A OPINION Page 4 Friday, September 24, 1982 The Michigan Daily Reagan's men: Full pockets, closed minds Is the Reagan administration out of touch with reality? Have top government officials formed an isolated, affluent club that ignores public opinion? Yes, charge the authors of the recently- released Reagan's Ruling Class: Portraits of the President's Top 100 Officials. Ronald Brown- stein and Nina Easton, staff writers for Ralph Nader, profiled officials in the federal bureaucracy and found "a gover- nment cadre of extraordinarily broad wealth, narrow vision, and little com- passion." Brownstein and Easton, in Ann Arbor to support the nuclear arms freeze, spoke to Daily editor Julie Hinds about their findings. streamlining their agencies. There's little sen- se of public service about them. Daily: What interest group cropped up the most? Brownstein: Business. The New York Times calculated from the book that 23 officials were drawn from the industries they are now regulating. Dozens more come from the cor- porate milieu-lawyers, lobbyists. One person described the Reagan administration as a car- nival of lobbyists. You now have the chief lob- byist of the national cattlemen's association running meat safety laws. Clearly, Reagan wants to turn the regulatory agencies over to the businesses they're regulating. Daily: Much has been written about the strange matchups in the cabinet-Watt for the Interior and Donovan, a former construction company executive, for Labor. Does that sort of matching run down the ranks of the ad- ministration? Easton: It goes way down. It gees down to the Bureau of Land Management, where the head of that is a former rancher, part of this Colorado mafia. He fought that agency as a rancher and was fined for over-grazing his cat- tle. Now he's loosening grazing policy to help his friends. Daily: From your examination, did you come away thinking the appointments were a con- scious effort to change government policy or just insensitivity on Reagan's part? Brownstein: It's very clear it was conscious. When the kitchen cabinet, which directed the selection process, got together, they were looking for three criteria: One, is he conser- vative, two, is he a Reagan man, three, is he a team player. Daily: Doesn't that sort of thing happen in every administration? Easton: One striking difference between this administration and even previous Republican administrations is the lack of an in-house critic. There isn't anyone substantial who can say, "Hey, wait a minute, this isn't going to work." A good example of this is the Bob Jones University tax exemptionsfiasco. That went all the way from William Bradford Reynolds, head of the civil rights division, a millionaire, white, no personal background in discrimination, to William French Smith, who has a very similar background. What happened is it got through and it opened the president for the first time to actual charges of racism. Nobody along that chain of command said, "Stop, this isn't a good idea." Daily: What about women and miniroties within the administration? Do they act as in- house critics? Easton: The five women in the top 100, for example, don't have a shared background. Jeanne Kirkpatrick, for example, wrote a book in 1975 about the dearth of women in high public office. It's ironic now that she's in an ad- ministration that doesn't do it. Anne Gorsuch, however, is an example of someone with a mean-spirited Horatio Alger ethic, a sort of "I made it. Anyone else can" attitude. But Gor- such came from a wealthy family. The doors were open for her. Brownstein: The book also reveals that Samuel Pierce, the secretary of housing and urban development, the only black man in the cabinet, is deeply disturbed personally over the administration's civil rights policy. He goes on the record for the first time with that com- plaint. Daily: Does Reagan himself fit into this profile? Brownstein: He's been in this milieu all his adult life. Reagan fits in just from sheer isolation from everyday reality. He's the sort of man who says the Great Society hurt the poor. The abstraction from reality, from human suf- fering, runs all through the cabinet, from the president on down. Easton: In our analysis of the White House, we say that one of the main responsibilities of r. 2 Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS f a book profiling the Reagan administration, d themselves from public opinion. Their view of the public was starkly expressed by the president when he said the public knows all it needs to know about Alexander Haig's resignation. They are consistently doing their best to limit public access to information. Daily: Did any of the top 100 get in touch with you after the book was'released? Brownstein: Two wrote to say they thoughts their profiles were very good, two others called to say they thought the quotes-which we taped-were inaccurate, and two called to see if we would autograph the book. Dialogue is a weekly feature of the Opinion Page. Daily: What common denominators did you find among members of the Reagan ad- ministration? Brownstein: Several clear patterns emerged of what Reagan is trying to do to the gover- nment. The most obvious is that this is a white, male, wealthy government. Of the top 100 of- ficials, 98 are white, 95 are male, and almost 30 are millionaires, 20 of them multi-millionaires. Also, I think, there is a striking lack of com- passion among Reagan appointees that grows from insularity. They are drawn from a very narrow strata of American life; they don't know about the problems they're supposed to deal with. When you speak to them about what they hope to accomplish, they don't speak of alleviating suffering, they speak of Nina Easton and Ronald Brownstein, co-authors o charge that the president's top officials have isolate White House aides, though it's unspoken, is to protect Reagan from himself. Some of the decisions that have raised the most furor-Bob Jones, the move to cut Social Security-were all made by Reagan personally. And of course there are his misstatements and blunders. The staff has to keep cleaning up after him. Daily: How is the Reagan administration checked? Through embarrassment? Does public opinion filter up at all? Easton: I don't think it filters up at all. Brownstein,: Look at their reaction to the nuclear freeze. They look at it not as if it represents a genuine urge on the part of the American people, but as if it comes from people who are manipulated, ill-informed. Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCIII, No. 14 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Oops, n REMEMBER last month, when everyone got so upset that a private in the U.S. Army on duty in Korea was "being held" by the North Koreans? Remember how there were ominous intonations that the North Koreans had crept over the border and captured that poor G.I.? Remember how the United States was making a big deal out of being able to talk to the service man to see where he really wanted to be? Shucks. It now turns out that the soldier, Pfc. Joseph White, formerly of St. Louis,. probably crossed the border of his own volition. That's right, after the big stink they made, the army has decided that he wasn't kidnapped after all. Army officials say a three-week in- vestigation uncovered that White had a "large amount" of North Korean propaganda among his belongings, and that, when he crossed into the ver mind demilitarized zone, he did so shouting, "I'm coming, help me! "-in Korean. All of which raises some interesting questions-which will probably remain unanswered: Did anyone in the vast apparatus of the U.S. army think of poking through White's belongings before suggesting he had been abduc- ted? Why, if White was yelling for help in Korean as he crossed the bor- der, did the army suspect that he was not going freely? How did a "large amount" of North Korean literature escape the watchful eyes of White's superiors? And what of the army? Will this episode inspire any healthy introspec- tion? Any investigation into what makes soldiers really happy? Any glance at why a soldier could consider leaving the cozy confines of the army? No, the army's response is a little more subtle than that. In fact, it can be summed up in one phrase. Oops, never mind. OURK 5CN1OL 5Y65EN1 HAS AWTE A NEW JUICY ClIVI NG "'EQUAML THEATO A~LL CIRATION THE~ORIES.... WE WILL TEACN HF-t . PIN U CONCEIPT OF AKifMON1C CREA1ioN~ AN-9 IES T~uroq cyL5S... WE W~ILL TEACH4 T[HE SCIENTIFIC IO-ORI OF THE " BI& ?AAi-" OI'0AE Ic0 OR 20 BILLION VVE WILL TEACH THE WwywON IAN A CCQuNF I Nor OUT of A .. WAE 1x & ODDF . WE WILL TEACH THE BIBLCAL ACCOUNT OF CREATION IN 7 PA WoJT 6ooY~ Ac~o..- AND OF COURCE, THE [ouy Wooo LEG END THAT THE WORLD WAs C W p BY CNARLTON HEsTON IN 1953 0 0 +vVC., JV.... .... ,., { l - L5, / 4 - -. t 1 o ,, : 3 . , {.: ._ ;, , 0 - ,-- Z f LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Reviewing the reporting on ISMRRD To the Daily:; I want to respond to the editorial and news article on the public hearing for the Institute for the Study of Mental Retar- dation ("Ignore the issue: It's only your school" and "Institute's profs charge review panel with bias," Daily, Sept. 23). First, in terms of the editorial, everyone appearing at the hearing, those on the institute staff as well as outside speakers, spoke strongly on the strengths of the program and its contributions to the University, the state, and the nation. Highlighted were the institute's nationally-known con- The concerns that I and other members of my staff expressed, were that these documents were not fully considered in the review process. It is our hope and expec- tation that they be carefully read by the executive officers before a final decision is made. Secondly, I wish to comment on a quote in the news article attributed to Dr. Julius Cohen which, I believe, was taken out of context. Cohen was describing some of the inherent problems and weaknesses in the review process as it is currently operated. He was pointing out the problems faculty members face units. He did not say that the members of the institute review committee recommended ISMRRD be eliminated to spare their own units from future budget cuts. Regarding your statement that Dr. Eugene Handley said that the review was "unfair because some of the institute's staff members felt they would be bet- ter off if ISMRRD closed" misses the point which he raised. He commented that certain staff had a vested interest in the closing of the institute because of their desire to return full-time to their academic departments. Thus, the staiff was dividped in their siinnort recommended that CDC be tran- sferred to another unit, with the receiving unit paying for the cost of the services. It was that modification, requiring a receiving unit to pay for the operation, that I believe would be the "kiss of death" for CDC. Without a core of support, I do not believe the clinic can survive. -Herbert Grossman, Director, Institute for the Study of Mental Retardation Sept. 23 r, r- .+' rl'i 1 t f