OPINION Page 4 Friday, April 12, 1985 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan The changing liberal voice Vol. XCV, No. 153 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Trumped-up proposal NEW YORK soon may be asserting the idea that sports is a business, this time at the hands of real estate developer Donald Trump. Trump, who also owns the U.S.F.L.'s New Jersey Generals franchise, has proposed a plan to build a domed spor- ts stadium adjacent to Shea Stadium. Seventy acres filled with seventy junkyards and some light industry will be cleared, under the stipulations of the proposal, to make room for the new structure. Unfortunately, it is also estimated that the 1,200 people who work on those 70 acres will be forced out of their jobs by the development. This is too high of a price to pay for New Yorkers to have the luxury of weatherproof football games. The idea of a new stadium in New York is also frightening because under Trump's plan only a select num- ber of spectators will have a glimpse at the new stadium. Trump has proposed building a stadium with a capacity of at least 80,000 in which he would sell most of the seats for condiminium ownership. The cost of these contrac- tual seats is estimated at $4,000 to $5,000. Although both Mayor Ed Koch and Mario Cuomo have endorsed the con- struction of a privately-financed stadium, the process of putting together a feasible proposal is far from complete. Along with Trump's proposal are similar proposals from other New York developers, including a recommendation by the New York State Sportsplex Corporation for a 78,000 seat open-air stadium. Koch struck down the open-air proposal saying that such a structure would merely be "a clone" of Shea Stadium. By the Mayor's logic, however, there is little justification for building any stadium-with or without a dome. Of course, such a stadium would likely mean the return of the New York Jets to the city as well as Trump's New Jersey Generals. The Jets moved from Shea Stadium to the more modern Giants Stadium in the Hackensack Meadowlands following their 1983 season, and the team's New York audience would surely welcome back the team. But stadiums across the United States continue to lose money, and when the majority of the seats are reserved for those willing to spend $3,000, the proposal appears more like one which will favor a few in the short term. In the long term sense, the entire city will likely suffer from the burden of such a structure-starting with the 1,200 people who will Instantly be unemployed by the initial stages of construction. Even if lucrative, in the country's greatest population center, an elitist proposal such as Trump's should not even deserve serious consideration. By Dave Kopel To some people today "liberal" is an epithet. The denigration people imply when they say "liberal" reflects the despair and confusion present in today's liberal com- munity. When Ronald Reagan carps about the "liberals" in Congress, nobody stands up and says, "Yes, I'm a liberal, and I'm proud of it." Liberalism is in serious trouble today. If the Democrats cannot produce a coherent liberal vision and a winning Presidential can- didate to articulate that vision in 1988, liberalism may find itself a permanent op- position for a generation or more-like con- servatism was from 1932 to the mid-1970's. America's first liberal Democratic President was Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson's liberalism included a strong streak of liber- tarianism, aimed at keeping the federal government small and weak. While Alexan- der Hamilton called the national debt "the national blessing," Jeffersonians considered it a scourge. Jefferson and other liberals feared that the federal government, in the hands of businessmen like Alexander Hamilton would be used by eastern urban commercial interest to gain unfair advantage over Jefferson's yeoman farmers. Andrew Jackson, the second great liberal Democratic President, considered Jeffer- son's vision of an idyllic rural republic ob- solete, but agreed with Jefferson's overall small government liberalism. A central feature of Jackson's campaign was his promise to abolish the Bank of the United States-the federally chartered bank that Jackson and his supporters believed to be a tool of the Eastern moneyed interests. A coalition of eastern workingmen and western small farmers allied with Jackson against the commercial elite. Fearing a strong federal government, Jackson warned: "The destruc- tion of our state governments or the an- l'nihilation of their control over the local con- cerns of the people would lead directly to revolution and anarchy, and finally to despotism and military domination." A century later, Frankling Roosevelt became the third great liberal Democratic President, and seemingly turned the definition of liberalism upside down. After Roosevelt got through with the word, "liberalism" meant support for a big federal; government, instrusion on states' rights, and contempt for struct laissez faire economics. Roosevelt set the federal .government on a spree of deficit spending not to be exceeded until the 1980s. When Roosevelt changed the popular meaning of the word "liberalism" was he just playing semantic games and preverting the previous meaning of the concept? Many believers in laissez faire certainly thought so. But if we look closer, we see that Roosevelt was not perverting the Jefferson-Jackson vision of liberalism, but fulfilling it.To Jeffer- son, a weak federal government was not a goal, but a method. Jefferson's goal was to nurture a society where small, independent and virtuous free-holders would control economic and political power. Because the federal government in the early 19th century Kopel is a third-year student in the Law School. was so often a tool of the Hamiltonian com- merical elite, Jefferson wanted to keep the federal government small. The ultimate ob- jective of Jefferson and Jackson was to oppose the eastern commercial elite's control of economic and political life. Roosevelt's goal was exactly the same. Like Jackson, he aroused the hatred and fear of the well-born and the well-to-do in the East, and won elections by uniting Eastern labor with Southern and Western small farming: Observed Roosevelt during the battle over the New Deal, "The country is going through a repitition of Jackson's flight with the Bank.of the United States-only on a far bigger and broader basis."~ The country had changed since Jefferson's time. In an industrialized and urbanized society, corporate and commericial power had grown tremendously in power and size. The only way to return political and economic power to the common man would be for the federal government to actively transfer economic power. As historian Arthur Schlesinger explained, to accomplish Jeffer- sonian ends Roosevelt needed to adopt Hamiltonian means. Today, Democratic liberals have custody of the bodies of Jefferson, Jackson, and Roosevelt, but have lost their spirit. After fifty years of experience with the most complex government in history, liberals' approach to regulation remains caught in the 1930s: If you question regulation you must be a conservative. Too many of today's liberals forget that regulation, like federal power itself, is only a means, not an end. Roosevelt himself made it clear that each of his programs were experiments, not dogma. "We do our best that we know at the moment, and if it doesn't turn out, we modify it. "The country needs and, unless'I mistake its temper, the country demands bold, per- sistent experimentation," he proclaimed. "It is common sense to take a method and try it. If it fails, admit it frankly and try another. But above all, try something." Unfortunately, the 1984 Democratic presidential nominee did not, challenge the American people with a New Deal, or a New Frontier, but promised only a restoration of the recent past. The reactionary liberalism of Walter Mondale ignores John Kennedy's ob- servation: "Change is the law bf life. Those who live only for the past or the present are certain to miss the future." To be true to the innovative spirits of Jef- ferson, Roosevelt, and Kennedy, Democratic liberals must examine federal programs in action, and, like Roosevelt did, discard ex- periments that don't work and the propose better ones. Some government agencies, such as the National Labor Relations Board, have done an outstanding job of helping the forgot- ten man claim his fair share of America's wealth. Liberals should not only defend suc- cessful agencies and their regulations against the Reagan attacks, but should fight to extend their protection to the left-out. Robert Kennedy was one of the first to foreseethe next direction for liberalism. He, not Ronald Reagan, first suggested revitalizing ghettos by cutting taxes for businesses that located there. His 1968 Presidential campaign stressed the impor- LI BERAL ISP:M 0 (2 1 -- n 0 N R, v. 6 tance of acheiving justice from the bottom up-through grassroots democracy, not through more and more federal agencies. Liberalism for the 1990s can regain its stan- ding with the American people by renewing its commitment to empowering them.6 Promoting home solar energywunits, suppor- ting employee stock ownership plans, and set- ting up Individual Training accounts are only a few of the ways that government can simultaneously help the people deal with the changing world economy and gain more power over their own lives. While the meals of liberalism can evolve, liberalism must remain true to its historical motives. Liberals must remain the advocates of the dispossessed and the disenfranchised. Democratic liberals should stand up for farm workers, for sexual minorities, for the unem- ployed, for children, and for all the people in the third word who hunger for justice. If elec- tions cannot be won with those goals, it is bet- ter to lose an election over decency than win one about self-interest. Liberals have always been ready to pragmatically adopt whatever methods were most appropriate for the circumstances. An- drew Jackson moved beyond Jefferson's agrarian paradigm. Woodrow Wilson under- stood that the small-firm economy of Jackson's era no longer existed. Franklin Roosevelt realized that Wilsonian progressivism did not contain the answers to the Great Depression. Adlai Stevenson and John Kennedy knew that faith in the New Deal was not enough to mange the new in- dustrual state. In today's rapidly changing world, liberals can only be true to their heritage by searching for new ideas to cope with the realities of the next decade and the next century. A better bullet THE ARROGANCE of the South African government in dealing with its oppressed black majority is never difficult to prove. But evidence which has recently surfaced about a clash last month between police and blacks perhaps best illustrates the at- titudes of those who control 'the coun- try. According to police accounts, the skirmish involved 4,000 blacks mar- ching in a funeral procession and 15 police officers patroling a roadblock nearby. When the blacks ignored or- ders to stop and began throwing stones at armored police trucks, the officers opened fire-killing 19 of the mour- ners. Blacks involved in the incident claim that as many as 45 people were killer' by police bullets and that the officers began shooting when the procession was still some 20 yards from the road- block. As inhumane as this incident proved to be, the fact that the police chose to fire at the procession is only the tip of the iceberg. In this particular case of South African unrest, the specific weapons used by the police illustrate their arrogance. This week, Maj. Daniel Blignaut, head of the riot control unit, told a commission of inquiry into the killings that conventional riot control weapons like rubber bullets, tear gas, and bir- dshot has proven to be useless in recent interactions. Blignaut said that this was becuase black rioters had become more "aggressive." Therefore, the 19 or more people were killed by more ef= fective heavy-gauge shotgun car- tridges and automatic rifles. The police were able to use the more destructive weapons and ammunition because of instructions recently han- ded down from their national headquarters. The instructions authorized police officers to use the heavier equipment. if the situation warranted it. "It's hard to disperse crowds," Blignaut was quoted. "It's at the discretion of the commanding officer." The Major has a point; crowds of angry blacks opposed to oppressive rule are difficult to suppress. But instead of looking for ways to more effectively' keep down social unrest, the government .should start seeing the causes of that unrest. In a country where racism is the law, those discriminated against will always fight their oppressors. More powerful guns and stronger ammunition are not the answer to South Africa's problem. Com- bating increased violence and unrest with increased firepower and sup- pression will only serve to perpetuate a vicious and unnecessary cycle. Letters . Critic leaves, something to be desired To the Daily: A couple of points, if you please, concerning your review (April 6) of the Gilbert and Sullivan production of H.M.S. Pinafore. We believe that the main pur- pose of a theater review is primarily to prepare potential spectators for the qualities of the production in question. Pete Williams paid but scant attention to the production, yet he postured at length and vehemently against the shallowness of the plot and its similarity to Love Boat plots. His essay isn't a review so much as a personal unloading of his par- ticular complaints. I see in the Daily masthead that you have art critics on staff, including even a theater critic, one Chris Lauer. Please, send us Chris next time, who doubltless has background enough to review legitimate theater, and discernment enough to differentiate the sight and sounds of the stage from the ven- ting of his own spleen. But to take Peter seriously for a' moment, I don't agree with his thesis that Pinafore is merely a Love conquers All rehash, The, story concerns the rigidity of social structure by the upper- crust, and though Love attempts to cross over, in fact it fails to do so. Two pairs of lovers are even- tually brought together, but only by Gilbert's jerking them into ad- se, in the tragic works, the lovers get squished by Fate Perhaps that is more to Pete's liking. In any case, if you sent Pete to the theater again, he is liable to write the same review. Spare him. Spare us. He says, "...under most cir- cumstances, the comparison of this complete production to the Love Boat would be enough to make even the most casual Gilbert and Sullivan enthusiast turn red with anger...". We didn't and no hard feelings. We put your essay on the wall with the nice reviews, and had a chuckle over it. But wait-what the heck is a "casual enthusiast?" -?avid Goldberg April 10 Goldberg is President of the Friends of the University of Michigan Gilbert and Sullivan Society. Daily editorial sets double standard To the Daily: Your editorial on "The Silent Scream" sets up an interesting double standard. You condemn Reagan, Falwell, and former abortionist Bernard Nathanson because they support "a film that is based on emotional argument." Anti-nuclear activist Dr. Helen Caldicott spoke here a few weeks ago and gave a rather emotional speech about nuclear war. The Daily praised her presentation. Make up your mind. If it's acceptable for Caldicott to make an emotional argument on an issue"(and she also happens to get a few of her facts wrong) then it must be ac- ceptable to support an emotional argument against abortion. Your condemnation of anti- abortion "propaganda" was also BLOOM COUNTY interesting. When one of Caldicott's films was labeled "propaganda" by the State ; Department, so-called free thinkers were up in arms: How' could one doctor's description of and opinions on nuclear war be1 propaganda? Well, I ask you: How then can one obstetrician's opinion on abortion be propagan- da? As for the obstetricians who ob- jected to the film, Nathanson has challenged them to make their own abortion videotape: "If they think that they're going to see the fetus happily sliding down the suction tube... waving and smiling as it goes by, they're in for a truly paralyzing shock." The real objection to "The Silent Scream" seems to be that it por-G trays a suction abortion for what it really is: The violent tearing apart of human flesh. Some people are not capable of facing up to that fact. However, not all of us can be "good Germans." -Steve Angelotti April4 m C00 1 PEQ .oL0 t Letters to the Daily should be typed, triple- spaced, and signed by the individual authors. Names will be withheld only in unusual circum- stances. Letters may be edited for clarity, gram- mar, and spelling. by Berke Breathed IT WOs API!,qWvp UK50 MAqNY 07T161?YOU/A'& A1CA'IC4J BOS OURTH mOucg,'r I/MCI' T T716 KOR OF 7T1E CMUM, I POPCORNV FLUM&G111PCAAiH THE6 AIR... YCS, we WERE R~iUPY FOR ONLY ONE V a Nt'-un, i1LIFP h IiC Ter A// If 7IRMt. 385 WAS 1 T~OIP(! A MR"/A' 561750NWEWWOMIP i C IA