A OPINION Page 4 Sunday, October 26, 1980 \The Michigan Daily The liberal alternatives: A whore or a hope The two-party system has done its worst job yet this election year. It has produced two can- didates, who, despite clearly distinguishable policies and proposals, will have a suffocating effect on the American citizenry. The claims of each party that it has the answers to America's mounting problems are ridiculous. The question of precisely which variety of bungling and wrongheadedness will dominate governmental policy until 1984 is neither of great interest nor of particular consequence. THE REAGAN BRAND of power abuse will be less underhanded than his opponent's. He will make no bones about pulling SALT II from r - Obliquity By Joshua Peck would march in his second term? Yet for some reason, the Democratic coalition has been falling in line behind the in- cumbent, whose record is shaping up to be the worst since Herbert Hoover's. Why Carter's already-committed mistakes should be less frightening than Reagan's potential ones remains a mystery. CARTER'S DOMESTIC policies are laughably bad, and everyone seems to know it. Inflation has risen, but unemployment has not dropped in compensation. The lot of American blacks is worse now, both absolutely and in comparison to whites, than it was when Carter took office. Nuclear energy, which'to candidate Carter was a "last resort," is an integral part of President Carter's on-again-off-again energy program. No one can doubt that a conservative trend is afoot among the American electorate. The very fact that Reagan is certain to finish within a few percentage points of his opponent confirms that trend., But the general mood of the nation does not mean that there are no liberals, progressives, and leftists remaining. Nor does it mean that the pendulum could not swing back the other way, perhaps even in the -near future. In lieu of any acceptable candidate who stands a chance of. getting elected, liberals, progressives, and leftists owe it to themselves and to their gran- dchildren to vote for the one candidate who of- fers hope for the future-Barry Commoner of the Citizens Party. COMMONER WOULD NOT make a very. good president. That may sound like a con- tradiction; in fact it is not. Commoner himself has no chance to win and he knows it, but his lack of legislative experience has no bearing on the wisdom and compassion the Citizens Party platform exudes. If and when the day comes that a Citizens Party candidate has a clear shot at the presidency, that candidate certainly will concrete results. Specifics from the party plat- form bear it out. AMERICAN LABORERS know well that large corporations pay them less than they feel their efforts are worth. They know many com- panies manage without American labor altogether by exploiting cheap labor pools abroad. The Citizens Party recommends that cor- porations be forced to pay a living wage to their employees, whether they be residents of Yp- silanti, Michigan or Soweto, South Africa. Think of what the enactment of such a proposal would mean: An end to slave wages for many of the poor abroad, a disincentive for the multi- national corporations to take their manufac- turing plants elsewhere. Need it be noted that neither Jimmy Carter nor Ronald Reagan has made any mention of the corporate policies that impose low wages on workers around the world? How could they? That would be biting the proverbialhand. The Citizens Party platform features a wealth of proposals for programs that would benefit various factions of society. These in- clude renewed and thoroughgoing daycare facilities, more expenditures for battered women and rape victims, efforts to redistribute wealth more fairly along racial lines, moves for Hispanic and Native American rights, and vastly increased funds for the development of conservation and renewable resource energy plans. THE KNEEJERK Republican respon- se-and perhaps, these days, the Democratic one as well-is a cry that there is no money to fund these proposals, worthy though they might sound. The Citizens Party response? Take the money from the two repositories where it languishes now, to the advantage of virtually no one: the national defense budget and the coffers, once again, of the large cor- porations. The billions the United States pours into defense make California's defense industry{ happy, but do little for anyone else. If even a half those dollars were spent on socially useful.. programs and industries, the beasts of inter- national military tension and domestic in- flation could both take a needed beating. As for the corporations, their billions were earned not only through the sweat of their workers, but through the collusionary policies of the government. Barry Commoner and his colleagues want to make good the unfair ad- vantages that have so horribly inequitably a distributed the nation's wealth. THERE IS AN understandable tendency among the electorate in general and first-time voters in particular to vote for a candidate who., at least has a chance to emerge victorious. Making one's vote "practical" must seem especially pressing when one of the candidates has been cast as a raving maniac, and when, indeed, the quality of American life might suf- fer considerably more under one candidate than under the other. But Jimmy Carter, the man who demands and expects liberal support, is a cynical, hawkish, mendacious political whore. He is an enemy of good economics, good sense, and goodheartedness. He is a friend only to good politics. A vote for Barry Commoner is not a vote for Ronald Reagan. It is a vote of conviction that j the poor, the sick, and the hungry are not $, spongers, or enemies of the middle class, but rather victims of a corporate system that is the - enemy of us all. Vote for Barry Commoner on November 4. Joshua Peck, is the co-editor of the, Daily's Opinion page. His column appears every Sunday. consideration before the Senate. He may get tough in word and deed with the Soviets, though it must be noted that the presidency has usually had a moderating effect, even on seeming ex- tremists. Does Jimmy Carter offer significantly less of a threat to world peace than Reagan? His avid support for the MX missile, his rash reaction to the "discovery" that there were Soviet troops stationed in Cuba, his insistence, faithfully echoed by Congress, that young men register for the draft, and of course, the enormous in- creases in defense spending over the course of, his four years in office, are but a few of the ways in which Carter has betrayed the trust of the liberal Democratic voters who put him in office. Unhampered by concerns that his ac- tions might hurt his re-election chances, who knows how dangerously far to the right Carter Barry Commoner be a man or woman suited for the job. But at the moment, the party is only begin- ning to spread its ideas. The man who leads it is an articulate and captivating spokesman for a group whose dreams are set on future election years, years when more and more American voters have come to the realization that the tenets of the Citizens Party platform are facts. "The commanding heights of the American economy are occupied by giant corporations whose grip on the nation's economic and political life has brought our society to the verge of national crisis." That assertion, the opening sentence of Commoner's platform, is a joke in "respectable" political circles today. But it is no joke to the people, Americans and foreigners, who suffer from its painful and very 0he 3IEIpt3an 1Bailjj Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Vol. XCI, No. 46 Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Keeping remarriage can LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Reagan plague will doom America T HE MONTH-LONG Synod of Bishops at the Vatican is finally over, and so; for the moment at least, we can cease our frequent attacks on the antiquated Church rules the bishops have affirmed. Almost. As if desiring one last volley of criticism from Catholics and non- Catholics alike, Pope John Paul II closed the synod with yet another policy straight out of the Middle Ages. ,He said that divorced Catholics who remarry should participate "in the life of the church" but cannot receive Communion unless they remain celibate. -That requirement is about as ridiculous as ordering a child who has measles not to develop small red spots. :This latest backward order from the keepers of the Catholic faith might be amusing were it not part of a devastating trend. Earlier in the synod, the rigid ban on artificial birth control was reaffirmed, although the sensitive prelates did ex- press compassion for those Catholics who have trouble accepting the rules. And Friday, in a brilliant example of confusing logic, a San Francisco arch- bishop said that the growing rates of violence, abortion, and divorce in the United States since the early 1960s are proof that the liberal attitudes of some Roman Catholics toward birth control are not beneficial to society. Perhaps the archbishop meant that the availability and use of artificial birth control has loosened our society's morals, leading to the aforementioned ills. Of course, he and the other Church leaders conveniently ignore the social chaos millions of unwanted babies-sure to be born in the Catholic dream world of rhythm-method con- traception-would wreak upon society. To the Daily: Theoretically, the American political system is designed such that the people rule. The people, by voting in their own interests, insure that the decisions made by their representatives will be congruent with those interests. As a male college student registered for the draft, I have a very specific set of interests to protect in the upcoming elec- tions. First and foremost in my mind is a desire to keep myself out of the Midest with a machine gun in my hands. It seems ob- vious to me that Jimmy Carter's foreign policy is much less likely to result in war than is Governor Reagan's. Carter's Olympics boycott, wheat embargo, economic sanctions, and peacetime draft registration, although cautious, are effective, appropriate, and benign tools of foreign policy. Reagan's desire to increase our nuclear arsenal and his proposal to blockade Cuba are clear in- dications of his philosophy con- cerning foreign policy. There can be no doubt that the probability of war will be much greater under a Reagan administration. As a student, I have another major interest to protect-my education. At present, I receive $2,500 from the federally sub- sidized guaranteed student loan program. It is no secret that the flow of these funds would come to. an abrupt halt should Reagan be elected. In a recent interview, Walter Cronkite asked Reagan if he would increase or decrease federal aid to students.- Reagan replied, "Aid becomes an interference to education." After this brilliant response, Reagan expressed his desire for the states to offer aid to students. I can't help but wonder if this is what he had in mind when he cut state aid to students 100 percent in California. Strange how his basic politicalrphilosophies change depending upon what job and whose votes he is after. Well, Mr. Reagah could easily serve a four-year term without involving the United States in a conventional war. And I could probably continue my education at a school in my home state. But a vote for a man who advocates a nuclear arms race with the Soviet Union is in no one's interest. In a recent television speech, Reagan said, "The way to avoid an arms race is not simply to let the Soviets race ahead. We need to remove their incentive to race ahead." Apparently Reagan in- tends to remove this incentive by keeping up with Soviets: He believes that if we race right along with them, then they won't move ahead, and this will destroy Hazing co To the Daily: I was amazed that your Octo- ber 23 article on the hazing in- cident did not contain even a note of apology. Since your first ar- ticle concerning the incident on October 14, you have run a total of (correct me if I'm wrong) at least fifteen articles related to it. Besides the fact that we were all getting a little sick of reading about it, I think you should realize that you are the ones who blew the whole thing out of proportion. If was, after all, just a hazing, not a murder or ex- their incentive. Reagan is arguing that the way to prevent an arms race is to engage in one.., This type of circular reasoning exemplifies the ignorance and stupidity of the man. He is neglecting, or is simply ignorant of, the fact that every single arms race in history has resulted in war. Ronald Reagan is an uneducated, misinformed, illad- vised actor. He is no more qualified to be president than Henry Fonda. Reagan is a disease attacking the American people, and his plague must be wiped out before Election Day or every American will be doomed to a political black death. -Joe Becker October 22 verage hit posure of mismanagement of millions of dollars in University funds. Furthermore, no one, as you've told us so many times, was seriously hurt. I do not condone hazing, but neither can I condone blatant journalistic irresponsibility. It is mostly your fault that Baseotto and Todd left. Next time you publish so muchabout one in- cident, make sure it's worth- while. -Chris Case October 23 4w Tisch will crush hopes Tot e Daily: For many of us, November 4' will mark the first presidential election in which we are eligible to vote. Surprisingly, there are those who do not intend to cast a ballot, not wishing to show sup- port for any of the candidates. Do we need to be reminded that there are other issues at stake in this election? As readers of the Daily, we are fully aware of the disastrous consequences Michigan faces if the Tisch amendment - Proposal D - is passed. According to University of Michigan economists, the state's entire system of higher education will be wiped out. Those colleges and universities not forced to close would have to double or even triple tuition-while at the same time, student financial aid would be eliminated at the state level. But in this situation we are not powerless. We don't have to sit back and watch The University of Michigan be hacked to pieces by Mr. Tisch's meat ax. We have a vote. And it does count. By not voting on November 4, you won't change the system of American politics. One of the candidates ' will be elected president; the two-party system will continue to dominate. By not voting on November 4, however, you will be providing no opposition to a proposal that could crush all our hopes for higher education in Michigan. We must show up at the polls in full force if we are to stop Mr. Tisch from turning our goals for the future into unattainable fan- tasies. -Kevin West October 24 01 Help the elderly Nov. 1 To the Daily: For some, old age brings physical problems which make it difficult to do simple but necessary jobs like yard work and window washing around the home. CHORE DAY, sponsored by Neighborhood Senior Ser- vices, is again coordinating a community effort to help Ann Ar- bor senior citizens, and it is im- portant to have responsible in- dividuals who can assistus. Neighborhood Senior Services is an organization whose goal is helping older persons remain in- dependent in their own homes. We have found that help with these seasonal chores can often make the difference for seniors who want to continue on their own, in their familiar neighborhoods. The CHORE DAY this fall is Saturday, November 1. Please- see the "Happenings ' column for further information. -Mary Baker, Director Neighborhood Senior Services Staff October 14 Mideast problems building To the Daily: The situation in the Mideast is of concern to all of us. However, -we should not only pay attention to those crises that have come to an open outbreak, but also to those that are building up, and especially, the role of our gover- nment in relation to them. Part of the Mideast "Arc of Crisis" is Somalia and Ethiopia. Somalia, in its quest for territorial expansion. is waging a Ethiopia's 30 million and one of the strongest armies on the con- tinent without exterior backing. The goal of the U.S. government is to destroy the socialist revolution in Ethiopia. Socialism is the only hope for these poor countries, and a coun- try as rich as ours has no business preventing Ethiopia from building the social and economic system that suits its needs best. Ethiopia just won a Tt. ~ _a _ , _ _ : _ _ _ _ Vote for Bullard urged c] To the Daily: If you want to be sure of having a representative in Lansing who understands the needs of Ann Ar- bor students and their rights within the University system, vote for Perry Bullard. He is ac- cessible, interested in our problems, and very effective in helping to solve them. He has my: recommendation, and I hope he'll. have your vote! -Carmell Anderson October 2 Na 1lmu4I * l_ Im\7 I A v10- -0fa I