4 OPINION , . . : _ d i Page4 Friday, October 26, 1984 The Michigan Daily f r, $ M Reagan launches religious McCarthyism M b M R i Y Y By Dave Kopel Thanks to the "leadership" of Ronald Reagan, America is in the midst of a phase of religious McCarthyism. Although President Reagan rarely fin- ds the time to attend church, he has taken every opportunity to pay tribute to ultra-fundamentalist preachers. Look at the religious leaders around Ronald Reagan, and you'll find men whose lips drip with bigotry and in- tolerance. Reagan himself seems to share their contempt for separation of church and state. A frequent White House guest for consultation on church and state issues is Rev. Jimmy Swaggert. As I detailed in a column a few weeks ago, Swaggert contends that everyone who is not a born-again Protestant, especially Jews and Catholics, is damned. In Swaggert's 1982 book A Letter to my Catholic Friends, Swaggert wrote, "I maintain that the Catholic superstruc- ture and organization is not really a Christian organization. Its claims are false." He believes that Satan invented Calvinism. And Swaggert argues that Jews' refusal to accept the protection of Jesus led to the holocaust. ON TELEVISION, the president smiles and pays lip service to what he refers to as "the wall of separation" between church and state. But his friends know better: the American Coalition of Traditional Values (AC- TV), a partisan group of 110,000 chur- ches that was set up with the blessing of the Reagan White House. Timothy LaHaye, director of the coalition (and also a key Moral Majority official) told a group of ministers that that problem with America was "We don't have enough of God's ministers running the country." The ACTV national field director dismissed "this nonsense about the separation of church and state." On April 19, 1984, President Reagan wrote ACTV leader LaHaye a letter praising ACTV for having "the potential to speak to millions of com- mitted Christians," and thanking him for his "faithful patriotism." Under the leadership of Ronald Reagan, the national Republican Party has fallen under the control of ultra- fundamentalist bigots. To open the convention, the president chose the Rev. James Robison, who prayed, "We thank you, Father, for the leader- ship of Ronald Reagan." What Robison did not say at the convention, but has observed before, is that an anti-Semite, president. Said Reagan: "You can't endorse me. But I endorse you." And the man whose benediction closed the Republican Convention was the Rev. W.A. Criswell. When John F. Kennedy was running for President in 'Under the leadership of Ronald Reagan, the national Republican Party has fallen under the control of ultra-fundamentalist bigots. To open the convention, the president chose Rev. James Robison. And the man whose benediction closed the Republican Convention was the Rev. W. A. Criswell.' Kennedy's election would "spell the death of a free church in a free state." THE NIGHT the delegates re- nominated Ronald Reagan, Jerry Falwell delivered the benediction. Falwell is the man who stated, "A man who is not a Christian is inherently a failure." Explains Falwell: "The idea that religion and politics don't mix was invented by the Devil to keep Christians from running their country." The president apparently agrees, for recen- tly he told reporters, "We have respec- ted every other religion. They're free to practice in our country." Other than the Christian religion? In our coun- try?! Had Reagan paid more attention in history class, he might have learned about President George Washington's 1796 declaration in the Treaty of Tripoli that "the government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion." The United States is not founded on any religion, but religion and morality play an important part in our political lives. One of America's finest religious and political leaders was the Rev. Mar- tin Luther King Jr. While Martin Luther King was out in the streets fighting for racial justice, Walter Mon-. dale was in the Senate leading the bat- tle for civil rights and for fair housing In 1976, when the Democratic party:* nominated Walter Mondale for nationail office for the first time, Martin Lutherr.' King Sr. delivered the convention's: closing benediction. Contrast Mondale's attitude to King; with Ronald Reagan's. In a 1978 radio address, Reagan blamed King's- assassination on themclimatef disrespect for the law engendered by the civil rights movement's non-violent civil disobedience. According to Reagan, King's campaign of civil. disobedience was wrong, because it violated the law and infrihged on property rights. More recently President Reagan wondered if King# had been a Communist.;' One Presidential candidate has ea-* ned the endorsement of Mrs. Martii Luther King Jr.; the other candidate has earned the endorsement of Jerry Falwell. The moral choice is clear. Kopel is a third year law student. "is someone who hates Jews more than he's supposed to." According to Robison, "The non-Christian can't un- derstand spiritual things." In 1980, Reagan spoke to the Religious Roun- dtable, of which Robison was vice- 1960, Criswell published a pamphlet, "Can a Man be Loyal Roman Catholic and a Good President of the United States?" The answer was "no." He wrote that the Catholic Church was "a political tyranny," and predicted that Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Cramer Vol. XCV, No. 44 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Foreign policy victories?. T WO HUNDRED and forty-one U.S. servicemen died when a suicide truck-bomber crashed into the Marine headquarters in Beirut a year ago Tuesday. Twenty U.S. servicemen lost their lives when American troops invaded the Caribbean island of Grenada a year ago yesterday. Yesterday also marks the one-year anniversary of President Reagan's refusal to allow the press to cover this nation's military action in Grenada. Those deaths, and the president's decision to deny freedom of the press, give Americans little reason to boast of our nation's skillful foreign policy. On the anniversary of these two military actions and their subsequent loss of lives, it is crucial to the long- term health of this country that Americans assess whether the ad- ministration's ends justify its means. Reagan defended his ad- ministration's attempt to intervene in the Middle East during last Sunday's debate. But his claim that U.S. objec- tives were met in that region rings hollow. The president originally said American forces went into the conflict as neutral "peacekeepers," but even- tually the United States took sides and supported the Lebanese government. Only after the government fell did the administration decide that Americans should begin to get out of the area. Surely this cannot be seen as a suc- cessful mission. Except perhaps by a president seeking reelection, a president not known for his inclination to admit policy failures. As for Grenada, the president feels assured that he can celebrate this in- vasion. He refers to it as a "rescue mission" and the turning point in en- ding America's "self-doubt and national confusion." Public opinion polls show that most Americans think the president did the right thing. But their feeling might be diffent had the invasion not taken place under a press blackout. The administration is the only source that can say for sure what really happened in Grenada. The Soviet Union operates under this kind of system, and often the people are unaware of the real reasons for their government's military conquests. The Regan administration claimed last Oc- tober that journalists would be in danger if they tried to cover the in- vasion. But the administration never gave journalists a chance to serve their country - a function the press has ser- ved in every other American military conflict. The journalists did not and never will ask for special protection in order to cover the news. The administration's primary motive for intervening in Grenada was the fear that an airport being built by Cuban engineers would be used by Soviet and other hostile aircraft. The administration believed such an air- port was a menace to the security of that region. Ironically, Americans are now completing the construction of that airport. Administration officials admit that it will be used by the United States for military purposes. But they say its major use will be to boost Grenada's tourist industry. Funny, that's what the Cubans said. There is much confusion over what really happened in Grenada. Ad- ministration reports of the situation last year kept changing. The number of Cuban and U.S. troops involved and the reason for invading Grenada kept changing. A mental hospital was ac- cidentally bombed by American forces and there were reports of U.S. ser- vicemen shooting at each other. All of these circumstances point to a less than successful operation, and hardly a mission to be lauded by the president. In addition, the United States is still feeding Grenada massive amounts of aid. American troops still patrol the streets of the island and help run the police stations. The administration is violating a United Nation's resolution of November 1983 calling for im- mediate withdrawal of foreign troops from the area.rAnd the United States now has a dependent, neo-colonial regime on its hands. American citizens should seriously consider their commitment to im- perialist policies that this government is pursuing and examine carefully the "success" of this administration's foreign policy in general. LETTERS TO THE DAILY Code editorial leaves false To the Daily: The Daily has performed a great service to the University community through its discussion of and editorial position against the proposed student code of non-academic conduct and proposed University judicial system. Nonetheless, one article concerning the system's protection of students' due process rights, "Students call code unfair" (Daily, Oc- tober 18), fails to mention the main reason the proposed code and system is more objectionable than the current University judicial system and rules of the University community. The ar- ticle gives the erroneous im- pression that students who are punished in the University's system will not also face criminal and/or civil charges. The current non-academic code prohibits the University ad- ministration from taking action against a student both in its judicial system and in civil and/or criminal court. The proposed system permits the administration to charge a student both in its system and in a criminal and/or civil court. This provision in the proposed system reveals that the administration's purpose for having its own wants the code not to treat students leniently but rather to treat them more severely than a criminal and/or civil court would alone. Second, the administration seeks the power to proceed against students regardless of the outcome of a criminal or civil proceeding. Section 11(h) of the proposed system states that if a criminal court of law finds a student not guilty that verdict is not binding on the University's own judicial system. The ad- ministration does not want to be "limited" by legitimate courts of law because it views students' civil rights as limitations on ad- ministrative action. One mem- ber of the University ad- ministration, who will probably oversee proceedings against students should the code and system be implemented, com- plains that students can be acquitted on "technicalities" in the court system. Those technicalities happen to be our civil rights. Further, the article leaves the impression that the proposed code's sanctions are less stigmatizing that a criminal court's since a criminal convic- tion, in many cases, leads to a criminal record. On the con- trary, the proposed code's san- ctions may be more stigmatizing than a criminal court's. There is npressio n a provision for the permanent notification on a student's academic transcript of his or her violations of the code's prohibitions. In effect, a student's academic transcript may become a criminal record. Imagine for yourself its effect at a job interview or on a graduate admissions officer. In sum, the allowance of dual proceedings against students is just one more example of the proposed system's bias towards the conviction of students. -Eric Schnaufer October 18 Schnaufer is chair of the Michigan Student Assembly's code committee. Chomsky rewrites history To the Daily: Not being trained in linguistics, I cannot match the facility of Noam Chomsky in altering the plain meaning of words. His is a talent well suited to the age that goes by the code word "1984." Being trained as an historian, I can, however, attempt to restore the historical record, at least in certain of its aspects. Zionism, BLOOM COUNTY contrary to Chomsky, was never a movement of "wealthy Jews." It was the nationalist aspiration of a people impoverished and op- pressed and excluded from the countries of their birth in Eastern Europe and North Africa. It is an egregious and inexcusable rewriting of history to pretend otherwise. Recognition--and indeed, sup- port--for the rights of Palestinian Arabs ought not blind us to the historical facts. And nationalism, if it has any legitimacy at all, is equally legitimate for all peoples who are seeking to build a homeland of their own. - Judith Elkin October 22 T T _ ! _ ___ _ _ ;7-... . *_ I .... _......... ,, r.... ........,,. r YOV re v KAAW MDW MfAT'.5dK7' OF by Berke Breathed r ND.1 I Ii. ww f.nel /2i l )'Vf 1 71 Ic Ifru A,,r r v e I i