4 OPINION Page 4 Sunday, October 12, 1980. The Michigan Daily I III- Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Back and forth on Vol. XCI, No. 34 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of The Daily's Editorial Board One Agee and sexism.. There is no question of morality or law before the American public that has spurred as much bitter debate as abortion. The pro- choice movement sees itself as protecting women's most basic human right: that to decide whether or not to bring new life into the world. The pro-life movement's name speaks for itself: Its members believe that once conception has occurred, the decision to bring new life into the world has already been made. The fetus is a human being for every moment of its nine-month existence and has as much right to live out its days as any other human, pro-lifers argue. William Fitzgerald, the Democrat who at- tempted to unseat Michigan's Governor William Milliken two years ago, learned the hard way how single-minded some vters are on the issue of abortion. Millions of life-long Democrats voted for Milliken for no other reason than that he is solidly pro-choice, One can easily see why a strict conser- vative might favor a woman's right to abort: If government should cut back on business regulations (environmental, safety, price controls, and the like), certainly it should leave private citizens to make their own decisions about personal health matters. It is, each individual woman's prerogative to decide whether abortion is morally objec- tionable. Government-imposed morality, the pro-choice conservative argues, is a con- tradiction in terms. MY OWN EVOLUTION on the abortion issue has been a painful and tortuous one. I was born into a liberal Democratic family that had me selling seashells for Gene McCar- thy at the age of 11. abortion fetus' is human, they have no moral alter- native but to attempt to prevent its extinction. It is unconscionable to expect them to let the offspring of a pro-choice woman perish in silence, merely because the mother's politics permit it. And yet I remain committed to sustaining the freedom of every woman to choose abor- tion. I'm obviously not entirely comfortable with my position, and yet I feel that the arguments in its favor are substantial enough to withstand the (admittedly noble) efforts of the opposition. I DO NOT claim that the fetus is unquestionably non-human; I suspect that that question will never be satisfactorily set- tled. Still, other situations exist where killing 0 MARY CUNNINGHAM'S resigna- tion from Bendix Corp. last Thursday culminates a most unfor- tunate example of sexism in the cor- porate world and in society as a whole. Cunningham only three weeks ago was promoted to vice president for strategic planning at the company, making her, at age 29, one of the highest-ranking female executives of a major U.S. firm. Because she had risen very rapidly through the echelons of Bendix, and because she was rumored to have a close relationship with William Agee, the chairman of the board, company gossip had it that she was promoted for reasons other than her business abilities. That such insidious gossip arises frequently when a woman is promoted in the predominately male corporate world is unfortunate; Cunningham ap- peared well-qualifed for the executive position. . What made this case even wor- se-and led to Cunningham's resignation-was Agee's attempt to quell the rumors by announcing to his employees and the media that the promotion had nothing to do with any personal relationships. That ill- considered announcement effectively legitimized, the employee gossip and inflated an in-house Bendix issue into a major media scandal. The media-especially the Detroit Free Press, which broke the story and covered its developments salaciously-is to be chastised for pan- dering to society's sexism. And society is to be criticized for continuing to raise its collective eyebrows whenever a woman achieves a position of prominence. Ob iquity By Joshua Peck . .Another and passports F OLLOWING IN the path of its Republican predecessor, the Carter administration has embarked on an effort to impose prior restraint on an American citizen. Former Cen- tral Intelligence Agency operative Philip Agee, who since leaving the Company several years ago has been writing anti-Agency books and ar- ticles,i' s the current victim of repressive activity by the federal government. A year ago, Agee irritated his former employers by publishing a book decrying the actions of the CIA during the U.S.' final days in Vietnam. That controversy ended when the Supreme Court ordered that any profits Agee earned be turned over to the gover- nment. The reasoning here was that Agee had not submitted the transcript to the CIA for clearance before it was published, and therefore had violated an agreement all CIA agents sign when they join up. We quarreled with the court's decision then, and still main- tain that before it levied any fine, the government should have had td prove, that Agee had done material harm through his disclosures. Now the feds have gone a step fur- ther. The Justice Department, in collusion with the Customs Depar- tment, has blocked Agee's attempts to leave the country for Europe. The CIA reasonably surmises that .Agee might be planning to continue his activities of the last several months, i.e., disclosing the identities of Agency operatives and the nature of their activities on the Continent and elsewhere. By barring him from leaving the country in the first place, the gover- nment hopes to keep Agee from doing any more damage to the clandestine hijinks of the United States overseas. The same heinous mindset is at work in the'current controversy as in the notorious Pentagon Papers case of the Nixon years. Then-President Nixon, afraid that the Defense Department materials The New York Times was planning to publish might prove em- barrassing, tried to get a prior restraint order from the courts to keep the Times from printing the infor- mation at all. The Nixon ad- ministration lost-and well it should have. Had such a precedent been set in the Nixon case, a pattern might have developed of screening all defen- se-and intelligence-related materials before publication. The Carter administration has clearly not learned the.lesson that the Supreme Court attempted to teach in the Pentagon Papers case. Agee should be granted a passport and freedom to travel abroad. If and when he endangers American security per- sonnel, he should be prosecuted by government lawyers, if they see fit. But to block Agee before he has com- mitted any crime is a violation of Con- stitutional principle. It amounts to a fulsome attempt to save the gover- nment the trouble of building a case against Agee, and it should not be tolerated. Passports are for all Americans, not just for supporters of the government. securing a healthy margin of victory for the incumbent over the pro-life Fitzgerald. THE 1978 MICHIGAN race is no aberration; it has happened dozens of times in political races around the country that a candidate's stand on abortion has determined his success or failure. The abortion issue seems veritably to con- found the usual lines of liberal vs. conser- vative. While freedom of choice in abortion is an integral part of the National Organization for Women's priorities for public policy, some vociferous supporters of the Equal Rights Amendment and other feminist doctrines see abortion as being in a different class entirely. At the Democratic convention last August, a group called Democrats for Life showed up in large numbers to push its anti-abortion views. It is not composed of Dixiecrats or of wild-eyed reactionaries who are Democrats only in name. The women (and a few men) of DFL seemed to be supporters of virtually every liberal, humanitarian cause under the sun. Some are veterans of the civil rights and anti-war efforts of the sixties. Virtually all think it ridiculous that the ERA has not yet been passed. BUT UNLIKE MOST of the convention delegates; who passed a strongly pro-choice platform, DFL thinks that the principles that, extend equal rights to oppressed minorities and to foreign victims of U.S. agression ought to embrace the rights of the fetus to exist as well. Then again, there is a considerable body of traditional Republican conservatives which sides with the pro-choice feminists on the issue of abortion. James Kilpatrick is perhaps the most eloquent speaker on the American right who holds this view. During his recent visit to Ann Arbor, Kilpatrick noted that the abortion issue was one of the very few on which he had sided with Washington, D.C. last winter. The abortion fight first came to my atten- tion in 1973, the year the Supreme Court af- firmed, in Roe vs. Wade, that abortion was a woman's right. At that point, I perceived the issue as just another case of "Us against Them": We who hated anti-Semitism, racism, war, economic injustice, and pro- lifers against Them, the insidious eye-rolling right that wanted wealth and power for the already-wealthy and powerful, and unwanted babies for everyone. I've come quite a way from that simplistic vision. For one thing, I'm convinced now that advocates of both the pro-choice and pro-life sides are acting fundamentally in good faith. I have met and argued with too many com- passionate, caring opponents of abortion to believe otherwise. Pro-lifers quite simply see themselves' as the only spokespersons for the most defen-' seless, vulnerable people on the planet. THE BRUSQUE PRO-CHOICE response to this notion goes something like this: "If that's the way you see it, then don't abort. But don't foist your perceptions of what is life and what is not on us." That argument registers with me as totally abhorrent. What would the abor- tion advocates who take this approach have said to slaveowners who claimed a religious conviction that blacks weren't human? It is the business of every human to ensure that his/her fellow humans are accorded human rights. Since pro-lifets believe the MEMBERS OF CENTRAL Michigan Right to Life march in front of the White House in is proper, and indeed the only moral course o0 action. I think Americans who refused to join the anti-Nazi effort in World War II were not merely cowards, they were moral deviants. Yet killing was part of that effort. The moral principle is clear here:rKilling is justified when refusing to kill will result in greater suf- fering for more people than agreeing to kill. The spectre of the back alley abortion alone is enough to sway me from the seductive, seeming humanitarianism of the pro-lifers. But even more central to my pro-choice belief is a simple, somewhat irrational gut feeling. I cannot bring myself to demand of any woman that she carry an unwanted child for nine months, only to be faced with the ex- crutiating choice of surrendering the child for adoption or embarking-on an unbearaby bur- b densome 15 or 18 yihrS'of raising it. I feel that to take such a stance would be unspeakably self-righteous. I suppose I'm resigned to an interminable struggle with members of the pro-life movement. I oppose them politically, yet 1 have more respect and sympathy for them than for many of the pro-choice advocates I meet. It's a precarious position indeed. Joshua Peck is the co-editor of Daily's Opinion Page. His column pears every Sunday. The ap- Shana Alexander in their Counterpoint" segments on "Sixty "Point- Minutes." A lien issue'getsshort I NV~l~ l 1 C m o ITOF *OR r' LOOK! JUST 1ECALJ5E YOU FOOT T1 E SILL DOESN'T (xIVE YOU THE R4IT rTO KNOW WIATS GiOIN4 ON! With some five million Mexicans entering the United States illegally each year and with projections of Hispanics -becoming the nation's largest minority in the near future, one might think that the issue of im- migration would warrant some substantive, clear-cut proposals from this year's presidential con- tenders. Instead, voters are being of- fered ambiguous statements about "guest worker" programs that failed in Europe five years ago, identification and classification procedures that have long drawn the wrath of human rights advocates, and im- plied threats to crack down on U.S. employers of illegals. NOTHING IN THE bag of political buzzwords will significantly alter the long-term impacts of Latin American im- migration. At most, they will, temporarily appease or anger a variety of special interest groups in the United States whose votes carry more weight this year than all of the up to 12 million illegals who already are estimated to reside in the United States. Ronald Reagan probably came closer than anyone to touching the raw nerve of the issue when he issued a call in Texas for open borders between the U.S. and Mexico, and for llowing Mexican workers to dnter the country "for whatever length of massive kind of exodus across the border. The fact is, the status quo simply is not working and we should be more realistic about our policies of admitting for specific periods of time more people than now legally cross the border." Gray added that the Reagan "concept" is to admit Mexican workers for between three and six months as "guest workers" with work permits-a plan already proposed by the gover- nors of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California, as well as six Mexican border states. Whatever the specific Reagan proposal (and Reagan has not personally elaborated on it), the guest worker concept is one that draws applause from powerful special interest groups in the Southwest, especially from agricultural and industrial in- terests who depend on a steady supply of cheap labor from across the border. BUT THE GUEST worker idea is also strongly opposed by other interest groups which Reagan is also courting, including many Mexican-Americans who fear for their own jobs, and blue-collar white workers who oppose any increase in Hispanics because of presumed overloads on the welfare system. come on a temporary basis to take jobs that go unfilled." As for those undocumented workers already here, Reagan would favor some sort of amnesty for workers who had demon- strated "good citizenship" over a ten to 15 year period, said Gray. He would oppose heavier san- ctions on employers who continue to hire undocumented workers. "It is impractical to try to put the burden of proof on an employer in deciding who is an illegal alien," said Gray. IN ANY CASE, he added, a Reagan administration would do nothing on the immigration issue until it could review a report, due on March 1, 1981, by a select commission on immigration ap- pointed three years ago. The Reagan position on im- migration thus offers no change from present policies, with the major exception of the guest worker program, which is still ambiguous in its "concept." And even that proposal would cer- tainly encounter formidable hostility in Congress, predicts Professor Wayne Cornelius, director of the program on U.S.- Mexian Studies at the University of California, San Diego. .But at least Reagan's proposal does square off sharply against the immigration policies of the By Robert Milliken shrit immigration pronouncements as "simplistic and unworkable.' MARSHALL MAINTAINS that plenty of American workers could be found for the so-called lower grade jobs filled by illegal aliens, and blames the problem on a number of employers who* he claims, exploit illegal workers with low pay and substandard conditions. Marshall has estimated that the unem- ployment rate could be brought down to 3.7 percent if U.S. workers took the place of the estimated two million illegal workers now holding jobs here (this is one of the lowes estimates of illegal workers). Ironically, it is the Reagan position which tends to emerge from the comparisons as the more liberal. "The Carter people," notes Prof. Cornelius, "prefer to attack the Mexican workers on grounds that they are taking jobs and depressing wages. To the Democrats, political refugees are OK, but economic refugees are not because they compete with our* workers." As for the independent can- didate, John Anderson, he too favors a guest worker program, combined with harsher penalties for employers of illegals and greater economic aid for Mexico to help provide employment south of the border. Anderson's running mate, Patrick Lucey, at