4 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 28, 1993 Shr as o* IV r THE IRE$IDEN T 'AY5 SIN TAXE S WILL H ELP PAY F~OR HE ALT H CAREo 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JOSH Dusow Editor in Chief ANDREW LEVY Editorial Page Editor I --- . . - --.- 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. ARELPL QON VY0R f . 'IE Hfw'TACK IDANIELS5 /SOME MORS \R. $ MP5ON Yop KA ,, "A WILL COVER. H(5 HEART Lh Mlorality isno the cure for AIDS rr)3 \Tz A -Z to ;& 4Q t) I COLT 0" 6 . 0 Of the many factors that lead to President Bush's defeat in 1992, one of particular interest was the Repub- lican Party's ill-conceived decision to hand the convention over to the religious right. The hostile rheto- ric and declara- tions of cultural I warfare, lead by High Priests Pat Buchanan and Pat Robertson, re- pulsed manyC P moderate Repub- licans, Perotistas, and most Demo- crats. In fact, sev- gd eral Republican members of Congress refused to attend the conventionwhile others regretted participating in its politics of division. The convention's saving grace was Mary Fischer, a Republican who con- tracted HIV from her unfaithful hus- band; she didn't take drugs, she didn't sleep around, she wasn't homosexual. Fischer spoke of compassion, educa- tion, and tolerance; not of condemna- tion, arrogance, or intolerance. The conventioneers applauded, but few probably listened. At least, our own College Republicans failed to hear what were probably the most impor- tant words spoken at either conven- tion. Last week, posters reading "Want a Cure for AIDS? Try Morality." greeted University students on their way to class. These fliers were dis- tributed by the College Republicans who, in a fit of cruelty and callous- ness, overlooked the unfortunate con- sequences. College Republican President John Damoose told the Daily that the post- ers were "not supposed to be nega- tive." Either Damoose is being disin- genuous or just naive. The behavior prescribed by the Republicans on their flier (don't use drugs, avoid homo- sexual sex, trust God) suggested that personal moral behavior was the sole determinant of AIDS's longevity, es- sentially condemning all people with HIV as deserving of their fate. Mary Fischer lived according to the radical right's notion of family values, yet she has HIV. The half- dozen patients who contracted the virus from a Florida dentist were not homosexual; they did not take drugs. There was also Ryan White, the little boy whose life ended as a result of a tainted blood transfusion. Would fel- low College Republican Bill Lowry tell Ryan that he "has to take respon- sibility for [his] own values?" But what about those high-risk groups, like homosexuals and drug- users? Nobody suggests that they should not take responsibility for their own values. But the insinuation that it is not society's responsibility to find a vaccine for HIV - "the govern- ment can't do everything," Lowry suggested - approaches a level of cold-heartedness that is simply in- comprehensible. In fact, the Republican right should rethink its notions of what family values are. Conservatives on campus probably tripped over themselves to hear Cal Thomas, the nation's fore- most syndicated intellectual midget. The Michigan Review reported that Thomas agreed, because of its spiri- tual or moral decay, our nation was not as "grand" as it used to be, pre- sumably during the golden era of Ward and June Cleaver. What were the values of that era? Blacks couldn't sit or eat with whites; men were free to beat and rape their wives without fear of punishment; women were forbidden to work out- side the home; people like me were generally not allowed into the coun- try; whites in the South didn't want Blacks to vote; whites in the North didn't want Blacks next door; eco- nomic prosperity and mobility were reserved for white men. The list natu- rally can go on forever. Whatever our values were then, they couldn't have been all that grand. The point isn't to condemn Ameri- can culture wholesale, but to recog- nize the fact that our values today are far more inclusive than before; we are more tolerant, more compassionate, and consider the notion of equality far more seriously. In their nostalgic view of the grand old days, the College Republicans have forgotten this. In their arrogance, they have done their community a great disservice. The cure for AIDS is neither mo- nogamy nor the end of intravenous drug use, although both would be preferable; the danger of HIV con- tamination from sex and drug use can be significantly reduced through proper precautions. The cure is likely an antibody, which our researchers will find with proper funding and unrelenting diligence. But a prerequi- site to that is compassion, for without society's eagerness to end this kind of suffering there can be no progress. If the College Republicans must sit around "trusting God," pointing fin- gers, and blaming the sick, so be it. The rest of us will just have to pick up the slack. I *n * SOn S Dolg ondtsuyaiegsonlbrt Daily failed to give adequate rebuttal to Smith's article To the Daily: Whenever an argument is made that questions the historical truth of the Holocaust, two responses must follow. First, the argument's inaccurate and dangerous assertions must be rebutted. Then, a question must be asked: Why was this view permitted to air? Often the answer is simply that the First Amendment ensures a person's right to air such views. An individual who wishes to post flyers or give speeches claiming that the Holocaust never happened may have a Constitutional right to do so. However, when a third party assists in spreading this revisionist history, it must either adequately defend its decision to do so or be suspected of sharing the opinion. When the Daily published Bradley Smith's article ("Museum lacks evidence of genocide," 10/6/ 93), it thus bore two obligations. One was to refute his arguments, and the other was to justify printing the article. The Daily failed miserably in each of the tasks. There were three articles that attempted to argue that the Holocaust did happen. One, by Jessie Halladay, was a description of the exhibits she saw at a visit to claims "on the denial of historical fact," and concluded that the revisionists were wrong.'In the third article, the Editor in Chief and the Editorial Page Editor called Smith's ideas "pure drivel." However, both of these articles failed to provide the needed point- by-point rebuttal of Bradley Smith's claims. The reader was forced to draw his or her own conclusions. Presumably, the conclusion would be that Smith was wrong, but there was certainly a possibility that the reader might believe Smith, because the Daily provided no direct contradictions to Smith's specific propositions. It was the Daily's duty to leave the reader no room to believe Smith's assertions, but unfortunately the Daily left substantial room. The Daily also attempted to justify printing the article. The editors stated that "suppressing such viewpoints - no matter how heinous - only leaves them to fester," and thus the viewpoints must be aired and scrutinized. This would be true - if proper grounds for scrutiny were provided. Unfortunately, they were not. The editors essentially claimed that they had the obligation to help spread a disease, lest the disease spread for itself. Perhaps they thought they were innoculating their readers, providing them with a- vaccine that would stimulate their ;mmn _a _ct m .nepa r-n - Queers are different, have distinct culture To the Daily: Regarding your recent editorial ("The Queer Kiss-In," 10/21/93), I was pleased that the Queer Kiss-In was featured. I would like to raise one particular point of contention; I object to the statement that "(homosexuals) are no different from anyone else." I, for one, do not want to be like everyone else. What ever happened to the ideas of multiculturalism? Queer people have had historical contributions erased from history's textbooks; we have had our vivid and dynamic culture invalidated, stolen, ignored, and surpressed. I want lesbians, bisexuals, and gay men to be more than just tolerated; tolerance means nothing. I want queer people to be recognized as a distinct group of men and women with a different set of values, hopes, beliefs, and aesthetic sensibilities. While many of these value sets cross over into different societal groups, and some componants of each group's sensibilities may be universal, each minority has a unique blend that gives life and dynamism to these groups. I want Queer contibutions to our greater society to be supported and appreciated; most of all, I want Queers to be recognized and supported - not marginalized. Recent national controversy over California's gas chamber method of execution has led to a debate that hist Michigan State University (MSU) close to home. Prof. Richard Rech, a scientist in MSU's College of Veterinary Medi-' cine, may be conducting tests on labo- ratory rats to investigate the pain- killing effects of cyanide gas. The test would include inserting balloons into the anuses of 60 rats and inflating them until the rats squeal and exhibit pain. Cyanide gas will then he administeredi and the rats uill that indicate pain relief. This would demonstrate that cyanide "has anal- gesic properties." The tests would challenge the American Veterinary Association's published standards that classify cya- nide as "unacceptable" for animal eu- thanasia. The standards call cyanide dangerous to personnel and the nature of deaths caused by it "aesthetically objectionable." Depending on the findings, the tests could legitimize California's use of the gas as a form of execution, a nractice that has heen uestioned by dards of decency. Cyanide gas kills by blocking the body's cells' ability to take in oxygen, causing chemical asphyxiation. What has been forgotten in this controversy, however, is that the prac- tice of capital punishment itself is contrary to popular standards of de- cency - regardless of the method. Although the tests could provide important scientific information, they should not be seen as justification for any form of state-endorsed murder, even if they prove cyanide to have analhesic nrnnerties. 1