A OPINION Thursday, January 22, 1981 4 e '4 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board merica must not renege LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Anti-porn frenzy is reactionary To the Daily: Firing a rifle through the win- dow of a Cambridge bookstore because it carried Playboy, leading mass marches to "clean up" Times Square, calling cops on Harvard students for showing Deep Throat and picketing scores of other films all over the coun- try, offering bounties for the cap- ture of alleged rapists and "taking back the night" with marches which resemble lynch mobs - these are the activities which presently consume what is left of the feminist movement. Whereas ten years ago feminism used to be identified with militant struggle - however misguided - against oppression, today's anti- N 9W THAT Iran has fulfilled its promise to release the 52 Apericans it held hostage, there have srrfaced disturbing suggestions that America should renege on its side of tbe agreement. The Wall Street Jour- nal, the newspaper with the nation's largest circdlation, said in an editorial yesterday that the agreement that secured the release of the American hostages has no "moral standing" and urged the Reagan administration to renounce the deal. And now the new administrators at the Reagan State Department are beginning to hedge on committing themselves to fulfilling America's half of the bargain. in its editorial, the Wall Street Jour- nal advised Reagan to carefully examine the agreement, warning "if its unfulfilled parts, on balance, benefit American interests, there should be no hesitation in renouncing it." The editorial also said the agreement "has the same moral stan- ding as an agreement made with a kid- napper, that is to say none at all.' Also yesterday, the Reagan ad- ministration refused to commit itself to fulfilling the terms of the agreement, saying instead that a careful review of the terms would first be necessary. "The intention at this point," said the new State Department spokesman William Dyess, "is to study these aspects very closely." It is alarming that well-placed jour- nalists and government officials are seriously discussing the possibility of reneging on the U.S.-Iran agreement. First, such a deceitful violation of in- ternational trust would gravely, perhaps irreparably, damage America's foreign relations for years to come. It would be foolish to expect any nation to enter .into a future agreement with the United States with the knowledge that America may or may not later decide to abide by that agreement. The reneging of an inter- national agreement would only rein- force the manipulative, exploitative image of America held by many Third World and independent nations. Of course, an argument could be made that this agreement represents a unique circumstance and, after all, Iran violated international trust when it took hostages. Yet, it is not the policy of the United States to justify the reciprocation of the violation of inter- national law. Second, the vast bulk of what America has agreed to hand over to the Iranians is in fact Iranian assets. To refuse to return those assets- although the capital might benefit "American interests"-would be no less than stealing. The Reagan administration, if it is to avoid a mistake that would have disastrous effects on American foreign relations, should fulfill the terms of the agreement negotiated by the Carter administration. Potter not born again . 0 0 To the Daily: Christopher Potter's column of January 16 concerned and distressed me a great deal. Once again the Daily has misrepresen- ted Christianity, and once again I must respond. Mr. Potter claims to have been born again a few years ago, an experience that brought him a temporary euphoria that faded upon contact with reality. He sounds as if he were once deluded by a grand myth, but then later came to his senses, as if recovering from an illness. Mr. Potter, I can assure you that you were never born again. Listen to your own words. "The experiment never really took." "I managed to descend my mountaintop before the san- ctimony habit took root." You never gave Christ a chance, and He used some of your own words to describe you. In the parable of the farmer who was sowing seeds, "some fell on thin soil with underlying rock. It grew quickly enough, but soon wilted beneath the hot sun and died because the roots had no nourishment in the shallow soil. The rocky soil represents the hearts of those who hear the message with joy, but like young plants in such soil, their roots don't go very deep, and though at first they get along fine, as soon as persecution begins, they wilt." (Mark 4: 5, 6, 16, 17) Mr. Potter, you "reverted to the teachings of a lifetime" when "the reality of a less than heavenly world swiftly reasser- ted itself." I share, your concern for the grief-stricken of this world, but. please consider this very thought. How do we know that such a situation is bad-not just against our personal wishes, but truly contrary to a very real, immobile standard of good? How can we call a line crooked without an intuitive notion of "straight?" I submit to you that you have a very real knowledge, recognized or not, that there is something beyond our perception of the world, from which a true stan- dard of goodness arises. Your violent reaction against the in- justice of this world appeared to be pivotal in your rejection of a personal relationship with God through Christ, but isn't a world- gone-bad the very thing that would need a redeemer? Concerning- the Moral Majority, I think you pegged it very well. Old values, and the "dreadful, meaningless little games'' of this world become truly insignificant in the light of a new life in Christ. That does not mean that such people become hopelessly alienated from objec- tive politics. If I may quote C. S. Lewis: "If you read history you will find that the Christians who did most for the present world were just those who thought most of the next. The Apostles them- selves, who set on foot the con- version of the Roman Empire, the great men who built up the Middle Ages, the English Evangelicals who abolished the Slave Trade, all left their mark on Earth, precisely-because their minds were occupied with Heaven. It is since Christians have largely ceased to think of the other world that they have become so ineffective in this. Aim at Heaven and you will get earth 'thrown in'; aim at earth and you will get neither." Concerning the "Jesus politics" of America, I disagree strongly that the Bill of Rights becomes a "nasty nuisance," and I must question your self- imposed motto: "Only in unity under Christ will America conquer hersamassed adver- saries." Such an eventuality is inconceivable to today's born again Christian. The Bible in- dicates through prophecy that the days of this earth, as we know it, are numbered and that the final victory willfgo to no one but Christ Himself. Mr. Potter, you said three times in your article that it is so easy to believe in Christ, and you related that you did feel something incredible when you just bowed your head and asked for help. I beg of you; please con- sider again that this just might be the real answer. Don't let "sophistication" prevent you from really becoming a member of the "club". -Steve Hamilton January 19 porn crusaders have moved so far to the right that some even embrace anti-homosexual bigot Anita Bryant as a "sister." Ac- cording to the Feminist Connec- tion (October 1980), "poor Anita, who not so long ago was mobilizing Bible-thumping, right-to-life yahoos against gays, is now just 'an emotionally bat- tered wife' and we must reach out to her now and make her path easier." Feminists have recently taken to the warpath against por- nography under the ridiculous slogan: "Pornography is the Theory, Rape is the Practice." At a time when Ronald Reagan is moving into the White House with the political backing of the "Moral Majority" and the Klan, when the Polish pope declares that even looking at your wife with lust is adultery, when self- proclaimed leftists cheer the veiling of Iranian and Afghan women, this latest outburst of petty-bourgeois moralism reflec- ts the general rightward drift and supports the recent government and right-wing offensive against social "deviance" of all sorts. (Deviant from what? As someone once said, perversion is whatever you don't happen to be into.) The. anti-porn frenzy is dangerous and reactionary, put- ting feminists in an objective bloc with the most conservative forces Obliquity SNo excuse for prejudice NATIONAL PRIDE is a healthy thing, but in retrospect, it ap- pears that some Americans might have gone too far with their patriotic fervor over the course of the 444-day hostage crisis. Iranians in America-including in Ann Ar- bor-have spoken of instances of bigotry ever since the American em- bassy was seized 14 mnonths ago. Certainly the problem was worse in other parts of the United States, with signs appearing in shop windows in various places barring Iranians from being served, and many visiting Iranians reporting harrassment on the job, irrespective of their political beliefs. One can hardly remember a national prejudice spawned \so sud- denly and irrationally since millions of Japanese were imprisoned during World War II, for no crime other than their place of national origin or an- cestry. This time, there was a general feeling of hatred directed toward Iranians as a whole, and an assumed air of superiority over them, and, by inference, other emerging Third World societies. Even as stories of the horrors of the hostages' experience are revealed, we ought not react with a general hatred toward all Iranian countrymen. For while that may seem the only rational reaction to the crimes of the kidnap- pers, it is wrong to hold non-involved Iranians responsible for the actions of their government or countrymen. People who get caught up in that kiid of blind fury may think they are waving a patriotic banner; in fact, they are bandying about the kind of ugly racism we ought to have aban- doned long ago. A cessation of hostility toward in- nocent Iranians living in the United States would be a good way to put the best elements of our national charac- ter on display. . ..without credentials... 9_ __ -I To the Daily: It leaves me sad and angry. Christopher Potter volunteered what must have been a very per- sonal moment in his life in his last column, his "conversion" to Jesus, and how it makes him in- terpret the suddenly visible and highly vocal Moral Majority in America. The Moral Majority is a worrisome phenomenon, true, but " far worse is Potter's frighteningly uninformed self- assurance. What are his credentials for examining belief? A five minute, admittedly giddy emotional ex- perience prompted by his own vulnerability and the en- couragement of a circle of frien- ds. That kind of euphoria was natural given the circumstances, and so was the ease of it all; en- joying the "light," basking in the approval of others who were hoping he could share their beliefs. That can be a starting point for belief (there-are many others, probably more common), but he can hardly claim to speak as a seasoned believer, or as a former "member of the club" any more than one can affirm oneself an economist after reading the business section of Newsweek. Why should Potter be surprised to return to his lifelong convictions as an atheist? I do not object to Potter's con- clusion that there is no God. There are many well-considered and intelligent arguments on his side. But there are at least as many offering other resolutions to his problems (such as the presence of suffering in the world), and issues which have gripped the greatest minds in the West for over three millenia can- not be summarily dispatched in such a narrow-minded and flip way. If the frightening thing about the Moral Majority is its imper- meability to intellectual analysis of its views, Mr. Potter, too, is still brandishing the tired rhetoric and ideas of 19th-century atheism and curiously offering them to a 20th century academic community. At least Potter could read something current, Michael Novak's Belief and Unbelief perhaps. Education neither demands nor presumes any sort of conversion. I think many could agree that religious studies are among the most exhilarating and useful intellectual adventures of our times. -George Greenia January 20 To the Daily: Joshua Peck entitles his weekly column "Obliquity." Obliquity is defined as divergence from moral rectitude, immorality, or dishonesty. After reading his column of January 19 arguing for Palestinian statehood, I could only think of how appropriate the title was. He says there cannot be peace' as long as "the Israeli establish- ment refuses to call the Palestinian people a nation." He fails to realize that the Israeli establishment has recognized the Palestinians right to self- determination from its inception. Thirty years ago, Israel's first foreign minister, Moshe Sharett, told the UN., "We are willing to accommodate our right of self- determination to the self- determination of others; we require, however, that the ac- commodation must be mutual." And in 1974 Yigal Allon told the UN General Assembly: "I would not agree to a general settlement without including in it the satisfaction of the needs of the Palestinians." He went on to say, "If there is any ethnic significan- ce to the Palestinian concept it applies equally to the peasant, to the townsmen, and to the Bedui east of the Jordan River (meaning in Jordan) as it does to the peasant, townsmen and Bedui to its (the Jordan's River's) west (meaning the West Bank)." That is why Allon proposed a "Jor- danian-Palestinian Arab state, east of Israel, in which the in- dependent identity of the Jor- danian and Palestinian Arabs can find expression in peace and good neighborliness with Israel." His proposal went nowhere; no one would even listen. Over the phone, Mr. Peck in- formed me that today 75 percent. of the population of Jordan is Palestinian. Jordan was created as a Palestinian state, and its demography shows that it is one. Mr. Peck, if I may paraphrase, there will be no peace as long as the Palestinian establishment refuses to 'call Jordan a Palestinian nation. But let us put this point aside. The major stumbling block in Israel's peace process with Rose Bowl To the Daily: The editorial "Getting to that Rose Bowl" (Daily, January 9) which appeared was a piece or irresponsible and unfair jour- nalism. Any point which the piece meant to make was lost in a pile of mealy-mouthed reproach- fulness which sounded more like sour grapes than responsible journalism. For example. Tim Lee's con- in society. At bottom, it is an at- tempt to impose censorship. What will be the next step? Will the self-appointed censors also want to stone adulterers and "loose women?" That is Khomeini's program, and he is certainly a world leader in the fight against "smut." There are no suggestive ads for Jordache jeans in Teheran, you can bet your life on that! Rape is a horrible, frightening, and violent crime. Women cer- tainly must have the right- to defend themselves against the violence of sick individuals. As Marxists, we defend the right to self-defense against criminal assault, including the right to bear arms. But we vehemently oppose vigilante-type actions or calls for more cops to get tough on rapists. In this racist society, it is blacks who get framed up in the courts, often on rape charges. Remember the Scottsboro and "Kissing" cases, where innocent black youth were railroaded to jail on trumped-up rape charges. It is not pornography which is the source of violence against women. It is this capitalist society with its enforced poverty, rigid family structure, and straightjacket morality which breeds the frustrations which ex- plode in violence. -Michele Lube. Spartacus'Youth League January 19 is oblique Egypt was linkage to the Palestinian issue. After many weeks of negotiations Israel of- fered political autonomy to the Palestinians. They were offered control of everything except a military (for obvious reasons). Again the proposal went nowhere, because no one else was willing to involve himself in the peace process.. The few prominent Palestinians that were willing to listen to the proposals were "done away with" by the PLO. - In 1947 the PN came out with its famous partition 'plan dividing a the British Mandate into an Arab Palestinian state and a Jewish state. Even though the proposal was a letdown for the Jewish community, it still accepted the partition plan. The Arab respon- se, however, was quite different. The armies of Egypt, Syria, JQr- dan; Lebanon, Saudi Arabia and Yemen invaded the newly created State of Israel. The proposed plan for a Palestinian state fell through, not because.of anything Israel did, but because of the aggression of the Arab states whose main purpose was not the establishment of a Palestinian state but the total destruction of the Jewish state. It is interesting to note that between 1948 and 1967, when Egypt and Jordan occupied Gaza and the West Bank, there was vir- tually no outcry from anyone that these lands be made into a separate Palestinian state. If the desire for political self- realization was so profound, then: the reasons for the silence are quite unclear. If the Palestinians: yearned for their own sovereign territory, demands for self- determination should have been directed to Egypt and Jordan. The fact that the silence remained until Israel took over Gaza and the West Bank after the Six Day War and the fact that Palestinians have repeatedly refused to sit down with - the Israelis suggest that Palestinian nationalism is at most a secon- dary consideration; the primary consideration being the pushing of Israel into the sea. Anti-Zionism is disguised anti- Semitism. -David Brief January 19 sour grapes paign and had absolutely nothing to do with homecoming. The mention of the incident served only to slant unfavorably and up- fairly the reader's opinion. The only statement of any worth was the suggestion that the homecoming concept be reexamined. Perhaps the Daily should expend its energy on such meaningful ends and stop proclaiming its nettv grievances. * v STEPFORD "aQ z ,. .. _.__ . F; "i ; L. d -i r" M' , 1C AAWML 4 I A I ... - , - ' - " i . ' C'~ ; g ICI .. . and condescending To the Daily: a narcotic. Claiming experience W.~ P . I j"w ff( ~. rlvu - udiwl I