91 OPINION Page 4 Monday, January 9, 1989 1st Amendment: freedom to By Jeff Gauthier The column by Brent Taggart and Ken- neth Sparks ("Protect Tagar & CFF," 12/22) assails the -Michigan Student As- sembly's (MSA) recent attempts to derecognize the Christian Cornerstone Fellowship (CCF) and Tagar as a serious threat to freedom of expression on cam- .'pus. Although there is certainly room for legitimate debate on these issues, Taggart and Sparks leave the erroneous impression that MSA's actions amount to no more than a dogmatic attack on civil liberties. A closer examination reveals a far more complex picture. Taggart and Sparks emphasize that the protections of the First Amendment extend beyond popular points of view. I'm sure that those involved in the fight against homophobia and racism must be shocked to find their long and frustrating struggles labelled "popular." In a culture where ho- Jeff Gauthier is a philosophy graduate 'tudent and the Rackham Representative to MSA. mophobia and racism (to say nothing of sexism and classism) are. celebrated as the norm in literature, art, and the mass me- dia, violence against minorities is systematically unrecognized, making the fight against it extraordinarily difficult. Anyone who thinks it's "popular" to challenge a homophobic or racist remark ought to try it sometime. By cashing out the events on the Diag as a clash of more or less "popular view- points," however, the First Amendment interpretation fails to do justice to the critical points at issue in this debate. The First Amendment defense of freedom of expression rests on two vital assumptions for its plausibility. First, it assumes that, barring state restrictions, all persons have free and open access to expressing their points of view. Secondly, it assumes that removing state restrictions, all persons have free and open access to expressing their points of view. Secondly, it assumes that removing state restrictions will bring about an atmosphere of freedom and open- ness essential for the development of free individuals. (C.A. MacKinnon, Feminism Unmodified, p.129) When a culture en- dorses an ideology of oppression against certain groups through its art, its media, and even the structure of its language, however, the social conditions necessary for freedom of access simply do not exist. So long as messages of oppression are a part of the social fabric, opposing "points of view," are systematically silenced. ment rights are quick to point out that it is impossible to draw the line between those speech acts which are to count as acts of violence and those which are pro- tected speech. This argument evokes two responses. In the first place, it seems that a doctrine which is blind to the difference between someone singing "God hates queer" on the diag, and the political The Michigan Daily silence symptomatic of a culture where social si- lencing and domination characterizes its institutions. (As a Tagar member aptly noted at the MSA hearing, in using the expression "Arab terrorism," Tagar was following the lead of such cultural icons The New York Times.) In either case, however, it is clear that the goal of a society where individuals may freely de- velop and express their own points of view is not advanced by a policy of First Amendment absolutism. The critics of MSA attack its efforts at derecognition as a threat to freedom on this campus. If their goal is an authenti- cally free campus, however, one where a person's race, gender, or sexual preference - does not exclude them from self-expres- sion, then this will not be achieved merely by allowing social forces to take their course. Where the historical conditions of a society are such that the voicing of a "point of view" may constitute an act of violent suppression, a community gen- uinely committed to freedom must express its intolerance of such an act. 'When a culture endorses an ideology of oppression against certain groups through its art, its media, and even the structure of its language...the social conditions necessary for freedom of access simply do not exist.' Moreover, to the extent that protected speech contributes to the perpetuation of these conditions by reinforcing an ideol- ogy of domination, it foments fear and si- lence rather than freedom and individuality. Freedom of speech becomes, ironically, the freedom to silence. ' sOf course, defenders of First Amend- activities of Students for a Democratic Society, is an odd one to guide a society ostensibly committed to freedom and equality. On the other hand, to borrow from Catherine MacKinnon's remarks on pornography, if civil libertarians have trouble distinguishing violent speech acts from everything else, perhaps this is e £irIiu i ftjj Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Snapshots from Zion 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. IC, No.70 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. Free films document U.S. involvement in Latin America: Alternative education By Sandra Steingraber Envisioned as the New Zion, Utah was established by Brigham Young as an inde- pendent Mormon state in 1849. Complete with the largest standing private army on the continent, settlers organized a society in which to live while waiting for the second coming of Christ. to be the only two women walking to- gether. As "gentiles" (non-Mormons), we are not allowed inside the Temple. So we tour the Visitors Center. Diaramas re-enact the persecution and martyrdom of the early saints. Mormon women are depicted as happy wives and mothers. "Do you want to see the giant Jesus?" asks Emily, steering me up a white spiral staircase overrun with children. At the top, under a blue, domed firmament, looms a great white figure with arms outstretched. Richfield and Capitol Reef The red canyons of southern Utah are populated with strings of small Mormon towns which once served as military out- posts for the defense of Brigham Young's utopia. More recently, its residents brought an unsuccessful lawsuit against the federal government for the excessive pointed and guarded. She notes that women here must choose to find strength within a patriarchal, theistic culture or risk almost complete isolation. I think of feminist Sonia Johnson who led Mormons for the Equal Rights Amendment and was excommunicated from the Church in 1979. Dugway Proving Grounds We drive from Ogden, home of the Hill Air Force Base and birthplace of the Min- utemen and Titan II missile systems, down around the Salt Lake and into the western desert. We are heading toward Dugway. Coming down out of the snow and sagebrush-covered hills, we can see the gates and fences from a long way off. Here they test the nation's arsenal of chemical weapons. There have been some terrible accidents. Open-air tests of live pathogens have spread diseases among THIS YEAR CUBA celebrat-s the 30th anniversary of its revolution. Prohib- ited by the U.S. government from travelling to this island only 90 miles off the coast of Florida, few North Americans have even the slightest no- tion of what Cuban society is like. And not too many U.S. citizens have paid a visit to El Salvador, a nation which receives $1.5 million every day from the U.S. government. And how ;:many North Americans know that Puerto Rico, a U.S. commonwealth, is the last remaining colony in the hemi- Jphere (in spite of an order from the Vnited Nations to the United States to * get out)? The U.S. people are starved of knowledge about life beyond their 'southern border. What information (hey do receive from popular media comes from the same official sources that have constructed an isolated Cuba, aiwar-torn El Salvador, and a colonized Puerto Rico. As media-analyst Noam ,Chomsky notes in his latest book, 3 Manufacturing Consent, news stories from Latin America are among the most incomplete and distorted in U.S. newspapers. Fortunately, alternative and com- pelling sources of information are available - albeit rare. In a commend- able move, the Latin American Solidar- ity Committee (LASC) has invested great time and expense to put together a series of some of the best documentary films ever produced on current events in Latin America. Each Thursday at 8:00 p.m. for the next six weeks, LASC will show films that focus on a particular nation while at the same time shedding light on the shared social, political, and economic 9 problems of this troubled region. One theme that consistently surfaces in these films is the historical legacy of United States foreign policy decisions. U.S. sponsorship of tyrannical puppets and state terrorism have left these countries struggling to survive in a chronic state of underdevelopment and fear for their lives. Countries such as Cuba and Nicaragua that have chal- lenged U.S. hegemony in the hemi- sphere by asserting their sovereign rights to develop independently are punished with political and economic isolation and physical intervention. As a new president takes office, U.S. citizens must not be fooled by George Bush's "kinder and gentler" rhetoric. Constant domestic pressure is imperative to stop the destruction and killing of the people of Central America and the Caribbean. Bush's linchpin role in the Iran-Contra crimes shows that there is no reason to expect that he will deviate from the previous agenda of subverting liberation movements in the developing world. A knowledge of how the lives of people in the region from Cuba and Haiti to El Salvador and Nicaragua are affected by the U.S. is critical to an understanding of their struggles for liberation. The LASC film series is an excellent opportunity to become more familiar with the people and issues of the region. The next film, "Bitter Cane" is about Haiti and will be shown on January 12 at 8:00 p.m. in the Pond Room of the Michigan Union. For more information on the film series consult the posters around town and campus or call the LASC answering machine at 665-8438. All films are free. Today Utah is very much incorporated into mainstream culture although the dou- ble legacy of militarism and religious zeal remains: The Mormon Church, which bars women from full status as church mem- bers, controls a financial and corporate empire worth $8 billion. Seventy percent Mormon, Utah has the highest birth rate in the developed world. Utah also fulfills the utopic visions of the Pentagon's prophets. With an econ- omy deeply dependent on defense dollars, Utah plays a key role in developing and testing nuclear weapons. Its landscape is scattered with military bases, depots, arse- nals and installations. The Dugway Prov- ing Grounds, larger than Rhode Island, serves as the official test site for the na- tion's chemical weapons program. During Christmas break, I travelled through this strange state with University graduate student Emily Smith, a native Utahn. Visiting both temples and arsenals, we tried to understand how this double pa- triarchy of Church and military operates in the lives of women there. Salt Lake City What I notice first are the children. I haven't seen so many children on the streets since I left Central America. The difference is that here the streets are anti- septically clean, the children are pale, blonde and fat, and they don't beg. So this is Zion. Mormon doctrine teaches that the family is sacrosanct. The purpose of life is to marry and produce Mormon children. In fact, Emily explains to me on our way to the Mormon Temple, women are taught that their souls can only enter into the highest celestial level in the afterlife if their husbands call their names. At Temple Square, the heart of the heart of Mormonism, we merge into a huge crowd of people who have come to look at the Christmas lights. Everyone is strolling around in family units. We seem 0 SANDRA STEINGRABER/Daily The perimeter of the Dugway Proving Grounds, chemical weapons test site in western Utah. Larger than the state of Rhode Island,. parts of the range are permanently contaminated. .cancer deaths caused by radioactive fallout from nuclear bomb testings in the 1950s. The leukemia rate among children was found to be double the national average. The sanctity of families. Emily and I hike in the sandstone canyons in Capitol Reef National Park. Scrambling up the outcrops, we find pet- roglyphs of the Ute Indians etched into the walls: birds, rams, horned snakes and con- stellations. In the little town of Richfield, we visit Kate Ashworth, a former Ann Arborite who lives here with her son and husband. Kate talks about the line of authority that characterizes the Mormon Church and which she sees as a strong parallel to the hierarchy of the military. Kate's criticisms of the Church are both neighboring farm animals. In 1968, an aerial nerve gas trial went awry and killed 6000 sheep. Parts of the range are perma- nently contaminated with anthrax spores. I walk through the snowdrifts along the fence and shoot a role of film. I am stopped and questioned twice by men in civilian cars who have U.S. flags sewn to their sleeves. The guard at the gate tersely answers Emily's questions. No, we can't go inside. Yes, some few hundred families live inside the gates of Dugway. We park at the edge of an unmarked road. The sun sets in the mountains, and the snow in this-contaminated place blazes with golden light. Two civilian cars pull out of the gate driven by women with children carefully strapped into safety seats. Wives and mothers here in the New Zion. UNITED S TA TES Atlantic Ocean - MEXICO . DOMINICAN A q~ A REPUBLIC GUATEMALA, HONDURAS HAIT NICARAGUA' SALVADORBRITISH GUIANA s PADONAMA E -a RENCH COLOMBIA 6GUIANA ECUADOR BRAZIL Letters.." totedto Buy books, help AIDS rP r We are a new non-profit, MSA-recognized organization on campus. Our purpose is simple: to provide used text- books for students at prices lower than those of the book- furthering AIDS research. The way we work is really quite simple. We will be sell- ing books for students on con- signment. Students determine the nrice oF the hooks they carry this out, we need student support. Our book drive will be heldat the Michigan League from January 6th to January 15th. If you are interested in becoming one of the charter