OPINION Page4 Sunday, November 15, 1981 The Michigan Daily Time to resist the Three hundred days and counting. Lord in the high heavens, be merciful. * * * * Three hundred days and counting. Lest we become short-sighted, there are more than 1100 left. Yes, the fun is just beginning. We knew it would be a major pain in the ass, this shameless and cretinous Reagan ad- ministration. We knew the shit-hammer was on the way down. But we tried to console ourselves by rationalizing, "The longer Reagan's in of- fice, the better Carter will look. The longer . BUT THAT DOESN'T work anymore. In less than a year, the Reagan "team" has systematically gouged the humanity out of our government, alienated and/or terrorized half the world, and pitifully sniped at each other in the process. Its performance has exceeded our wildest expectations. Our former sympathy for former President Carter has been replaced by deep resentment. * * * * A monster, to say the least. And where do we go from here? The American electorate has in- stalled a muddle-minded demagogue in the highest of offices, and there's little to do now but sit back and witness the fireworks. The display has already been impressive, and it's a safe bet the rest of the show will be even more so. THE WHOLE rigmarole would be quite comical, actually, is the inhabitants of our nation and world had little at stake. Unfor- tunately, there is the small matter of survival here, and-our cold-warrior leaders are putting us all in jeopardy. Secretary of State Alexander Haig warns us not to "delude" ourselves about the Menacing Soviet Threat; we hadn't also deluded ourselves about the perilous, blood- soaked course of human history. Our stay on this planet has been odiously fraught with plunder and violence. It would seem consistent, then; that Reagan and his fellow lunatics-with their bigger and better tools of death-will per- form the finale. So much for humor. We're playing with fire. * * * * With this in mind, fellow students, the time has clearly come to emerge from our shells. Sure, the post-Vietnam era has. been pleasan- tly apolitical-our leaders managed to refrain from the outrageous inhumanity of that war, and it was damn comfortable kicking Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, and Jimmy Carter around. But the seventies are long gone and, by all indications, the eighties are not going to be pretty. The time has come to mobilize. * * * * EVERY DAY in the newspapers we read another horror story about the pathetic Reagan Romp. Whether Interior Secretary James Watt is gutting conservation initiatives or CIA Director William Casey is proposing renewed domestic surveillance, the horror stories keep on coming. And, like any doomed enterprise, there is the usual self-destruction: Haig and National Security Advisor Allen feud; Haig and Defense Secretary Casper Weinburger con- tradict each other; William Casey is nearly ousted from the CIA for dubious private prac- tices; Budget Director David Stockman publicly doubts the wisdom of Reaganomics. By Steve Hook Now we have Allen under an FBI in All the elements of a successful sit-c But again, the comic elements shadowed by tragic ones. On th front, to name a few injustices, soc are cut by the same 30 percent1 budget is increased. Food stamps; Dependent Children are reduced vironmental Protection Agency is its potency. Funding for alternative ploration is reduced while nuclear the green light, despite its mountin unfeasibility. Mass transit projects or curtailed. JUST LAST WEEK, we wer Medicaid, Medicare, and Social S not far behind. Get ready for the trio These horror stories can be stom great effort, if heard individually you consider the collective mass administration antics, you'd better bag handy. * * * * In foreign affairs, where does one WE HAVE A wondrously concei policy that has, for the most part, We learned in beginners politicals the main purpose of foreign p reassure allies and alarm adversa The Reagan team, from Haig Secretary Casper Weinburger Nations AMbassador Jean Kirkpa given this a new twist. We haver alarm our allies-with one-dimen talk that has inspired huge ant Reagan Ri demonstrations throughout Western Europe-so that today the NATO alliance is frayed worse than during the "indecisive" Car- ter years. And our adversaries, namely the vestigation. Soviet Union, cannot help but feel relieved that com. the Americans have stolen the spotlight once and over- again, so their own equally lamentable Le domestic behavior has been less conspicuous. ial services the defense In England, West Germany, and the and Aid for Netherlands, the "pacifism" our leaders con- 1. The En- demn has mushroomed in recent months. And stripped of let's not kid ourselves, Uncle Sam is the focal e energy ex- point of this movement-the Reagan ad- power gets ministration's superficial red-baiting has sim- Zg economic ply failed to move our European allies, and the s are halted stability of the alliance is severely shaken. The "monolithic" communist threat, eviden- e told that tly, has been perceived with more alarm here ecurity are than in its own backyard. Do we know ckle down. something they don't know? I doubt it. ached, with We have further eroded our already floun- . But when dering relations with the third world, never of Reagan mind Reagan's post-Cancun gibberish. The have a barf good citizens of Thailand and Tanzania have simply not bought our president's free enter- prise line. They somehow feel that their begin? agonizing poverty is not due to a suicidal ved foreign dedication to socialism-and they wonder how back-fired. the most prosperous nation can ignore this. science that olicy is to IN THE MIDEAST, where the players are ries, right? catching their breath before the next con- to Defense vulsion of killing, American policy is seen as to United capricious at best. The Camp David accord is trick-have dying a slow death, and our leaders have failed managed to to evaluate the present-day, complicated isional war realities that make it unworkable. We were too ti-American busy squabbling over asenseless AWACS sale to omp Saudi Arabia, which estranged Israel and crip- pled the "peace process," to approach the un- derlying conflicts with any sensitivity. Our sabre-rattling has also estranged Japan. Rather than appreciate the grim Reagan-Haig- Weinberger-Kirkpatrick scenarios of an im- minent communist thread, the Japanese have pointed right back at Washington for the distin- ction of Number One Menace. Anti-American demonstrations began after one of our sub- marine skippers politely rammed a Japanese barge last summer, leaving the crew ter- minally treading water, and their apprehen- sion-if not utter hostility-continues today. We have seen unprecedented ignorance at work in our international relations. And this mismanagement has accompanied a flurry of high-volume arms sales to every corner of the world, and a visible reluctance to talk arms control with the Soviet Union. Two wonderful examples for the world's most powerful force to set. S * * * * Three hundred days and counting. These loathsome developments have been reviewed extensively in domestic and foreign publications, but the level of alarm here in the states remains curiously low. We have a gang of clowns running this country, with all the resources, necessary to dismantle our civilization (and the mentality to do it), and our citizenry remains complacent. Lord in the high heavens, be merciful. Steve Hook was the Page editor last summer. News Department intern Detroit. Daily's Opinion He is currently a at WXYZ-TV in rt Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Feiffer Vol. XCII, No. 58 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, M! 48109 Editorialtsrepresent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Running the goVernment t41/ UV RTIKU' AUK? 1ffMO L-B p UAPR$. Ak)17 THE AIR CgJTRII f4 I II wt v N06U~iN . jii ,-ost a- PIKE GAE IT'SALWAYS nice to know that the government is being run smoothly. Unfortunately, the Reagan ad- ministration hasn't made things that nice;-especially over the past week. First of all there was David Stock- man. The OMB's whiz kid-the high priest of supply side economics-said that the administration's plan really wasn't anything new and that the Kemp-Roth tax cut was a "Trojan hor- se" designed to give the wealthy bigger tax breaks. Well, that's old news by now. And besides, it's been obvious the Reagan administration has certainly made no efforts to help the non-wealthy. But then there's this little thing about Richard Allen, the administration's natonal security advisor. Ikseems that Allen received $1,000 frcix a Japanese magazine publisher, forijrranging an interview with Nancy Reagan. Allen has insisted it was not a bribe and that he received the money on Jan. 21-the day after the inauguration, and immediately put it in a saf4 in his office in the Old Executive Office Building. When he moved his office to the west wing of the White House, he said, he simply forgot about the money. A secretary has since found the money. Allen says he forgot about the money. That's not a comforting thought. Let's hope the national security advisor doesn't forget about a few MX missiles or a couple stray AWACS. Allen insists it wasn't a bribe-and there's a good chance it wasn't. But whether it was unethical behavior or just Allen's stupidity, both demon- strate a fundamental problem with the people who are running the gover ; nment. 9 ~II r 1-46 IQ J --7- eW- P R', i:.- o-" 7#. f 7 r r' +± . Y M A .> 3 rp Just a little more than a year from now, a central principle in the American dream will be of- ficially laid to rest. Simply put, the principle held that the common man in this country not only had an inalienable right to property, but be a nation of home-owners. NOW THE Reagan ad- ministration has taken steps toward a landmark policy change which will, in effect, acknowledge the withdrawal of home ownership from the main- stream of American expec- tations. Beginning in 1983, the Depar- tment of Labor has announced, monthly Consumer Price Index estimates of the U.S. cost of living no longer will include the cost of buying a home-prevailing mortgage 'in- terest rates and the current market value of real estate. In addition, the proportion of the CPI which is accounted to housing will be reduced to 14 per- cent of the index, from its present 25 percent. According to Commissioner of Labor Statistics Janet Norwood, the change is intended to more accurately measure the cost of living. Because relatively few Americans purchase homes in any given month, she argues, un- stable interest rates and soaring real estate prices are not relevant to the actual living costs of most citizens. THE NEW POLICY has been warmly received in Congress, where it is viewed as an effective means of curbing federal budgetary increases in such SWhittling away at the American Dream By Frank Viviano discovered in recent years: the emergence of a vast chasm in the United States between those who purchased homes in the era of low interest rates and reasonable real estate, and those who never will own a home. The latter category includes most young people and recent immigrants, as well as millions of others who waited too long to enter the housing market. IT IS A CHASM measured not only in dollars and dreams, but also in historic political im- port. Since the day Abraham Lincoln signed the Homestead Act in 1862, the U.S. government has actively endorsed he concept, of a society composed almost entirely of property owners. The concept was modernized by Franklin Roosevelt in 1934 with the Federal Housing Authority, .vlin n1.. - -'f* nl fi . l.. - k California, to purchase a city home at a monthly cost of little more than $200. TODAY, A renter in virtually any American city must expect to pay in excess of $500 for a modest apartment, and look forward to yearly rent hikes as well. By con- trast, the 1972 home buyer's mor- tgage payments remain $200--with property taxes frozen in some states. Yet under the revided Con- sumer Price Index, the gap bet- ween the renter and the owner would be quite invisible. This by no means is an unusual contrast. It is, in fact, typical of our times, and it will grow steadily more typical as the number of those who cannot join the ranks of American property owners rises. In the meantime, the cost-of-living gap also will. grow. nation of a gargantuan defense budget. Washington must go to the private lending institutions for defense money when the tax intake is insufficient, and interest rates soar accordingly. But in the years ahead, the decision to abandon the active endorsement of mass home ownership could prove to be social dynamite. "Always before in North American history," the eminent land ."economist Mason Gaffney observed in 1977, gover- nment policies and "the exuberance of land developers" have combined to keep real estate within the common reach and "blurred the distinctions between the haves and have- nots." f*NOW, HOWEVER, with gover- nment simultaneously deserting the common buyer and discouraging the construction of new housing through its fiscal policies, warned Gaffney, "we are in danger of developing a class structure more rigid than anything ever seen before over a long period of time on this con- tinent." We are in danger, in other wor- ds, of repudiating the egalitarian materialism of the American dream which has been a 'fun- damental stabilizing force in U.S. history. Ironically, the rise of ,Ronald Reagan to the White House was in no small part due to his in- vocation of that dream-his promise to return us to the days when no one could challenge the material superiority of the American way. He replaced a president who had the temerity to declare, in- t r , .' .. ~H ,a . IAD I