4 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 24, 1993 G1je Airbiguu i ail ar asTos b imLse 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JOSH DUBOW Editor in Chief ANDREw LEVY Editorial Page Editor Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the majority opinion of the Daily editorial board. All other cartoons, articles and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. F4 50N',TITHINK T K~oVVWH p~Y C-6 ARELYN' it A I oaf 91 Pursuing success To the Daily: Just exactly what it takes to become a successful person in today's highly technical and ever complex world is really much simpler than most people think. Never think of success as something distant and elusive, but instead something that can be achieved by anyone including yourself. What it takes is not a mystery either, but a formula that can be outlined in a clear and concise manner which can be easily understood. First, be a person willing to work hard and take action. Anyone can just think they can do something, but you must go further and take concrete steps forward. These steps forward must be continual and not be deterred by any setbacks that can occur. Second, make every possible effort to know the subject matter you are involved with. Not only know the major details but the minor details as well. Be smart and realize knowledge is not only power, but it allows you to anticipate beforehand what is going to happen in the future. Thinking ahead is definitely a must for an individual to become successful. Third, have an open mind and be amenable to any suggestions that can enhance your know-how and performance. Experience is an important factor to success and the longer amount of time you have been in any endeavor the more likely you will be able to make logical and smart choices. Anyone offering you advice may just be that person who has the necessary experience that can provide advice. Fourth, do not try to do things overnight but realize that the goals you want are going to take time to achieve. Be more content with continual progress over a long period of time rather than any immediate success. Fifth, exhibit flexibility and make an effort to mold yourself or connect to different circumstances that may work. Never be narrow minded but instead be willing to pursue different avenues and realize you may have to look in more than one place to find exactly what you want. Last, be hopeful and optimistic, how you think is going to determine what type of action you will be taking. Becoming a person who cam overcome adversity, achieve his or her goals and become successful is not something that is impossible or even difficult. It is a simple procedure that can be grasped by anyone who is willing to take the necessary steps. This anyone also includes you. PATRICK DWYEL Williamsburg, Va. Gun control doesn't help stop violence To the Daily: The editorial on gun control, ("Florida tourist murders," 9/22/93), was off base. The author states that the murders of the Florida tourists illegal means such as theft or the black market, and not through licensed firearm dealers. (U.S. Dept. of Justice survey of Felons.) Most proposed gun control laws focus on the only element the government can control, the legal sale of guns to law abiding citizens. The Brady Bill for example. Thus these gun control laws do little or nothing to prevent criminals from obtaining guns. Further, in contrast to the author's assertions that the Florida tourist murders are an example for the necessity of more gun control laws, Florida had recently passed one of the nations most liberal concealed carry laws. Under the law, any law-abiding resident of Florida can carry a concealed firearm for defense. Since the enactment of this law, the homicide rate has dropped 20% while it has risen nationwide. (FBI: Uniform Crime Statistics.) Meanwhile, the targeting of tourists, whom the criminal knows will be unarmed, has risen markedly. Thus the author's use of the Florida tourist murders as an argument to further restrict the ability of the law- abiding citizens to legally obtain firearms is flawed. DOUG CLARK First year Law student Banning firearms helps criminals To the Daily: This letter is in response to the opinion column regarding gun control ("Florida Tourist Murders," 9/22/93). In the United States, a criminal is generally regarded as someone who breaks a law. Laws in this country forbid, for instance, crimes such as rape, murder, robbery, and thousands of others. If someone murders another person, the murder becomes a criminal-they have broken the law. Suppose then, that laws are made that forbid the possession of firearms by private citizens. Those who obey the law will no longer possess guns-they are law abiding citizens. Yet, criminals are called criminals because they break established laws, and will not, therefore, simply decide to no longer possess guns because the law forbids it. Laws against murder do not stop criminals from killing people, and laws prohibiting the possession of guns will not stop criminals from possessing firearms, either. The only people who would be disarmed are the law abiding citizens. Thus, banning firearms will only help the criminals; for those who use them unlawfully will continue to do so regardless of whether or not legislation dictates that they cannot. Criminals will always have guns-and with the knowledge that those on which they prey cannot defend themselves, the criminals will find crime extremely easy. Laws already exist dictating that intended merely to protect us from the British Army, is quite unjustified. Whatexactly did our founders feel the importance of the right to keep and bear arms was? James Madison said, "(The Constitution preserves) the advantage of being armed which Americans possess over people of almost every other nation ... (where) the governments are afraid to trust the people with arms." Or how about Thomas Jefferson, who said, "Laws that forbid the carrying of arms ... disarm only those who are neither inclined nor determined to commit crimes .... Such laws make things worse for the assaulted and better for the assailants; they serve rather to encourage than to prevent homicides, for an unarmed man may be attacked with greater confidence than an armed man" (quoting Cesare Beccaria). Or, closest to the point at hand, Samuel Adams said, "The Constitution shall never be construed ... to prevent the people of the United States who are peaceable citizens from keeping their own arms." One must never underestimate the absolute necessity of the people of a free society to possess ans in order to defend their liberty. For without arms, the people of a free society are helpless against the will of an armed government. CRAIG HALSETH LS&A sophomore The economies of Mexico and Los Angeles are not. S 0 comparable To the Daily: In its editorial pages of Monday, Sept. 20, the Daily displays a critique against the anti-NAFTA speeches recently held by former independent presidential candidate Ross Perot. The editorial also shows a pro-NAFTA position arguing that, as the 300 economists did in their letter to President Clinton last week, the agreement not only will be good for both Mexico and the United States but also that it will have a minor effect in the short-term upon the American economy. Moreover, the editorial says that those "who claim * that Mexico, which has an economy - roughly equal in size to that of Los Angeles, will somehow absorb the entire American job base are guilty of misleading the public. An economy like Mexico's is simply not big enough to produce a disastrous effect here." What this editorial is doing through this latter statement is precisely misleading the reader in comparing the Mexican economy to that of Los Angeles. If, as the editorial argues, Perot is exploiting the "workers fears" in his position about NAFTA, this editorial is exploiting the badly assumed ignorance of the Daily's readers. It is difficult to believe a priori that Mexico's economy is "roughly t^thr fT AnnS UNICEF reports deficient child care By PETER ADAMSON The industrialized world is enter- taining an age of doubt about material progress. Many of its citizens are ex- periencing what the economist Robert Heilbroner has called "the startled re- alization that the quality of life is worstening ... that people who are three or five or 10 times richer than their grandparents do not seem to be three or five or 10 times happier or more content or more richly developed as human beings." Coinciding with such doubts is the gradual realization the world, material progress has very different connotations. It holds out the hope of adequate food, clean wa- ter, safe sanitation, decent housing, reliable health care, and at least a basic education. This is a definition of progress which remains entirely valid. And it is one with which the rest of the world must keep faith. In the 1960s and 1970s, hopes rode high that national and interna- tional efforts would soon enable all people to meet these needs. But over the last decade, such hopes have been replaced by widespread disillusion- about10 percent of all international aid for development has been spe- cifically devoted to these purposes. This means that many governments of the poor world have been spend- ing less on meeting human needs than on meeting military bills and debt-servicing obligations. And it means that the total amount of aid being given for the specific pur- pose of meeting these most obvi- ous and basic of human needs is less than the amount that the people of the industrialized world spend each year on sports shoes.