4 OPINION . ... .. .. ... .. .. .. ... .. .. ..... ........ - -------- -- Page 4 Saturday, March 12, 1983 The Michigan Dail- &W IIithtigau Ial Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 'Specter' of communiE more imagination than fact . Vol. XCIII, No. 126 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial BoardI Big Brother and the FBI By Vladimir Solovyov '" \\ , y f4 S SCHOLARS are huddling at the University for a conference on George Orwell's 1984, the Senate is scheduling hearings on new Federal Bureau of Investigation rules that would bring the specter of Big Brother all that much closer. Attorney General William French Smith issued weakened guidelines for FBI surveillance of groups who sup- posedly advocate political and social change through use of violence. Smith seems intent upon returning the nation to days when the FBI abused its powers to infiltrate and spy on Americans in feminist, civil rights, an- ,i-war, and socialist groups. When such abuses were exposed in the mid-'70s, strict rules were issued to :purtail such activities and bring the federal agents back under the law and the Constitution. But the new rules would again unleash a politically motivated FBI on unpopular political groups. -The guidelines would allow the FBI to launch a full-scale investigation if a group's mere statements advocate "criminal activity." The discretion, of course, if left up to law-enforcement officials, and the distinction between political dissent and criminality could easily be lost along with the First Amendment rights of free speech and peaceable assemblage. What individuals and groups would have then, are rights that could sum- marily be swept away in a misguided FBI witch hunt for domestic subver- sives. And tactics used for such in- vestigations wouldn't be far from the truncheons and telescreens of Orwell's masterpiece. While nonconsensual wiretaps and bugs could only be used under laws already in existence, the scope of group and activities which they could be used against would be greatly broadened, as would searches and seizures. Can "reasonable" break-ins be far behind? The new guidelines, despite wide conservative support, are heading law enforcement in the wrong direc- tion. The nation should be moving away from 1984, not toward it. Exactly 100 years this month Karl Marx died, leaving behind him a prophecy which was to haunt the West for generations: that the "specter" of communism confronted all of Europe. If one accepts at face value the assertions of the Reagan administration, that specter today haunts America's own hemisphere. But is it actually the same ghost? Or is it, in ef- fect, a specter of a specter, born in part of the unbridled and arbitrary imagination of Americans, rather than of actual facts? THE FIRST realnspecter, which in the past century frightened Europe with a gravedigger's spade meant to bury capitalism alive, ended its day in the boundless expanses of Russia. Over its gave a more skillful gravedigger, Joseph Stalin, erected the tombstone of a national- chauvinist empire. As for the contemporary Eurocommunist specter, it is more a namesake than a true relative of Marx's specter. It has given up haunting and settled down, peaceably taking its place in parliaments, and in France, even in the government. In Europe they have discovered that the best way to tame a spec- ter is to domesticate it and give it the status of a living human being, along with the other members of a pluralistic society. The situation is different in America. where the specter has been reanimated in its most improbable sinister aspect and declared responsible for all of the world's problems, from the pacifist movement in Western Europe to social instability in Central America. It allegedly threatens to overwh- elm those countries like so many dominoes and ultimately to menace the holy-of-holies of world democracy, the W hite House, which stays awake all night to do battle against the invisible ghost. THE SPECTER of communism arose out of fear, and fears have a most regretable at- tribute: They may be realized. I for one, very much fear that the specter of communism now being invoked jointly by the White House, the State Department and U.N. Ambassador Jeanne Kirkpatrick will one day materialize and indeed challenge the Western Hemisphere with its presence. Wasserman E E AP Photo President Reagan points to the specter of communism in Central America. Problems remain at EPA Yet this development will only be ac- celerated if the U.S. government continues to support anti-popular, repressive regimes in Central America, driving local advocates of reform into the arms of Moscow. Thus, not so long ago, the United States isolated Fidel Castro and contributed a good deal toward his adoption of the communist faith - although, when he came to power he was virtually the contradiction of Marxist-Leninist ideology. In 1983, America is effecting a similar metamorphosis with the Sandinistas of Nicaragua and the Salvadoran rebels. Should the trend continue, Washington will create not one but many communist specters in neigh- boring countries. The upshot, in fact, may be the domino theory in action, but with the first push against that fragile regional structure coming from Washington. TO PREVENT the transformation of the Western Hemisphere into a classic haunted house, the United States must halt such ar- tificial cultivation of communist specters. It is better to have the Salvadoran leftists in a coalition government than in the Salvadoran mountains. It is better, by means of holding talks, to turn the Sandinistas into Social Democrats-like those now in power in Spain, France, and Greece-than, by frightening and isolating them, to make then into Soviet puppets. It is even time to approach Fidel Castro, to wean him away from Moscow, instead of trying to overthrow him and install a new Batista, thereby creating favorable con- ditions for the emergence of another Fidels It is better, in sum, to have tame specters than wild ones, and in the process to shake a self-defeating paranoia. Solovyov, a Russian-born historian, wrote this article for the Pacific News Service. NNE BURFORD'S resignation as head of the Environmental Pro- tection Agency may not signal the beginning of a cleanup at the agency. Instead it signals an effort by a Reagan administration attempting to cut its political losses before much more harm is done. The cleanup at the agen- cy can only begin when the president stops circumventing the laws and either enforces them or tries to change them. The whole mess, dubbed 'Sewergate" by some, could have been avoided if the Reagan ad- ministration were not so bent on in- sisting its policies are correct whether or not the laws of this nation say the same. Reagan and his inner circle have gotten themselves into hot water before by trying to get around existing laws instead of trying to change them. 'This time the water boiled over because the people involved - Bur- ford, Rita Lavelle, and others - may have gone beyond just being distasteful a la James Watt, and com- mitted illegal acts. As such, the problems at the agency will not go away now that many of those apparently guilty of at least being overzealous in their execution of Reagan policy. These people were merely "team players," carrying out the administration line. The congressional investigation should not end now that the "bad ap- ples" have been picked from the tree. Quite to the contrary, the in- vestigations can now apparently proceed without further interruption since Reagan has also turned over all the documents the various committees requested. The president can't put off all the people complaining about the affair as 'environmental extremists." He should appoint someone willing to execute the laws governing the agen- cy, not figure out ways to get around them. Congress also needs to be careful that another Anne Burford is not con- firmed as head of the agency. In demanding a nominee who is willing to serve the people - not the president - Congress can also signal the president that he needs to change his posture on the environment and lean a little fur- ther away from big business toward cleaning up the big toxic mess big business has left behind. WE~ CANNt~OT N6E TO %KT\1oT{T0N WIT TLHE REBELSo ToSNOLc '1M"2e 01 OFCETRAL. b m~lCA RVLLS AND~ mi~T. 0es 4 x t '...THAT I WILL FAITHFULLY EXECUTE THE OFFICE..:' EXCEPT FOR LAWS AWE PONT LIKE BUTI MR. VReS1 FIT, MiE~XI1 oN O1TE WUNTR1FS CA-t-IN& FOR. NC-6OflTiO N £ V' y o u) SE - THcu ~ N OrURA~-y4Er 44 KG'R ci:w ' ...... ..... .. - -- C . t ca +.. ,. , .: :f ^ j ! t ' X ;:t ,,; zr; . a. .,,rt X11 r , ,- ,. t r, , , nl 'i '!+ --I I LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Dialogue on state budget inhibited To the Daily: We are all tired to tussling with the question of PIRGIM's right- or-privilege to use the University as a fundraising devise, but reading Wednesday's Daily casts some new light on this "educational" group's nature. PIRGIM claims to be "non- partisan" (as stated by the letter on the editorial page by two PIRGIM members). But the ar- ticle concerning the pitch for needs really are, or how this sub-' stantial tax increase will affect the Michigan economy - and I do not count those in the legislature or in the executive among those in the know. The state budget is in disarray, which is probably the ony thing we do know. But Lansing has failed to make the hard choices. They have failed to address the real problems of directionless growth in state government and sell the tax increase in the guise of a discussion of the State's all- too-real fiscal crisis, one wonders about their non-partisanship. This is not to say that PIRGIM is a Democratic front-group anymore than are efforts to remove PIRGIM's fund-raising privilege a Republican con- spiracy - clearly neither is true. But when PIRGIM inhibits real 4 dialogue on Michigan's problems by advocating a cover-up tax measure as it did Wednesday night, one wonders whose in- terests PIRGIM is trying to ser- ve. -Martin B. Tatuch March 9 J