4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 11, 1999 C l e aictigFnt :4Dtctllj 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 daily.letters@umich.edu Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan HEATHER KA.MINS Editor in Chief JEFFREY KOSSEFF DAVID WALLACE Editorial Page Editors Fighting for God, c an we talk about the Bible? Better yet, let's not. There are dozens upon dozens of catego- rizations and issues that are just itching to cause arguments and divisions among the Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the maority ofthe Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. members of our won- derful community. But one thing that nearly all can agree on is the utter futility of the Diag preachers' mission. Christian. Jewish. black, white or whatever, Wolverines almost universally find the Diag preachers more annoying than help- til. Day after day, they come to our campus with signs decrying we horrible sinners. ("Go to hell. Go Just did i t Jack Schillaci country and the Diag preachers And like teeny-boppers at an LFO concert, crutch for the "weak-minded." Oh the most studens walk through and wonder drama. but does anyone esides red-faced what the hell it is they're yammering on Minnesotans. who by now have uot to want about. him to shut up) really care what he has to say There are those that stop. They listen. about this subject? They yell back. Sometimes they get really Al Gore and Georue W Bush have both angry. They walk away. In the end, just like spoken about our nation's spiritual basis and those that walk on by they find it as convinc- the importance of god as a cement to build ing as when a Bush asks us to read his lips. communities. For example. both have made Part of this has to do with the speakers' expansion of public support for faith-based method of argument and their audience. organizations a significant component of Academic types are notoriously critical of their campaigns. According to GW's things they can't dissect into a proof, empir- Website, government must turn "first to ical test or thesis. Mix in the fact that most faith-based organizations. charities and com- Diag dwellers answer pointed philosophical munity groups to help people in need. questions by screaming, ignoring the ques- Through these "armies of compassion," we tion or just repeating what they've already can overcome societal problems and rebuild said. usually verbatim, and you have a recipe our sense of community. Blah. blah, blah, for wasted time. In-depth theological discus- blah, blah. sion this is not. This isn't the Great Awakening. Politicos Using religion as a way to create a public and the ritfraff in the Diag are not Jonathon fervor is not limited to Ann Arbor, however. Edwards. We're not on a spiritual highway to Unfortunately, it's just as ubiquitous else- hell, though much of Washington's lip ser- where. We've all witnessed the recent explo- vice on the topic suggests otherwise. sion of religious trendiness with Cosmo, Religion was not meant to be a punch Details and their ilk printing articles about line or a campaign slogan. It wasn't meant to which stars believe what, complete with be something to bring up when you run out paragraph-long sidebars (poorly) summariz- of talking points. Religion. roughly, is about ing the basic tenets of Scientology, the a very personal connection one feels Kaballah. Buddhism and so forth. between themselves and a higher power. It And of course, religion has always been a will necessarily be debated publicly, but it big issue in politics, be it the much-fabled should not be wielded like a sword against separation of church and state, or campaign hapless political enemies or unwitting col- funding for and perhaps influence over many lege students trying to get to class. candidates. Lately, indeed, there has been a Discussion among faiths is vital, but it surge in the number of politicos who call on should not take the form of screaming and religion to ease our woes. Numerous politi- jumping. up and down. Understanding and cians on both sides of the aisle have capital- tolerance are important if we are to prevent ized on the immorality of the Clinton White the religious conflicts that have plagued House to call for a return to our spiritual human history, but they cannot be achieved roots. by fiat or through politics. Jesse Ventura made headlines two weeks -.Jack Schillaci can be reached via ago when he called organized religion a e-mail at jschillaa unich.edu. .Jmen. Nike finally responds to labor activists 01 F or years, Nike has been the leader in the world of athletics. But despite its industry dominance, Nike's labor record has been shameful. It was only last Thursday that Nike gave in to lengthy activist pressure and publicly disclosed the locations of factories that produce University-licensed apparel. Historically, with its high-profile image and marketing campaigns, Nike had always sought to advertise its prod- ucts - while avoiding tough questions and allegations regarding the production of those goods. But Nike has taken an important step and given activist groups such as Students Organized for Labor Equality the full public disclosure they spent hours protesting for. Of course, it is natural to question Nike's motives. Would Nike have taken this step in the absence of pressure from human rights activists around the country? Is Nike simply interested in improving its tarnished image? Probably so. But Nike's motives are less important than its actions. Regardless of Nike's intent, several things are clear. First, activist groups such as SOLE deserve recognition for providing an effective stimulus to push Nike into action. They have proved that student-led protests are not a relic of the past. Instead, student activism remains an important force in upholding human rights world- wide. The countless hours of protests. shouts on the Diag and the siege of University President Lee Bollinger's office did not all go for naught. These pas- sionate maneuvers provided the impetus to action. And in a world of stodgy beau- rocracy and slow-moving institutions that tend to resist change, that difficult first step is often the most crucial. Nike has reduced workers' hours, raised the minimum working age, significantly curtailed the use of toxic substances to equal or exceed the standards set by OSHA and decided to buy only from contractors who pay "at least the minimum wage, or the prevailing industry wage, whichever is higher," according to its 1998 Annual Report. Nike also terminated contracts with eight factories in four different coun- tries that refused to meet its labor stan- dards. And now it has agreed to full public disclosure - all notable, but overdue and imperfect. It is necessary for the rest of the apparel industry to follow suit. One would be foolish to pretend the end of the fair labor practices crusade is near. Ignoble conditions do not arise overnight, nor do they disappear with the crack of dawn. But as Eric Brakken, an organizer for the United Students Against Sweatshops, said in Friday's New York Times, "What Nike did is important. It blows open the whole notion that other companies are putting forward that they can't make such disclosures." The precedent this situation has set is most important. We have now seen once again the power of concerned citizens to spearhead positive change across the globe. Times like these make one believe not only in the power of free speech, but also in the ability to rectify past evils. directly to hell. Do not pass Go! Do not col- lect S200," would be a good one, though they're usually less whimsical, more fire- breathing.) They want to save us, to deliver us from the horror of our debauched lifestyles before the fiery pits of the under- world engulf us. After all, the millennium and ensuing apocalypse are near. And if there is any one place that is categorically void of spirituality, it's got to be large public universities. Student life is a cesspool of youthful excess and we hedonists need to be put back on the path toward enlightenment. At least that's what I've gleaned of their thinking while walking through the Diag. Out of this misguided sense of urgency and necessity, the Diag religious folk try to con- vert the preached to at least five days a week. THOMAS KULJURGIS ..Nc AT1 E1Y S.EAK. NG c Poatential fallout Senate must ratify nuclear arms treaty Mental illness is a social movement To THE DAILY: After a week of events for Mental Illness Awareness Week, I want to acknowledge and thank the Daily for playing a role in promoting awareness and education about mental health and mental illness. Historically. the only information that the media has disseminated about issues regarding mental health has been negative and stereotypical. In the past two weeks. however. the Daily has risen above such narrow-minded and stigma-producing thinking, by printing three well-written arti- cles about the stigma surrounding mental illness and about the events on campus for MIAW. In organizing these events, Mentality's goal was and is manifold. Among others, the major reasons were to promote and cre- ate awareness about the realities of mental health and mental illness, to educate stu- dents about the many available mental health resources, to support and give a voice to those with mental illness, and to "break the silence" and create a dialogue within our own community about mental health. To suffer from a mental illness is enough of an isolating experience on its own; we hope to create a dialogue so that the experience of a mental illness doesn't have to be comn- pounded by the present need to hide it. In addition, the more comfortable that people feel with the rue concepts that mental health is something that everyone has, that mental illness doesn't discriminate and that there is no shame in seeking help, the more likely it is that people will recognize poten- tial threats to their mental heaith before the threats become problems. Again, we applaud and thank the Daily for helping us to raise these issues, and we also thank all of those who attended and expressed interest in the week's events. As the Daily's Sept. 30 editorial said. "Get involved and stay informed. Mental illness may not feel like a social movement, but it is. It's everyone's responsibility." "/ ti \\_\ -Oill. immawl ll" tdk* ""' "' , - - - ", , % , , 6"r Ioioi4ii ". , L-- . t shouldn't be a controversial issue. Ever since the ratification of the nuclear non- proliferation treaty nearly 30 years ago, it has been a consistent policy goal of the United States to limit the development and spread of nuclear technology throughout the world. Few things would be more effective at doing so than a ban on nuclear weapons testing, and yet the current proposal to do just that, the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, seems unlikely to be ratified by the Senate, and may be killed outright. This would be a grave mistake: our leaders in Washington should consider the future of the people they represent and pass this treaty. The CTBT would extend the current international ban on open-air nuclear testing to underground explosions, resulting in a complete testing ban. Compliance would be monitored with seismological equipment that can pinpoint the location and magni- tude of any nuclear test. Supporters argue that without the ability to test nuclear weapons, it would be almost impossible for rogue nations to develop an effective nuclear program, stopping proliferation in its tracks and locking in our current nuclear edge. Nations that already have a nuclear capacity, like India and Pakistan, would be unable to modernize their stockpiles with any confidence in the effectiveness of their weapons, making the current possibility of a nuclear arms race in the region that more unlikely. A world without nuclear testing would be safer and secure, supporters assert. Critics point out that the treaty would also hamper our ability to further develop our nuclear technology, threatening our national security. They doubt whether or not we would be able to detect an underground nuclear explosion, despite past successes with India and Pakistan, and equate the treaty with unilateral disarmament. As the treaty comes up for debate this week, senators like Jesse Helms (R-N.C.) and James Inhofe (R-Okla.) are intent on killing it, setting a dangerous precedent. After pushing so long and so hard for nuclear restraint, after slapping trade sanc- tions on India and Pakistan in the wake of their nuclear foray last year, after painstak- ingly making clear to nations like Iraq and North Korea that attempts on their part to develop nuclear technology would not be tolerated by the international community, a turnabout now would be hypocritical and invite a renewed fervor in every nation with nuclear aspirations. The United States has already survived nearly a decade without a nuclear test, thanks to advanced computer technology that can simulate testing in the lab. Our nuclear stockpile remains as effec- tive as ever, and the CTBT would do little to change this. An express provision of the treaty allows the United States to withdraw from the pact if our stockpile's effectiveness can no longer be scientifically certified. Our future is secure. The only thing that might threaten it is the defeat of the CTBT. playing field for everyone. Universities in this country are the only group that would ever consider such an action. In the real world, people are graded on performance. At work, when a supervisor writes your review, it is based on your per- formance -- not on your performance com- pared to other people from a specific ethnic group and background that you happen to be in. Yet the ETS wants to start grouping people together to make the system as fair as possible. Well, the system isn't always fair. That's the way it is. This has nothing to do with diversity. This has everything to do with changing how we as a society evaluate people: Do we evaluate people based on who they are and what they've done (cur- rent system). or do we evaluate people based on where they came from and people who are similar to them (proposed system). Sooner or later you're going to have to be graded against everyone, and not just the people who are from your socioeconomic background. It is time we put a stop to this fairy tale world that some people wish to create and welcome everyone to reality. MIKE DAUBER ENGINEERING SENIOR not deserve the right to higher education (just maybe not here). Nor am I saying that this is an elitist institution, but it, does attempt to maintain some degree of excel- lence. So why turn away excellence in favor of diversity? My apologies to those minorities here who do excel on a daily basis, and who, even with the disintegration of Ann Arbor, would still be here. Thanks also, though, to those of you who should not be here. The curve in Econ would not have been the same without you. Mark another one up on the transcript. DUSTIN LEE LSA SOPHOMORE Muir's column was stereotypical To THE DAILY: I would like to thank The State News' Pat 0 Muir for his wonderfully insightful comments in his Oct. 7 column, "A2 not as diverse as you'd think." It's nice to know that someone in today's society is still able to stereotype peo- ple (in case you can't tell, I'm being sarcas- tic). If this is the way Muir sees the world, I suggest that he talk to the American Nazi party or the KKK - they're always looking for new recruits. ERIK ZEMPEL ENGINEERING JUNIOR MSU student: Campus vandalism was 'childish' TO THE DAILY: I would like to take this opportunity to sincerely apologize to the students, staff and faculty at Michigan. The defacing of your campus was noth- ing more than a foolish and childish prank. Though we cannot be sure that it was current Spartan who did it, I feel compelled to apol- JULIA KLEIN RC SOPHOMORE Affirmative action detrimental to 'U' SAT is accurate method for comparing students TO THE DAILY: I have to strongly disagree with the Daily's Oct. 7 editorial "Strive for Equality." I can't believe they are considering implementing a system where the students are put into categories based on 14 criteria (such as household income, ethnic back- ground, etc). The SATs serve as a means to compare all students on the same scale. Some people do better on it than others - that's life. We as a society can't continually try to level the playing field. When you TO THE DAILY: As a true advocate of civil rights, and one who would like to uphold the constitu- tional belief that both all men are created equal and that equal rights and opportuni- ties should not be denied to anyone, I am a staunch believer indthe fact that affirmative action must go. This is, in part, in response to the Daily's editorial "The verdict is still out" (10/6/99). Wah, wah, cry, moan, tear. I am sick and tired of hearing people at the University whine and complain about how we must maintain diversity by any. means necessary. Since its inception, affirmative action has done nothing but detrimentally affect this University. Sure diversity has increased but at what cost? At the cost of more quali- s.-aa 1%& im 1 rnnat Q a - Cn .-.n .Ann~u a~a*