I OPINION Page 4 Wednesday, October 24, 1984 The Michigan Daily Why have a day for entral America? I By .Matthew Kopka The Ann Arbor city Council has declared today Central America Day. A teach-in will be held at the University at- tempting to shed light on the conflict in Central America. There was a period in our recent history, a period which the present administration has taken pains to tell us is finally behind us, when television and the entire exploding range of technological advances that followed World War II made us participants in an experiment of crucial importance, an experiment in the transmission of events and in the analysis of our society's convulsive movements whose lessons and vast repercussions we are only beginning to understand. That experiment is, of course, a continuous one, part of the greater process by which societies define the world and are defined themselves. For a time, at least, we became painfully aware of how great our responsibility as masters and users of the new technology was, and of just how prone it was to manipulation. Two events of that period, two of its high or low-. water marks, depending on how we are made to see them, and both very strongly and ominously linked to present events, signalled not only the coming of age of that era, but that it had come of age in the hands of a new and cynical elite which had learned how to stage an event, practice the new politics of misinfor- mation, and obscure those truths that made them vulnerable. The two events were, of course, the end of the Vietnam War and the fall of the self-same President Nixon. One of the most unfortunate results of those two events, one of the most tragic results from the perspective of the present, is that rather than having been taught to take pride in them, in our resolution of them, to see that they were a necessary shedding of innocence (or ignoran- ce),.and that after a long period of struggle it was ours whose will had been restored to its proper place over that of our leadership, we have instead been taught to be ashamed of them, taught that we left Vietnam defeated and in disgrace when the leaving was in fact the most, perhaps the only, heroic thing we had done there. To our detriment it has been im- plied that the corruption of President Nixon and those in his administration was somehow our own, that it was we who had been caught with our hands in some kind of colossal cookie jar committing a petty thievery for which we could later be rehabilitated, when in actuality Nixon's crimes and the crimes of those under him, especially in South-East Asia, were an enormous violation of the trust we had placed in them. Part of our shame at those events is, perhaps, natural, and can be attributed to the very distance from them that the era had created: the passivity inculcated by watching those events night after night without reflec- ting on them, staring into the now electronic river of history and at its more mundane daily offerings until we were mesmerized, until their significance had all but escaped us. And part of our "loss of face" was natural, too, because it exposed our innocence, and graphically. the same instruments, in fact, that had been used to put us to sleep were then turned on us, showed us waking from that sleep, angry and confused. But a good part of that shame, it must be un- derstood, has been created and cynically ex- ploited by the same people who had led us into those events, and let them go on so long. And such synicism, in the hands of they and their successors, is now using that sense of shame and guilt that it created to make cam- paign slogans, to its own ends, to justify actions frightening in their similarity to those of the era they claim to have put behind us. The taking of the hostages in Iran, the sub- sequent failed rescue attempt (neither of those, iCki5 N 1 ARA&ulFtASCO ? SOMEONE ToTaX-LY ouT o Touch{ WtTI- PoLtc, \M~o NAS No GRASP ot= THE wNELL, , Vt S9 MS To SE \~t'1OQV % A\N QvE9zEALOUs RE-aNCER , AND IS OBSESSED BY V'MA HECALLS TH EVIL EMIRE S ( I KtXJJUN """ . ' .- F ' trauma had exhausted us, but for that we have been all the more vulnerable. And now, during this most fateful of presidential campaigns, those same men ap- pear to whisper soothingly to us, "America is back," just as one year ago they said "We have overthrown one of the enemy's citadels," using a language of mock-heroism ever- disproportionate and ill-suited to the grave realities we face, telling us that we can sleep soundly, at last, that our good name has been cleared. And in confusion we ask ourselves what such words can mean, recognize that there is something false and familiar and hollow- sounding in them, but fail to indentify it, won- der whether we should stumble to our feet,beat on our chests, or remain, almost hypnotized in bed. And why a day for Central America? Because the part of America which we inhabit finds itself in this state of confusion, while another part of America, Central America, stands innocent and helpless, and is being prepared as a sacrifice to just such cynicism, to a counter-productive and falsely created need to reassert ourselves, to us. We face the prospect that we learned nothing from earlier events, that we awaken to the same nightmare, history having repeated itself, the corruption of our leadership having again been apparent and we once again having failed to see it. Why such urgency? Because this time the stakes are so much higher, the possibility of war so much closer to home, the plans so much better laid. Because thirty thousand of our troops are at present poised to drag us into a catastrophe from which we may never emerge. Because a world that applauded us the last time we truly awoke may never forgive us again. And because this time our innocence will not serve us for an excuse. Kopka is a senior in the Residential College. again, events of our making), and the leverage gained from it and used by President Reagan's campaign in 1980, made it clear what the pat- tern would be. Subsequent doings - the refusal to negotiate with the Soviet Union, the invasion of Grenada, and the continuing threat of an in- vasion of both El Salvador and Nicaragua - would be predicated on and justified, not morally, not through a presentation of factual or persuasive evidence (for there exists no evidence to justify such actions, however many "white papers" or overblown telephoto aerial- view photos are produced and trotted out), but with a low appeal to the wounded giant which their rhetoric had so carefully prepared us to believe America was. And slowly we have drifted back to sleep, staring mesmerized into that river, forgetting to touch ourselves now and then, fallen, not into the profound sleep of a man whose conscience is clear, but into the troubled, evasive sleep of one who would rather not face up to the immen- se disturbance that a long nightmare has caused. In fairness to ourselves, perhaps, the Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Sinclair E q A rTPS o MANUAL WAS WPITTFEN BY A Tmzoa : rs Vol. XCV, No.42 420 Maoynrd St. Ann Arbor, M{ 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board 11 Education, not politics W HEN A university takes a formal position on a political issue, it should be done only after careful deliberations. If the regents start to vote on every issue that indirectly af- fects the University, it sets a dangerous precedent for politicization of the board. That's why a memo expressing "the University viewpoint" on the con- troversial nuclear-free Ann Arbor ballot proposal was an error in judgement. Dr. Alan Price, assistant vice president for research, sent such a memo to people who had expressed an interest in joining a group to defeat the proposal. The Board of Regents is the only source of "the University viewpoint" on such an issue, and although they discussedthe matter at lastsweek's meeting, a formal vote was never taken. University President Harold Shapiro wisely wrote in an issue of Science magazine last summer that "a univer- sity remains a creative part of society only as long as it remains an intellec- tually open community and not the ally of a particular point of view." The cir- cumstances surrounding any issue the University decides to take a stand on must be either overwhelming--as they were when the regents decided to take University investments out of South Africa--or very directly related to the University--as is the Voter's Choice ballot proposal. The regents were justified in taking a stand on South Africa divestment and Voters' Choice, but the potential danger of doing so with the nuclear free proposal and a host of other proposals is great. The University exists to promote the free exchange of ideas, so any position the regents take on any issue--no matter how salient to the university--necessarily under- mines that exchange. Price certainly did not realize he was doing anything wrong when he sent that memo.Price simply gave information to people who expressed an interest in fighting the nuclear-free proposal. His error in claiming "the University viewpoint," though, points to the dangers that can arise if the University is thought of as a political institution, rather than as a strictly educational. institution. E C Su .fi .,c ti - T, f . l Tt { LETTERS TO THE DAILY The individual's responsibility for the arms race . ,.-- l _- . _. - .- -- . - r , ; f ! t . : ° { To the Daily: The Ann Arbor Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends, at its regular Monthly Meeting for Business on Oct. 21, 1984, gave careful consideration to the question of whether work on the research, development, testing, or production of nuclear weapons should take place in this com- munity, or in any community. This discussion was stimulated by the Ann Arbor community's serious and thoughtful deliberations about the Nuclear Free Zone Act. Our statement, however, is more general, and does not refer to the Nuclear Free Zone Act in particular. We have based our decision on our deeply-held religious convic- tion that there is that of God in every person. We attempt to follow the injunction to "love thine enemy, and thy neighbor as thyself," and to act upon the precept "thou shalt not kill." weapons. We ask ourselves whether we as individuals are prepared to launch a nuclear weapon, having the sure knowledge of its massive destructive power; the knowledge that its use would result in the suffering or death of huge numbers of persons; and that the use of one such weapon runs the risk of escalation to a major nuclear exchange, with untold dangers for humankind, and to God's world. We believe nuclear weapons must never be used. It is wrong to use nuclear weapons; it is wrong to threaten to use them; and it is also wrong to design, develop, and produce them. We believe it is appropriate and necessary for individual citizens, and for groups of citizens to ex- BLOOM COUNTY press this message publicly, to our fellow citizens, to our gover- nment, and to all governments. We are determined that a beginning must be made, especially in local communities, to stop the spiraling arms race, and then to begin the all- important process of reducing the world's reliance on lethal weapons, finding non-violent ways of providing for the peac4 and security of all peoples. -Ann Arbor Society of Friends October 22 Unsigned editorials ap- _ . _ I_ l _ _1 pearing on the left side of this page represent a majority opinion of the Daily 's Editorial Board. 6 by Berke Breathed MRg. CANPIPRT6... aP[ PNfr W