OPINION Page 4 Monday, October 21, 1985 The Michigan Daily Mtdpian 1awI Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Buying a balanced budget Vol. XCVI, No. 33 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board , -. Courts and the Cruise O N AUGUST 6, 300 demon- strators commemorated the atomic holocaust of Hiroshima at Williams International, a missile making plant in Walled Lake. Later in August, Williams requested what amounts to its second injunction against demon- strations on public property in front of its plant. At present, the in- junction awaits hearing. Originally, Williams asked that demonstrations on public property outside Williams' gates be limited to three or fewer people. Now Williams has amended the injun- ction request only to prohibit "mass picketing," as to be inter- preted by the judge. The reaction of Williams under- scores the potency of the demon- strations against facility. Williams specifically cites three anti- militarist groups and about 30 in- dividuals in their activities; specifically seeking to ban demon- strations by a student group called the Michigan Alliance for Disar- mament. Williams claims to have suffered "irreparable harm" from the perennial demonstrations citing the national coverage past demon- strations have attracted. What is at stake at Williams that is so important? Why does Williams and the government seem intent on repressing anti-militarist demonstrations at Williams? Williams builds Cruise missile engines. Cruise missiles are known for their small size (25 feet in length), slow speed and low-flying altitude. Designed to avoid radar detection, the Cruise missile is un- settling because of its potential to reach targets unnoticed. According to Robert Aldridge, a former Lockheed military engineer, during his term at theG White House Jimmy Carter pointed out that it is possible to launch Cruise missiles from anywhere yet it is impossible to know whether their payloads are nuclear or con- ventional. Carter conceded that "Cruise missiles represent a class of weapons which raises potentially troublesome verification problems." Most dangerous of all, the Pen- tagon admits that the Cruise missile is the most accurate weapon it has. The Cruise's "high kill probability" for "hardened targets" makes it a candidate for cleanup operations after a U.S. fir- st strike on the Soviet Union, which might be initiated with quicker missiles like the Pershings in Europe that can reach Soviet targets in six to eight minutes. Robert Aldridge has pointed out in his book First Strike! that a first wave of U.S. missiles that hit the USSR may cause atmospheric problems for the firing of the USSR's missiles that would other- wise be operational. Hence, while the Soviets reload their silos with undestroyed missiles and wait for proper conditions to fire, the Cruise missiles could be arriving. The arms race is dictating to the courts how much repression is necessary. Both superpowers build weapons that make sense in fighting a nuclear war. While the U.S. criticizes the Soviet Union for its supposed totalitarianism, it builds ever more first strike weapons and defenses against retaliation and gives a back seat to so-called civil liberties. The kind of weapons that Williams builds and the treatment of even non-violent anti-militarist activists makes sense to an elite of warriors but not to humanity. By Sean Jackson Last week the Democrats on Capitol Hill gave away their best shot at regaining con- trol of the Senate in November of 1986 when they agreed to support a Republican spon- sored balanced budget amendment. Instead of challenging the deficit problem like leaders - the Democrats joined the Republicans in a game of politics. No one has wanted to deal with the deficit problem - which has gotten massively out of hand since the Reagan Administration took over in 1981. In four years Reagan ac- cumulated a debt higher than all the presidents before him - combined. And campaign promises in 1984 prohibit him from raising taxes or cutting back Social Security. Congressmen - facing elections in just 12 months - would not want to face their constituents after voting for a tax hike or cutting spending power to lower the deficit. But the deficit has to be dealt with - and after six years of booming budget deficits - all the Democrats would have had to do was point to the Republican record to show the Republicans' inability to solve the riddle. But the Democrats have blown it. They let the Republicans out of their own political noose by agreeing to the balanced budget law requiring no deficit spendingby 1990. A balanced budget however, is the wrong way to solve the deficit problem that is bleeding the United States red. While a seemingly good idea and quick fix for the moment, the amendment poses severe problems for the long run effects on the economy. The end result of a constitutional amen- dment requiring a balanced budget would be deeper and longer recessions and hard to control economic expansion. The business cycles that produce the recessions and booms are still unpredictable and cannot be altered yet by economists. They have been trying for decades - but still cannot predict exactly when they will come and how to prevent them. To try and prevent a slowdown in the economy from becoming a full fledged recession, or to soften the blow of inflation Jackson is an LSA sophomore. in an economic upswing, Congress created automatic stabilizers. These stabiliziers work like a sprinkler system during a fire - they automatically turn on when they sense smoke and try to put out the fire before it gets out of hand. The automatic stabilizers - progressive taxes and unemployment in- surance - small the economic smoke and try to put out the fire before and prevent a deep recession or uncontrollable inflation. These mechanisms may not do the job by themselves - sometimes Congress will have to be called in like firemen to put out the fire. A balanced budget resolution would eliminate the economic sprinkler system and cause serious damage before the economic firement can reach the scene. A balanced budget requires that the government spend no less than it takes in. But doing the opposite is what prevents a souring economy from becoming a rotten one. An economic swoon is often caused by a fall in consumer purchases, and as the number of goods bought begins to fall, businesses begin to layoff workers. If the pink slip meant no more money at all, pur- chases by consumers would fall even fur- ther making the recession even worse. That's where unemployment insurance comes in. It allows the consumers to con- tinue to buy goods and prevents a precipitious drop in demand. Now, just as the government is spending more money to try to maintain the level of cinsumer spending, its revenues are falling because of people being laid off or businessmen with sinking revenues are paying lower taxes. It's sort of a built in tax cut to stimulate spending - or at least to maintain it. The stabilizers also check economic growth and prevent wild economic booms. When salaries and business sales begin to climb, as in an economic recovery, the higher income will boost consumers and businessmen into higher tax brackets. Un- bridled growth is as bad as an approaching recession. Inflation and higher interest rates, the byproducts of the boom, could choke off a recovery before it hits its poten- tial. A tax bite would avoid that problem, somewhat, by slowing the increase in demand and allow for stable economic ex- pansion instead of rapid booms. A balanced budget amendment would turn off the Congress's automatic sprinkler system. No longer would small economic fires be snuffed out by the sprinkler, but they would grow into economic bonfires. The beauty of the progressive tax system and unemployment insurance is they require no action by Congress. When the economy needs help, the automatic stabilizers act immediately. No debate, no politics, just action. And if the stabilizers cannot do the job, the Congress or the President can come to the rescue. When Uncle Sam will be forced to keep the books in balance, he will not be able to stimulate the economy when it slows or when it booms. Since revenues fall as people are laid off. The government would not be, able to spend more to maintain consumer demand and prevent a deep recession. Recessions would be deeper, booms more out of balance. The result hurts business. That's bad, but think of the unemployed; they are forced to live off of savings - if they have any - and may well end up in povertry. The answer to the deficit problem is sim- ple. No one wants to cut programs any fur- ther than Reagan did in his first term, so let's face the facts. We have to pay for them. Republicans are realizing it. Former Senate Majority leader Howard Baker, who castigated Walter Mondale's tax hike plan a year ago, is calling for tax increases. The man as close to the nation's economy as anyone, former Office of Management and Budget Director David Stockman, says a $100 billion tax hike is a must. Democrats have done more than hurt their chances of regaining control of the Senate in 1986, and maybe the White House in 1988, they have turned their backs on the American people. Now everyone will get off the hook. Since the budget doesn't have to be balanced for another five years, today's Congressman will not have to deal with the problem. When Congress convenes in 1990 the balanced budget will be the law - and blame for the necessary domestic spending cuts and tax hikes will be blamed on their predecessors. But the real losers, as is usually the case when Congress and the President play pass the buck instead of leadership, are the American people. They will suffer the effec- ts playing politics with longer than necessary recessions and out of control booms. 41 LETTERS Hidden militarism, ads and escalation To the Daily: It is a disturbing commentary on our times that in a recent issue of the Michigan Daily (Oct. 9) highlighting the twenty-fifth an- niversary of the Peace Corp I found so many elements of militarism and the hidden but implicit attitude that the only route to peace is through military strength. Much of the reporting, story topics and even adver- tisements were indicate of the present administration's Rambo- like mentality towards world peace and an acceptance of the infiltration of this attitude into our academic institution. It is no longer possible to overlook the fact that being a state-funded institution means that we are only an appendage of the administration in Washington and its economic and political goals. Therefore, it becomes justifiable that a front page "Profile" story on a top-ranking, silver polishing, Army ROTC cadet is merely routine, that a story headlined, "V.P. Praised Peace .Corp" is in fact really talking about a man who is part of an administration that has been responsible for the largest "peacetime" military build-up in U.S. history, and that two huge quarter-page advertisements for the Navy, "The Nuclear Navy," are merely timely indicators of the tolerance of an academic community living in this current political climate. How very sad that the real con- cept of peace is clearly lost within all this. How very sad indeed that pride in one's country means, as it does for cadet Joseph Gneiser, being allowed to gain "special training in military strategy and weapons use" at a university, that students must fund their own peaceful teach-ins like the recent National Conference on S.D.I. held at Rackham Auditorium, and that theneditor of the Wayne State student paper, the South End, is fired from her past when she refuses to print military ad- vertisements. If we, as students, do not object to this tide of militarism and ac- ceptance of global conflict and nuclear arms escalation as inevitable U.S. policy, we will dearly pay the consequences. Today we allow a man like George Bush to grace the steps of our student union in total mockery of peace, and watch researchers being prodded to take on Star Wars contracts, but tomorrow... what could the con- sequences be for tomorrow?? If we do not stop this flow of anti- peace thought and action, where will tomorrow be and what will we have wished we had done yesterday. I 4 Under the rug Hanover Band review strikes sour note T HERE WAS something comical in the way the Univer- sity managed to clean up all of cen- tral campus to coincide with the live broadcast of Thursday mor- ning's Today show. But in taking pains to filter which students were actually televised, the program came across as downright sinister. The express purpose of the Today Show's visit was to present a glim- pse of the University setting to con- trast it with a similar look at Brown University. To that end, host Bryant Gumbel broadcast live from the Diag. At Brown, students were permit- ted to come right next to host Jane Pauley, yet at Michigan not only was there a ring of chairs for in- vited guests, but there was also a rope preventing spectators from getting within 30 feet of the designated area. It's understandable that the University would have set up the chairs, because with so many nennle likely tn h interested in national exposure. Several students were frustrated in their plans to display banners protesting NBC's lack of coverage of U.S. sponsored bombing of El Salvador villages. The merits of their cause aside, the protesters are a part of the student body and ought to have had the opportunity to be a part of the proceedings. Although the University has claimed it put up the additional ropes to prevent a shoutdown, as occurred at Vice President Bush's recent address, there was no in- dication that any such a protest would occur. In going to such lengths to meet an imaginary threat, the Univer- sity penalized everyone in the University community and demon- strated a frightening inclination to hide a certain part of that com- munity. By rights the University ought to be proud of the fact that it has a number of politically outspoken faculty and students. At the very least, though, it should not be To the Daily: Rebecca Chung's review of the Hanover Band's performance last Saturday ("Hanover band fights self restraint", Daily, Oct. 14) evening was a sad commen- tary on her misconception of the idea of performance practice music. Her attitude toward period instruments and those who play them caused her to write a review which was misleading, unfair and condescending. It damages Ann Arbor's reputation as a nationally known hub of the early music movement to have the Daily print a review written by one so uninformed of the very raison d'etre of early music. Performers who choose to ply their art on baroque fiddles, flutes, harpsichords and the like do so not out of some antiquariun fascination with musical museum pieces, but because they seriously believe that the sounds produced by the old instruments, and the performance practices they dictate, create an aesthetically superior reproduc- tion of the music of Beethoven (or Haydn, Bach or Guillaume de Machaut). To them the com- parison is not, as Ms. Chung suggests, between a Model T and a Porsche 944; it's between a painter's palette and a modern instrument and its an- cestor is irrelevant to a sophisticated critique of a music performance. The question should be: did the Hanover Band give a good performance, period? If they didn't, thenthey should have gotten their act together before having the nerve to charge admission. Ms. Chung shouldn't feel con- strained to pull her punches, but she would do the entire musical community a favor by swinging with a bit more sophistication, discernment and knowledge of her subject next time. -John Abdenour October 14 BLOOM COUNTY -Jennifer S. Akfirat October 13 Letters to the Daily should be typed, triple-spaced, and signed by the in- dividual authors. Names will be withheld only in unusual circumstances. Letters may be edited for clarity, grammar, and spelling. K by Berke Breathed O/57IN, A4Wg'OM, VWKY OfrEN.., t,1,fPBUTT., YOU? Ivor GOINGTv L/KE r/0 -21/ IveBEN .' rN 70 OU oa 5TCK WK/A 7Yi6 RO 'V6(--o-Mn~ric' MMY. w 9N~v M CK 'I N,~P MOM Al iue i*- f FW A F6WI PAM,, F,,:o' CALP ,A SAFE UE /"USK-OX RWM ? O P op>W MR1V5B" '4