TPINI N Page 4 Thursday, March 17, 1988 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol XCVIII No. 112 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Save the Sharpsville Six 'U' should examine values SOUTH AFRICA: FRIDAY morning "at dawn. Six people known as the -Sharpsville Six are scheduled to be executed. A multitude of interna- tional organizations and govern- ments are supporting clemency for the Six, but Pretoria is indifferent to the pleas. This case demonstrates the lack of morality and concern for hu- man life pervading the Pretoria gov- ernment. The Six: Majalefa Reginald Sefatsa (age 33), Oupa Moses Diniso (age 31), Reid Malebo Mokoena (age 25), Theresa Ramashamole (age 27), Dama Joshaua Khumalo (age 27), and Francis Don Mokgesi (age 31), are being executed for having "common purpose" with the murderers of a South African offi- cial. The Six were part of a crowd of bystanders during the September 3, 1984 murder of Deputy Mayor K. J. Dlamini, of Lekoa. Dlamini was necklaced, a technique entailing burning victim's to death by placing gasoline-filled tires around their necks. Necklacing, in South Africa, symbolically identifies the victim as a conspirator with the Pretoria gov- ernment. No court ever proved that the Sharpsville Six actually committed the act of murder. As their judge concludes in his 121 page decision, "the individual acts of each of the six accused; convicted of murder, manifested an active association with the acts of the mob, which caused the death of the deceased. These ac- cused shared a common purpose with a crowd, to kill the deceased and each of them [were therefore found guilty] in respect of his 4-death." In other words, the Six did :riot physically carry out the killing, but are "murderers" by association. South African law does not require k proof that one actually commit mur- 'der, but only that one be present at a ::killing. The Six have hence been ::convicted of murder in the first de- tgree. With this reasoning, Pretoria Scould justify the imprisonment of nany South African Blacks. Outrage in the international com- *: munity has come from the United Nations, West Germany, and to the 'surprise of many, the United States F and Great Britain. President Reagan -made a statement which includes a clemency plea for the Six, as well as w m Norie a an GENERAL M ANUEL ANTONIO Noriega is losing friends in the Rea- gan administration. Ever since Nor- .iega's alleged involvement in drug .;trafficking and other ethically ques- tionable activities became public, the ,Reagan administration has tried to distance itself from the failing regime. However, considering the P close ties between the United States and Panama in the past, it is unlikely that the new revelations come as a shock to the administration. Most of the information about Panama's leadership comes from p J6se Bland6n, a former Panamanian w official, presently testifying in a r Florida drug case. He claims that Noriega has been heavily involved in * drug trafficking, in addition to other , extracurricular activities such as mpli. ---nn nr ctpalnu fernl a damnation of apartheid. Reagan falls short, however, of issuing any sanctions or economic penalties against the South African govern- ment. In December the United Nations Security Council unanimously en- dorsed clemency for the Sharpsville Six. The resolution, however, also did not contain sanctions because of objections by the U.S. and British representatives. The government of South Africa completely disregards human rights. The cruelty and inhumanity of apartheid need not be explained. Nonetheless, South Africa's presi- dent, P.W. Botha, has stated sev- eral times that apartheid will never end. . Botha's actions reflect his beliefs. According to the South African Consulate in Chicago, Botha will not exercise his power to grant a stay of execution, even in light of the over- whelming international protest. The South African government is ambivalent to international outrage. It is clear that Pretoria will not dis- mantle their system of racial subju- gation and oligarchical rule. Gov- ernments claiming to oppose the system of apartheid should move swiftly and firmly toward a complete economic boycott of South Africa. The long-standing U.S.-UK policy of constructive engagement is not working. What can students and local resi- dents do? The American Committee on Africa is urging concerned per- sons the send telegrams and telex messages to Botha urging clemency for the Sharpsville Six. Please let the South African government know that their heinous crimes are not going unnoticed. An eleventh-hour appeal on behalf of the Six is before the South African Supreme Court. As of press time last night, the outcome of the appeal was unknown. The Pretoria government may get away with murdering six more innocent people, however every nation and every person must pull together to end brutal wrath of apartheid. Write to P.W. Botha on behalf of the Sharpsville Six: President P.W. Botha State President Office Private Bag X213 Pretoria, 0001 S.A. ally no longer Arturo Delvalle. Delvalle himself was removed earlier this month by Noriega. The CIA has always had a good working relationship with the dicta- tor. The late CIA director, William Casey, met several times with Nor- iega. It is unlikely that the CIA, with its "sophisticated" intelligence net- work, could have been left in the dark as to what Noriega was up to. It is also unlikely that the CIA would provide classified intelligence reports to General Noriega unless it had extensive background informa- tion on him. According to Bland6n, the CIA sent intelligence reports to Noriega on U.S. Senators and other officials visiting Panama without the knowledge of the visitors. Noriega was also contracted by Oliver North and the CIA to be a link in the illegal By Henryk Skolimowski this is the last part of a two-part series It is often lamented that too much im- portance is attached to traditional humani- ties whereas computer illiteracy is ram- pant. I want to suggest that this lament is spurious and unjustified, for the opposite seems to be the truth. In this university, every student is somewhat literate in the use of computers whereas the rampant il- literacy of the role of values in one's own life is hardly perceived or acknowledged. The ethical literacy goes beyond the fash- ionable belief that everyone, is entitled to his/her values - for such a stand is noth- ing but moral relativism - an expression of moral illiteracy. In his book The Clos- ing of the American Mind, Allan Bloom has incisively shown how moral rela- tivism and moral nihilism are undermin- ing the very fabric of this society and the integrity of the American mind. In this university we are perpetuating this moral disease. What I am saying is the following: yes, there is institutional racism built into the structure of this university; there is institutional sexism; but they are built into the structure in a subtle way - in the very foundations of values on which this University stands and which this univer- sity perpetuates - whether consciously or subconsciously. The edifice of knowledge and learning, which this university represents is impressive in many ways - partly be- cause it penetrates almost every aspect of our thinking and our existence. Yet this edifice is not value free. On the contrary, it is based on specific values. In turn it perpetuates specific values. In what way? The world that is in the focus of attention Skolimowski is a Prof. of Philosophy in the College of Engineering. is that of matter. The mind that is culti- vated and enshrined is that of clinical ob- jectivity. The attributes of knowledge that are most valued are efficiency and control. Everything else is less important - if important at all. Through this very model we exclude other views and other values. In the world in which there is only physical matter and the laws of manipula- tion, the most important aspect of our be- havior is the manipulation of this matter, as well as the manipulation of the other stuff of the world, including other human beings. Everything becomes an object of manipulation. Since there are no higher values recog- nized or promoted, manipulation and the power trip become ultimate values. All very logical and almost natural. In this scheme the rampant individualism not only is not discouraged but finds its apotheosis: you only live once, and you fulfill your destiny through power and manipulation. In this pseudo-objective scheme, there is no place for compassion, for brotherhood, for solidarity - for if you are smart, you should dominate. Since the people of color are weak, because of their historical circumstance, or whatever, they deserve their fate. It is too bad but we cannot help them - but the objective world is made for the strong. Such is the logic and such are the ar- guments - following neatly from the whole structure we have set up. We can now see that racism and sexism are built into the structure of our universities and other social institutions. For this reason the cosmetic operations will not help much. Hiring two or three people of color is good action, as I said, but still on the level of symptoms, that is as long as the whole value structure is kept intact and is allowed to generate its imperatives which are fundamentally divisive, competitive, pitting us against each other. What I am saying (secondly) is that we have to examine the whole value structure in earnest. The systematic reflection on values must include courses offered to students on various levels of the curricu- lum. How many new courses have we created concerning the use of computers during the last five years? Many! Is ethics so pitifully unimportant that it does not deserve a large-scale University course? By this I mean not only a course in the his- tory of ethics offered by the Philosophy Department but one that examines values relevant for our times. In this intercon- nected world, we are a part of all human- ity. If we create and perpetuate values and structures that are divisive if not vicious, their fruit will come back to haunt us with vengeance. A viable and cooperative ethics is a matter of our survival - both spiri- tual and economic. We need to reflect on these great ideals of humanity which have sustained magnificently many societies in the past: cooperation, compassion, solidarity, reverence. It is simply an unexamined bull to claim that without competition we would all atrophy and nothing of impor- tance would be created. The greatest achievements of human kind were created not through competition but through acts of compassion and love. We can, if we so wish, create an ethics based on the win- win principle. It will not be easy. But if we have the will to examine our founda- tions and to pursue our noblest aspira- tions, it can be done. Where are the administrators with wisdom and courage who would realize all the tinkering with technology does not exhaust the scope of our destiny and does not solve our funda- mental problems? Where are the adminis- trators who can see that we do not live by calculus alone, and that we need to re-ex- amine our values - for so much depends on them? The business of the University is continuous examination. Unexamined life is not worth living. Unexamined val- ues are not worth having. I 4 LETTERS Davis symbol of Black liberation To the Daily: Born and raised on Birmingham's Dynamite Hill - so named because of the number of Black homes bombed there - Angela Davis quickly learned of the brutal racism which oppressed her family and people. Her parents were active in the anti-racist struggle. Davis knew the families of the four Black children killed in the 1963 bombing of a Birmingham church. Despite the racist edu- cational system, Davis grad- uated magna cum laud from Brandeis University and pur- sued graduate studies in Eur- ope. As the civil rights move- ment accelerated in the mid- sixties, however, Davis left Europe to join the struggle. She was one of the original central staff members of the SNCC (Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee) chapter in Los Angeles. As a radical scholar, intellectual, and political orga- nizer, Davis was extremely vocal in condemning the Viet Nam War. Her active involve- ment in the Black Liberation movement and her fierce ad- vocacy for prison reform led to her harassment by state authorities in California (led by then-governor Ronald Reagen). She was eventually framed on murder and kidnapping charges. Wilhite qualified To the Daily: For the information of read- ers of the outrageous article ("Alumni still want Bo-Fi- nalist Wilhite's ability ques- tioned," Daily, 3/3/88) con- cerning the Athletic Director- ship: Clayton Wilhite was one of several scholar athletes who took a lot of political science Davis spent months in solitary confinement - she was haras- sed and under surveillance 24 hours a day. A mass movement of international scope, how- ever, led to courtroom victories as Davis became a symbol of Black Liberation. Since she began teaching in the late 1960s, Davis has refused the apolitical academic status which most university professors assume. In addition to her political activism, her teaching and writing have focused on political oppres- sion, particularly racism and sexism. Davis is now teaching at San Francisco State Uni- versity and has published her latest book, Women, Race, and Class. As part of the United Coalition Against Racism's efforts to educate the commun- ity and combat institutional racism, we are bringing An- gela Davis to speak this com- ing weekend. A symbol and a leader from the sixties, Angela Davis continues to challenge the oppressive racist and sexist structures of society, to orga- nize, to resist. Davis will be speaking on Racism and Sex- ism in the Eighties this Saturday, March 19 at 7:00 pm at Rackham Auditorium. -Brett Stockdill, United Coalition Against Racism March 15, 1988 West Bank and Gaza not Palestinian state To the Daily: I do strongly believe Israel must get rid of its occupied territories. There is no way they can hold on to them much longer without m a s s i v e bloodshed on both sides. Besides that, I think it is harmful for Israel's intention to be a Jewish homeland; a n Islamic population exceeding the Jewish one would make democracy impossible. But surely one can't be serious about demanding an instant unconditional establishment of a "Palestinian homeland." That would put Israel in the same situation it was in in '67, a nation some few dozen miles wide with hostile neighbors on all sides. Would the PLO, if it were accepted as the voice of Palestinians, accept a homeland forbidden to militarize by the UN? There is much talk of how "moderate" today's PLO is, how willing it is to sit down and talk. The PLO is still headed by Yasser Arafat, a man who was only a few.years ago encouraging terrorist bombings and shooting Israeli civilians. Maybe he h a s mellowed in his middle age, but that does not change the horrible things the PLO so recently was still participating in. Also, what is this about Israel "confiscating their country?" Funny, but I don't recall the West Bank and Gaza being a Palestinian state in 1967 or any time before that since Biblical times. Israel seized the land from Jordan in 1967 if you recall, a n d Palestinian leaders often point out that they are not Jordanians and do not want to be part of Jordan again. Before that, the whole region was a British possession. The end result is this: The occupied territories threaten to destroy Israel slowly from within if they are kept. If they are given up, the occupied territories become a fantastic beachhead for another all-out Arab-Israeli war. Some would call it a Catch-22. In the meantime, the Palestinians aren't doing much to further their new image as pacifists rather than the terrorists they took pride in being for so long. There is no simple solution to this situation, Mr. Jamil, and being misinformed only complicates the situation. -Steven Koppelman January 28 I I Zinn RNAcS E IE5 J4 W A T . rH R' WT . , bEAM U W1A5S, AGO Tf4E 1' O Vz s C.IA ~ mwcmr W.MI1J t 0TN ~4~1. A ,.. 'T HA6 I 4 r A