.f OPINION . ...... ..... - Page 4 Friday, October 13,1989 The Michigan Daily t , Edgedantichigand Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Theoloe: In the service of the state 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. C, No. 28 jUnsigned 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. Nightmare in the sky ECONOMISTS ARE slow to abandon favorite theories, even when the facts prove them wrong. Like the notion that a'free market fosters competition and benefits consumers; in the deregulated airline industry, now in its eleventh year, eight companies control 94% of the market and customer dissatisfaction ivat an all-time high. What's worse, deregulation has meant open season on airline workers: today there are as many baggage handlers, flight atten- dants, pilots, and machinists out of work as there are with jobs. It's time to scrap the whole plan. Deregulation was introduced during the recession of the late 1970s. In an attempt to put life into a sluggish industry, the U.S. Government stopped subsidizing carniers, lifted anti- trust laws which hampered acquisitions, and okayed competitive air-fares. At first their scheme seemed to have worked. The number of small shuttle-lines grew-more than 200 companies were born in the first years-and ticket prices fell. But so did services. The small com- panies offered a new product, no-frills flights, to compete with the giants. The idea caught on and became the industry standard, or lack of one. More bags were lost in the muddle of connecting flights, and flights were cancelled with astonishing frequency, based on a dompany's desire to send capacity rather than half-full flights to their des- tination. Consequently, as the major carriers, capital-rich after years of sub- sidies and inflated fares, computerized their booking systems, the new com- panies began to fold. Most of them did not have unions and were able to pay low wages; their unemployed workers became a pool of potential scabs for the union busters who were to come in the next decade. Reagan was the first of them. He rolled back safety standards and then, when professional air-traffic controllers struck for minimum working condi- tions - they did not ask for wage likes - he fired every one of them, jailing four of their leaders. While Reagan was setting the tone for treatment of airline workers, Wall Street investors started to take advan- tage of relaxed tax laws to fund corpo- rate takeovers. Borrowing money at usurious rates, small fish swallowed big fish through what are called lever- aged buy-outs, or LBOs. What was once quaint Allegheny Air, and is now USAir, bought Northwest Airlines in August for $3.65 billion, and has an agreement to buy UAL, United's parent company, for $6.75 billion. Congress encouraged monopolization by making the interest on LBOs tax- deductible. Still, the biggest expenses that airlines face are the interest payments - not new planes to replace DC-10s, and certainly not wages. To sustain such costs, it has taken a special degree of greed; thus the corporate raiders who emerged in the early 1980s: Checchi (USAir), Lorenzo (Continental and now Eastern), Icahn (TWA), Crandall (American; Donald Trump has offered to buy), and Evans (United). Lorenzo followed Reagan's initiative by bankrupting Continental in 1983 when its unions struck, and reorganizing the company around scabs. Icahn followed suit when he broke the flight attendants' union a few years later. Lorenzo is now trying his trick again at Eastern. Today, planes crash so frequently that the reports blur together; Continental is looking to break its own record, set last year, for millions of bags lost; and, according to The Wall Street Journal, coach fares are up 50% from January 1988. Meanwhile, seven of the eight carriers that dominate the market are enjoying record profits. Deregulation has been a nightmare for all but a handful. But today's lack of competition-for passengers, for services, or for technology-also pro- vides a chance for an alternative: na- tionalize the airline industry, with guar- antees of union representation. If the idea sounds foreign, it is: nearly every other capitalist country boasts a state- owned airline, and most are thriving. Think about it the next time you buy tickets: what good has the free market done anyone? What might airlines be like if they were run in the interests of the people, and not to make interest payments on LBOs? And don't fly Continental or Eastern. N By Marc H. Ellis Editor's note: The following essay has been reprinted from Christianity and Cri- sis, October 9, 1989 with the author's permission. The August Abduction of Shiekh Abdul Karim Obeid by Israeli forces reasserted Is- rael"s antiterrorist credentials, and Jewish groups took out full paged ads in the New York Times raising the banner of Israel as bulwark against the terrorism that threat- ens the "civilized" world. The abduction served a purpose little noted by Jewish commentators and the international media. It diverted attention from the ongoing Palestinian struggle and the brutal meth- ods employed by Israel to repress the uprising. All states seek to divert attention from the fundamental problems confronting them. Since Israel is a state, neither lies nor diversions should surprise us; nor should we wonder that Israel, like any other state, uses power to accomplish its goals. The policies and action endemic to the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza simply replicate those of occupa- tions by other states. In 1939 Walter Benjamin, a German Jew experiencing the power of the state, wrote "whoever has emerged victorious participates to this day in the 'triumphal procession in which the present rulers step over those who are lying prostrate." Sadly, a half-century later Israel is no exception to this analysis. Yet Jewish theologians continue as if Jews are innocent, as if the state of Israel is the portent of redemption rather than a state among states. The present behavior- of Israel as a state has had little impact on Jewish theology; its conduct has either been ignored or, if considered at all, seen as aberrational and correctable. Thus even Jewish dissent is within a framework that the state of Israel can handle, correctional rather than foundational. Of course, like any theology which le- gitimates a state, Jewish theology is called upon to justify the exercise of power over which it has no control. As some outside the Jewish community have thought for a long time, it is paradoxical that Jews are expected to justify policies in Israel that they would not justify anywhere else in the world. If there are those who continue to see Israel as redemptive, it is also clear that Israel has introduced a schizophrenia in Jewish thought and activity which is evident in the emotional turmoil and lack of intellectual clarity on the most pressing issues which confront the Jewish people. Hence the delays, the diversions, the de- ceptions of the state of Israel. Jewish the- ologians, who have functioned brilliantly as critical thinkers when confronting the- ologies which oppressed Jews in Christian Europe, are now quiescent in the service of Jewish state power. Though the occupa- tior. and its policies are in their third decade and the Palestinian uprising almost two years old, not one major Jewish the- ologian has said what is obvious to many Jews and non-Jews alike: - What Jews have done to the Pales- tinians since the establishment of Israel in 1948 is wrong. - In the process of conquering and dis- placing the Palestinian people, Jews have done what has been done to them over two millennia. - In this process Jews have become everything they loathed about their op- pressors. - It is only in the confrontation with state power in Israel that Jews can move beyond being victim or oppressor. - The movement beyond victimization and oppression can only come through a solidarity with those whom Jews have displaced - the Palestinian people. In short, Jewish theologians have, for reasons of state, been silent on the gravest crisis which has faced the Jewish people since the destruction of European Jewry during World War II. Benjamin's comment about the truimphal processions of the victorious is thus joined by his further comment: "In every era the attempt must be made anew to wrest tradition away from a conformism that is about to overpower it." The task of Jewish theology begins to come into focus: to lay the groundwork for a solidarity with the victims of Jewish power, the Palestinian people, which ne- cessitates a confrontation with the founda- tions and policies of the state of Israel. The function of Jewish theology is to in this light. Communal structures, then, rather than being delegitimized, are rela- tivized and demystified. At the same time, structures which serve the people in one era may hinder the people in another era. That which drew the energies for building new structures at one point in history may, at another point, need to garner the sarr energies to transform those struc- tures into something else. Jewish theol- ogy, then, needs to be wary of absolutiz- ing any structure through uncritical sup- port or silence. Ultimately, a vocational question is be- ing posed i re. What is the essential voca- tion of the Jewish people? To build the Is- * raeli state? To serve that state in the United State by lobbying for Israeli eco- noniec and military aid? Is this a voca- tional choice faithful to a history filled, with suffering and struggle? Can such a, choice be maintained over time without changing the essence of what it means to be Jewish? Can Jews continue to pretend to an innocence and redemption when ac- tions of the state of Israel closely replicate the history of suffering Jews sought to escape? These are the questions which con- front Jews as a people and Jewish theol- ogy. Can we say that any theology that. does not address these questions as central is a theology that leads to torture and mur- der? One that threatens the very tradition of suffering and struggle which Jews in-' herit? In the coming months, as in the previ- ous years, these questions will remain unasked, at least in public. Those who raise them in public will be villified. Jew- ish theologians will continue to legitimate Israeli behavior or, when this is no longer possible, at least equivocate. But the con- sequences of Israel's diversionary tactics of abduction and the power it exercises to de- stroy a people are too serious to be ig- nored. The day of reckoning will come. By then, however, Jews will survey with Benjamin the treasures of victory which have an "origin which we cannot contem- plate without horror." That is the day Jews 'The policies and action endemic to the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza simply replicate those of occupations by other states.' evaluate critically the history the people are participating in, and the structures which promote or hinder the Jewish strug- gle to be faithful. Palestinians, Muslim and Christian, will face a similar theologi- cal task when they achieve statehood. Since the Jewish struggle occurs in diverse communities historically and in the pre- sent, communal structures are to be judged will relate with tears the history Jews have bequeathed to their children. To minimize that history we must act now. We are very nearly too late. Marc Ellis is Professor of Religion, Cul- ture and Society Studies at the Maryknoll School of Theology where he directs the Justice and Peace Program. 1 t No WE DEMRIG17 EA~g IRLIIS. HOWW~R~hG TECARER5G OU WHEW!HAT WAS CLOSE! THEY WERE ARMPEP WITH ROCKS AHD IPEAS OF FREEPOM" IN THEIR OWN LANP! THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL Letersto the editor A t a y p b ' i a! 6 N 'e ! yaw BUIN LM cio u (7 . it o AD PART O U SH A~fllHISTRAflON'. 09~ TO DI(WRAGLSHE USE OF IMASS T IV . lt TI /)A' Ip, Speak-out and March / for W nmn's Rights E& I Picket Right-to- I ifp pro-choice views. Despite this, the leadership of the anti-choice forces have decided to come to Ann Arbor in order to plan their strategies to further restrict reproductive have blocked the doors of women's health care clinics across the state, denying women access to birth control, pre-natal care, gynecological care and abortions. They have rights. AACDAR is participating in a picket of the right-to-life con- ference at Weber's Inn on Oc tober 13. Students, workers and community members must