court southern white racists whose re- cords on upholding the Constitutional rights of persons accused of crimes could only be character- ized as dismal and "mediocre". He has allowed the Voting Rights act of 1965 to expire, and be reinstituted in a weaker version. And he has maintained in office J. Edgar Hoover as head of the FBI who, with the consent of At- torney General John Mitchell, has begun to wage war on dissenting students. Court approved wiretapping has been increased by staggering proportions under Mitchell-Nixon. Yet this is only the tip of the iceberg. Mitchell has repeatedly stated that he reserves the right to eavesdrop electronically without court permis- sion whenever he feels the national security to be endangered. There are no public records of these taps. From what we have heard out of Mitchell and his wife, and the rest of the Nixon administra- tion, it would seem that he considers a large pro- portion of the people of this country are threats to the national security. This anti-intellectualism of the Nixon admin- istration is perhaps the most ultimately depressing aspect, for it has manifested itself in a verbal hate campaign being waged by Martha Mitchell, Vice President Agnew, and Nixon himself. It has encouraged divisiveness and distrust. Voices have not been "lowered," nor has Nixon attempt- ed to "bring us together." The official intolerance of dissent that has be- come the formal stance of the Nixon administra- tion is rubbing off. It is clear in the wording of the report of the grand jury report at Kent State, where the language indicated a deep resentment of educated, concerned persons and at the same time, a willingness to tolerate indiscriminate murder of four human beings. ON THE economic front, Nixon's policy has been to put the lower classes out of work in order to hold down prices for those consumers who do work. And even this has not had any effect. Un- employment is horrendously high; even allowing for those affected by the GM strike, it is at an intolerable level. Yet the cost of living continues to rise at record levels. The only real affect of Nixon's policies has been to stabilize the stock market and increase the profits of the Wall Street financiers. The draft, intolerable in any form, continues to exist, despite pledges to the contrary. Only token reforms have been made. "This is Martha Mitchell-I'm calling you from my upstairs bathroom so John won't hear me. -#1- II 4.. Blanket Party Campus Bombers la * "Woo - - t Fss -w -Vp w 9s . rnP Regster xn I 'f ri hone S4ndS aie "'^ r°" r - _ 4Q 4Ui Tti F rs'70 " ' t i "All the 'Tiger cages'. aren't in South Vietnam." MBad " 1 " Pit -1i VI