Fge 4-Saturday, March 15, 1980-The Michigan Daily Carter's gutless U.N. disavowal retards peace I With the White House disavowal last week of the American vote in the U.N. to condemn new Israeli settlements on Arab land, the power of a special interest lobby has never been more ap- parent. It displays the political weakness of President Carter and his vulnerability in the upcoming primaries. Had the White House disavowal come the day after the vote, it might be acceptable to dismiss it as a niistake. But in coming more than two days later, and af- ter a State Department affirmation, Carter's reneging is a clear manifestation of his no-guts pragmatism. The Security Council vote was not, as many view it, a vote to undermine the security of Israel. Rather, it was a vote of conscience to condemn the building of new settlements on Arab land, which was declared off-limits by the Israrli Supreme Court last October because the presence of settlements there constituted a "provocative action." Carter, however, was afraid of being perceived as an anti-Zionist and anti-Semite by the vote, so he ordered Secretary of State Cyrus Vance to shoulder the blame for the "mistake." WITH THE NEW York primary coming up soon, Carter was anxious about losing the Jewish vote, which constitutes a large part of the registered vote in New York. By reneging as he did, he did not get himself out of hot water with the Ziuonists, rather, he is only into more hot water with non-Zionists. Carter, like many supporters of Israel, refused to allow a distin- ction to be made between Zionism and Judasim-which labels as anti-Semitic anyone who dares to question the prudence of any Israeli policy. The Begin Government's policy of building new settlements on Arab land is a clear in- dication of the expansionist aims of that gover- nment. By further encroaching on Arab lands, as was done earlier this week with the seizure of another 1100 acres near Jerusalem, the Begin government is undermining the image of Israel as a peace-seeking partner of the Camp David agreement, and is testing the willingness of Sadat to ignore this slap in the face. As long as Israel persists in systematically robbing Arabs of their land through ex- propriation, water piracy, and direct shelling on civilian areas, the Camp David agreement will be meaningless. It is disturbing to see Zionist supporters smugly pat themselves on the back for the "accomplishments" of Camp David. T;HE ONLY ONE who has claim to any ac- complishments in Camp David is Anwar Sadat. His unprecedented gesture of going to Jerusalem has yet to be reciprocated. The per- petuatign of illegal settlements is pushing Sadat td the limit of his bargaining power and is making it increasingly difficult for him to maintain his position. If the May 26 deadline passes with no significant changes in Israeli policy toward the. Palestinians, Sadat may have no choice but to abandon the Camp David agreements. He has bravely faced the ostracism of the Arab world for more than two years now, with no sign of reciprocation from Israel. Giving up parts of an uninhabitable desert can hardly be called meaningful, especially in light of the bombing of refugee camps in South Lebanon, diverting water from Arab farming areas in Gaza and the West Bank, and the expropriation of land. By disavowing the Security Council vote, Carter has tacitly endorsed the oppressive and expansionist policies of Israel, purportedly to By H. Scott Prosterman strengthen his domestic position. His vacillation on the settlements issue makes as much sense as his attempt to fight inflation by increasing military spending-a tactic which I doubt even Milton Friedman is buying. IT IS MOST unfortunate that many Americans refuse to accept anything as fact unless they read it in Time. Newsweek, or The New York Times. It is equally unfortunate that we can hear some of the most critical infor- mation about political developments only from independent researchers, such as Frederick Jameson and Sheila Ryan, who conduct their own fact-finding investigations. We dismiss the findings of these people too easily because they contradict the more easily digested reports of the news media. Because Israel has squandered many oppor- tunities to solve the Palestinian issue, we might ask if Israel really does want peace, or if it is seeking to continue to profit from the state of "no war-no peace." Without the element of crisis, aid from the American government and . private citizens would be drastically diminished. One critic of my last article on this page has stated that "some influential Isrealis feel quite comfortable with the present status quo." Given that the status quo keeps the Palestinian people in a state of destitution, and 'maintains an atmosphere by which Israel maximizes its profits from American military and economic aid, this statement is easy to believe. Not all of the problems of the Middle East will be eradicated by resolving the Palestinian issue. But it is absurd to deny that the Palestinians are at the center of the Arab- Israeli dispute. THE PLO, ALONG with the rest of the world, has seen how Israel has failed to answer the overtures of Sadat, and how he has been politically humiliated by Israel's continued op- pression of the Palestinians. Israel has given no sign of offering anything in return and is only party with the power to use carrots and sticks. The Palestinians have nothing. Zionists pay lip-service to the need to address the Palestinian issue in a way that arrogantly brushes aside their plight. When the issue is addressed, they make angry attempts to defend Israeli policy with emotional value judgments that convey feelings of racism toward the Palestinian people, andthey dismiss serious attempts to address the problem as "tendencies toward emotional bias." Until the Palestinian issue is addressed by Israel and the United States, Camp David will keep Americans and Israelis blind to their own folly, and increase the destructiveness of the eventual explosioi. Contrary to what some readers have read in- to my statements, I have never advocated the destruction of Israel. But it is becoming more obvious that if radical changes are not made very soon in Zionist policies toward the Palestinians, thest policies will be the impetus of Israel's own self-destruction. H. Scott Prosterman says he is a mean and ornery graduate student in the Center for Near East and North African Studies, just as many readers have imagined. AP Photo MANY BELIEVE PRESIDENT Carter should not have disallowed the now-famous United Nations Security Council resolution regarding Israeli settlements on the West Bank. t I N Ninet v Years of Editorial Freedom LETTERS TO THE DAILY: NORML hits drug equipment stance 6 Vol. XC, No. 129 News Phone: 764-0552 - Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Skepticism T IME WAS, WHEN the labels of "national security" and "national defense" were enough to make many Americans unquestioningly set aside any personal reservations about a government project or policy in favor of the putative national effort. Little protest was raised in the West when dangerous tests were first begun. But the carelessness of the military with regard to nuclear testing in the 1950s apparently raised the incidence of cancer in Nevada and 'Utah. The inhabitants of those states have not forgotten that, and this time around, have greeted the government's defen- ,se, plans with a healthy measure of skepticism. The MX intercontinental ballistic over the MX missile system, a planned network of underground launchers linked by 10,000 miles of railroad track, has caused concern among the residents of these same two states. They worry that the system will make their homes a likely target for Soviet missiles. En- vironmental dangers are also a con- cern. The MX opponents who have been turning out at government hearings and forums on the MX are not just the same protestors who align themselves with most liberal causes. They are grizzled miners and ranchers who are quite unaccustomed to the strains of "We Shall Overcome." It's en- couraging to see the grass roots resisting Big Brother's inposing foot- steps. To the Daily: We are a little surprised that the Daily would take such a dim viewof HB 5542 and one of its co- sponsors, Perry Bullard. I guess you better sharpen your pencils for an editorial shot at Michigan NORML (National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) as well, because we also supportRepresentative Richard Fitzpatrick's proposal to ban the sale of smoking materials and smoking devices to minors. While we would much prefer to see its age limit setat eighteen, and will do what we can to see that it is, we otherwise find the bill a reasonable and constitutionally sound attempt to discourage smoking by minors. It was not clear from your editorial that anyone at the Daily has actually read the bill, or given it much consideration to what prompts its introduction. The Daily is certainly entitled to its opinions, but you don't seem to realize that the state does have the right to limit the accessability of certain substances or items to,. minors that it must allow to adults-this is true not only of recreational substances, but of automobiles, explosives and firearms, and sexually oriented material. No one in their right mind would encourage a minor to smoke any recreational substan- ce. Nevertheless, beyond volun- tary efforts of retailers them- selves, we see no attempts to en- force Michigan's conflicting tobacco statutes. HB 5542 would require enforcement to prevent tobacco sales to minors and we welcome the effort. Another bill which sets this bill apart from similar legislation is its precise definition of "smoking paraphernalia." Several states and hundreds of .local gover- nments have attempted to com- pletely ban sale of all "parapher- nalia" and in some cases even literature, regardless of a per- son's age. Because of their vagueness and overbreadth, these attempts have uniformly violatedconstitutional due process protections. A November 1979 Library of Congress report on such legislation succinctly notes "We could locate no case which has upheld one of these statutes against a full con- stitutional challenge disposed of on the merits." It should be pointed out that in each of these hundreds of cases, it has been the retailed, trade organizations, and organizations such as NORML which have been forced to bear the tedious and very expensive burden of raising the constitutional challenges. It is a burden none of us can continue to bear indefinitely, a lesson not lost by the Carter Ad- ministration which is circulating a "model paraphernalia statute" to state legislatures. It seems to incorporate the worst features of enjoined legislation but is never- theless being promoted as capable of withstanding con- stitutional challenge. N ORML, . . .L for one, is thankful that Mr. Fit- zpatrick did his homework and offers a bill which will not allow its definition of smoking paraphernalia to extend to ashtrays, brownie mixes, and ziploc bags as was the tem- ptation. I think the Daily does have a valid, if somewhat muddled point, in wondering why the eighteen year-old is or is not an adult at the convenience of the state. Both NORML and Perry Bullard agreed to back HB 5542, and both have encouraged in- terested parties to contact their legislators and encourage them to amendthe bill to controlsale only to people under age eighteen. The Daily might better expend their talents and energy doing the same rather than con- demning a legislator who has consistently defended civil liber- ties and the best interests of the Ann Arbor community for so many years. Perhaps the greatest irony of the situation is that most retailers that we are familiars with have for several years refused to sell smoking materials and devices to youngsters and are now thankful for legislation which clarifies and is largely consistent with their position. It is a far better alternative then yet another federal court fight. The law may often be an ass, but it can't hold a candle to the Daily's editorial implication that a five year-old has a constitutional right to a pack of Bull Durham and a Power-Hitter. -Roger Winthrop, Michigan NORML March4 SYL excluded from rally Answer to our prayers T HARDLY seems possible that anyone could misinterpret the direct language of the first and four- teenth Amendments to the Con- stitution: the two guarantee that neither Congress nor individual states shall make any laws respecting any particular religion. Yet, there have been of late a num- ber of mysterious and disconcerting attempts in several states to directly contradict this Amendment. Six weeks ago in Massachusetts a law requiring prayers in public schools (which generously allowed students not wishing to participate to leave the room) was pushed through by that state's governor. Fortunately, the prayers of millions of Americans who respect the Con- stitution were answered on Thur- sday, whenothesMassachusetts Supreme Court struck down the freedom-eroding school prayer law. Tolerance of religious freedom is, as everyone knows, one of the fundamen- tal ideas of this country. To demand that students participate in religious prayers-often euphemistically called "silent meditation"-is to undermine that freedom. Let's hope that we can put an "amen" to school prayers. everywhere. Emotions rule Prosterman _..- - To the Daily: The beliefs which are ruled by one's emotions instead of careful reasoning often have their basis in opinion, and not fact. This is an unfortunate result, and examples of this, I think, are found in H. Scott Prosterman's recent article ("Myths Abundant About Israel, PLO and Arafat," Daily, Feb. 29) and the outraged reactions to the article by Jeffrey Colman (Daily, March 12) and Carl Cohen (Daily, March 11). The debate here has some deeply rooted problems, yet solutions cannot be found unless one truly searches for them without allowing oneself to be overtaken by emotion or prejudice. I do not claim to be an expert on this subject, yet I have tried to gather as many facts as I can to help me better understand the delicacy of the situation. Battle lines are often drawn by speakers on the Palestinian/Israeli problem, with one side usually made out to be the righteous; the other, the villainous. But this prblem is too complex to simply take sides on. Indeed, it appears to me that the brutal strikes of "retaliation" by either the Israelis or the Palestinians are devoid of any real validity. 'the cycle, I think, has continued now for so long that there cannot be any good guys left. Palestinians blow up buses, to drive the residents of a group of Palestinians settlements out of Israel/Palestine. Such acts, many Jews claim, never hap- pened, yet why are such claims covered up, prolonging irrational beliefs? This is indeed regret-a table. Why is a prominent Jewish figure no longer invited to speak at Jewish gatherings merely because he expressed sympathy for the Palestinian refugees? And further, how can any real peace be achieved through the Caip David accords if the Palestinians are not even represented (a problem which seems to leave both sides at fault)? There are countless other examples of in- cidents where information which would have formed a fuller, more balanced viewpoint is not allowed to be heard. The United States is in a position of extreme influence regarding the entire Palestinian/Israeli problem. In- formation, I think can only help everyone who is trying to find a viable solution for all parties in- volved. Yet real knowledge of the situation cannot be gained merely throuh reading press clippings. The voices of suffering must be heard by everyone, and they lie on both sides of the issue. Facts must be searched for. This is what we all should do. Nevertheless, perhaps the most To The Daily: On Saturday, Feb. 16, the Mid- west Coalition Against Registration and the Draft (Mid- CARD) held a conference in Kalamazoo, Michigan sup- posedly for all interested studen- ts and organizations opposed to the draft. At that conference, its organizers excluded members of the communist Spartacus Youth League (SYL) on the pretext that we did not agree with CARD's "principles of unity" and that the SYL has been "disruptive" in the past. What is "disruptive" to the CARD leadership is clearly the SYL's attempt to raise its working class opposition not only to the draft but also to the army and U.S. imperialism. So while this conference had been scheduled to work out a statement of principles of unity, their first principle had already been set: exclude the SYL. The leadership of the CARD conference - a liberal conglomeration of the Maoist Revolutionary Student Brigade, the Democratic Party supporters of the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee, and the New Patriot Alliance - united to fight the draft explicitly within a framework loyal to capitalism. Because these organizations form anti-draft coalitions with the racist right-wing Liber- tarians and the parties of war and racism, 'the Democrats and Republicans, they had to bureaucratically expel those who woul stand for socialism as the only road to peace and for military defense of the Soviet Union against imperialism, namely, the SYL. We were the only group to cut through CARD's cold-war anti- Soviet social-patriotic "unity." The ex-Trotskyist Socialist Workers Party/Young Socialist Alliance opportunistically tags along behind the CARD organizers hoping to be the "best war" against the Soviet Union. Ever since the U.S.'sstinging defeat in Vietnam, the American ruling class has sought to recap- ture its position as "top dog" of world capitalist powers. Desperate to recapture one-sixth of the world that was ripped out of the clutches of the capitalists in 1917, the real target of Carter's war drive is the Soviet Union, the military powerhouse of the deformed workers states. We un- conditionally defend the Soviet Union against imperialist attack. Despite the massive bureaucratic degeneration of the Soviet workers state since the time of Lenin and Trotsky, we recognize that the planned economy and collectivized property are a great historic ad- vance for mankind and must be defended. We oppose Carter's at- tempts to bring "democracy" (like the kind the U.S. brought to Vietnam and Chile) to Soviet workers. The Soviet working class will overthrow the Stalinist bureaucracy and re-establish workers democracy only through political revolution. "Our opposition to the draft, is not based on pacifism or social- patriotic opposition to peace-time conscription. We are opposed tQ the bourgeois army, whether. volunteer or drafted, because we. are- for proletarian inter-> nationalism and are committed. to the defeat of U.S. im- perialism." The present anti-draft protests should not become platforms or campaign rallies for bourgeois politicians. The Democratic Par- ty, no less than the Republicans, is a capitalist party. From the* Vietnam War to the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba, the Democrats are totally committed to the in- terests of imperialism and should not be allowed to speak at anti- draft rallies. The only way forward is to build a class-struggle fight against the draft centered around opposition to U.S.,imperialism BS~1V~'~i~i r~~uEin~.5~ v a