4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 24, 2000 Ele Sitligatu DaiIl Who is really wasting their vote? 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 daily.letters@umich.edu Edited and marnaged by students at tihe University of Michigan MIKE SPALHN Editor in Chief EMI LY ACHENBAUM Editorial Page Editor Unless otherwise noted, unsiged editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Daily's editorial boar dAll other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. ;Students can learn from groups on campus L isten up, you undecided voters: Your declared the week of October 23-27 days of fence-sitting must soon come Voter Education Week: A series of free than end. activities designed to help you make So, you're having a tough time the most of your votes this November. -eciding whom you'd like to call your And remember, there is more to be next president. You've seen the decided on this ballot than just the next debates; you've registered to vote. commander-in-chief. In addition to a -Maybe you even got the chance to see student debate between advocates for Al Gore or Ralph Nader while they different presidential candidates, were in Ann Arbor. You're familiar debates will be held between candidates with this year's hot-button political for Ann Arbor Mayor, 53rd district State ssues, but you just aren't sure who will House Representative, and US House of *st represent your views. Maybe you Representatives. Discussion groups will think all the candidates are the same. also be held on issues such as social Maybe you think your vote doesn't security and school vouchers. matter. The evening news loves to release Your votes do count. According to studies that show how clueless our gen- the polls, the presidential race is so eration is about politics, that we don't close in the state of Michigan that cur- care who our leaders are; it is up to us to rently undecided voters wield all the prove them wrong. Even if you can't power; you are going to determine who make it to the Voice Your Vote events, it -gets this state's electoral votes. And is imperative to the future of this state Elecrtion Day, November 7th, is and of this country that you educate approaching with lightning speed. yourselves about the issues. Many This leaves you with a very impor- young people believe that by not voting tant decision to make, and very little in an election, they are making a worth- time in which to make it. Over the while political statement: That nothing course of the next week, it is up to you on the ballot is even worth their time. to become the most informed voter this Resist the urge to join them; a democra- state has ever seen. Fortunately for you, cy cannot function if its citizens refuse the Michigan Student Assembly has to participate. Rmember AIDS? Ad-ing to the lax attitude toward HIV In an election year where the biggest catch phrase involves the notorious "wasted vote," I've got a few questions to ask. What is this wasted vote that everyone warns me about? "Don't waste your vote by voting for him! He's. got no chance!" Waste my vote ? What is a wasted vote? Is voting for someone you believe in a wasted vote? Not in my book. In my book, the only wasted vote is a misinformed one. The power of a democracy lies in the people's abil- ity to vote for a persona who best represents their views. This isn't a' high school student government election; ManiSh it's not about voting for Raiji the person who throws the best parties and * smokes the best weed.: ii Iy: It's about voting for the person who you think is best suited for leading this nation. And unfortunately, too many peo- ple don't understand that and get shepherded into voting for a "winner." If you don t support someone, don't vote for him because of the donkey or elephant sewed into his boxers, because that's a surefire way of making sure that your voice is silenced. So do this nation a favor, and don't vote if you're out to vote for a person whose plans you don't understand, whose ideologies you don't agree with, and whose integrity is about as strong as the paper this is written on. Do us all a favor and stay as far away from a voting booth as you can, because not voting at all is better than voting uninformed. There are more than two candidates running for office this year, and if Bush or Gore don't appeal to you, don't settle simply because you fear you have no choices. There are six candidates on the ballot in Michigan, and voting for any one of them without knowing what the others stand for is really the only wasted vote. Do you feel that the government is too intrusive? Do you feel that the budget surplus is a shining example of government theft? Should the government have no place in the abortion debates? Do you believe in interna- tional free-markets, regardless of human rights violations? Are you entirely opposed to affir- mative action? Should the education system be privatized? Is the war on drugs intrusive and wasteful? If you say yes to these issues, than look into Harry Browne, and avoid Gore and Bush like the plague, because they will not represent your needs. Do you support gun control? School vouchers ? Funneling more money into social security'? Do you think that increased govern- ment control over the airwaves should limit the amount of sex and violence on television? Are you opposed to genetically altered foods? Opposed to nuclear power because of the envi- ronmental damage done by nuclear waste? Do you support increased sexual education for children? John Hagelin does, and if you agree, than maybe he's the candidate you ought to showing your support for. Do you disagree with sending aid to for- eign nations? Do you believe in closed Ameri- can borders'? Should Christianity be the driving force behind our government? Do you support concealed weapons? Is abortion'"homi- cide - and should doctors who perform abor- tions be prosecuted for such crimes? Should welfare be entirely disposed of? If you answered yes, than why vote for Bush or Gore when you can vote for a person who supports what you support? Why not vote for Howard Phillips, who believes in all of the above? Do you feel that corporate sponsorship of the electoral process has destroyed the democ- ratic system? Should the government be more concerned about the unequal distribution of wealth in this nation? Do you support trigger locks and background checks on gun purchas- es? Should the budget surplus be spent on improving the urban school system and gov- ernmental infrastructure? Do you support equal gay rights? Should investments be made to shift our dependence on environmentally damaging fossil fuels towards more sustain- able energy such as hemp? If so, than Bush and Gore are not going to speak for you if elected, but Ralph Nader will. These are your four other choices. These are the four candidates that you can "waste your vote" on. Remember this when election time rolls around; once every four years, we are given the opportunity to vote for the person who will become arguably the most powerful person in this world. You have two weeks. If you've never heard of these four people before, you have two weeks to catch up, and figure out who truly represents your beliefs. If you're fed up with the way this government works, then don't vote for either of the two parties responsible for making this government the way it is. Are you going to walk into the voting booth in two weeks and vote for the candidate that you admire, or are you going to walk in and waste your vote on a person you don't believe in? - Manish Raiji can be reached via e-mail at mraiji@umich.edu. '1 can handle It. Oh, who am I kidding? They drive me freakin' crazy!' - First-year Music student Dan Wilansky on the campus ladybug infestation. 0 0 Pharmaceutical drug companies in the last decade have developed quite a itucrative business by inflating demand tfor their products with over-the-top mar- ,rketing strategies. Advertising on televi- sion, in print, on the radio and on the internet has reached a fevered pitch, bombarding people with messages that the cure for just about any ailment - from allergy symptoms to baldness to erectile dysfunction - is only a doctor's visit away. But recently, these ads have taken a turn for the worse. Specifically in the newly developing market of AIDS drugs, advertising has become a social problem. Recent nation-wide ad blitzes seem to say it's OK to have AIDS because prescription drugs are here to save you. Well, nothing could be further from the truth. The ads have been targeted mostly at gay men, appearing on billboards in major metropolitan areas and in the pages of national periodicals. They usual- ly show a man or sometimes a gay couple in their late twenties surrounded by friends with the message, "I'm positive" or "We're positive," respectively, in bold print. The ads seem to that the lifestyle of the HIV positive man has not changed dramatically, that he can still go on living his life. These ads contribute to lax atti- tudes about AIDS. As awareness and fear of AIDS as a serious illness becomes less a social real- ity, the true reality has not improved because threats of acquiring the virus have not diminished in this country or abroad. The social consequences of promoting an even more carefree attitude toward AIDS through careless advertising are disastrous. When the AIDS epidemic is reduced to mere trend, when the HIV positive man is lauded as a kind of bill- board celebrity and when formerly fear- ful and cautious individuals are lulled into a false sense of security by these ads, the results are clearly awful. These ads are proving to have a negative impact on conceptions of HIV because they almost promote a kind of HIV-positive band- wagon exclusivity. Obviously, with this kind of message, a more lax attitude toward safe sex and a rise in HIV infec- tion rates are the consequences. And AIDS drugs don't work for everyone. Although news broke last week that an AIDS vaccine has proven effective in preliminary tests done on lower primates, such a miracle cure may be years away. Even if the vaccine does appear to be effective for humans, it faces years of FDA testing. At this point - being very optimistic - we can only begin to imag- ine a cure for AIDS on the horizon. But such hope seems ever more tenuous. AIDS is no longer a hot-button issue. Support for fundraising and research has dwindled in recent years, much like sup- port for rainforest preservation collapsed in the '80's. Too many now ignore the deadliness of AIDS. As this virus slips from the spotlight, apathy and careless- ness has taken the place of safety. The only certain way to avoid the onset of AIDS is to protect oneself from acquiring the virus in the first place. Safe sex, abstinence and limited risk behavior are the only ways to truly avoid this dis- astrous modern epidemic. And these ads continue to rip apart that foundation, that AIDS awareness safety net. Magazines with any social conscience should pull these dangerous ads from their publications. Celebrating an as-yet- incurable disease to sell drugs is repre- hensible. Go ahead, throw your vote away TO THE DAILY: I found David Horn's column ('Kodos, Kang, Clinton, Nader and pop machines at lunch," 10/17/00) to be very interesting. Horn's use of a Simpson's episode to persuade our vote at first seems very inticing. However, I feel very sorry for Horn; it seems that he missed the end of that episode: Kodos: It's true, we are aliens. But what are you going to do about it? It's a two-party sys- tem; you have to vote for one of us. Man 1: He's right, this is a two-party sys- tern. Man 2: Well, I believe I'll vote for a third- party candidate. Kang: Go ahead, throw your vote away. REID WAINESS LSA SOPHOMORE Spartan attends game and leaves town disgusted TO THE DAILY: Often I hear from friends in Ann Arbor about how :much more sophisticated life is at the University of Michigan, and how us "Cow College" folk are doomed to a life of manage- ment at McDonald's. It's all in good fun, how- ever, and we all know that none of it is meant to be hurtful or derisive. Saturday, however, my roommate and I attended the football game involving our two teams in Michigan Stadium and left complete- ly disgusted. If Ann Arbor is truly more sophisticated than East Lansing, then please let me be a cheap beer-swilling, lazy, dirty red- neck any day of the week. We took seats in the student section, among a couple other MSU fans and the rest of the University student body. We were then pelted with a rain of garbage, filthy names, derogatory comments and the stadium security attempted to deny us our seats wh'en we paused for a moment to decide how best to navigate through the packed crowd. I was hit in the face with a large cup full of pop and soaked to the bone. A little of this pop spilled onto an older man in front of me, who turned around and informed me that my roommate and I were a disgrace. Vk were the disgrace. Us, dripping with pop, pelted with half-eaten marshmallows and pizza boxes were the disgrace. At one point, a young man in the stands behind us nearly started a fist fight with one of our fellow Spartans next to us, and after breaking the fight up, we decided it was time to leave. We weren't watching a football game. We were enduring a kind of punishment. There have been times when Ann Arbor had some things over East Lansing. I've often felt that it was just as nice a place, if not better in some respects. The downtown area is beauti- ful, the Huron River is a wonderful sight to behold. However, the people leave something to be desired. I've come to the conclusion that while anyone is free to walk the streets of East Lansing, those who do not wear the Maize and Blue are not welcome in Ann Arbor. I love my friends dearly, and the area is nice, but it will take a lot for me to ever return to your city. CHRIS BOYER MSU SOPHOMORE THOMAS KULJURGIS T :NT Ai~V1 iv LYSPEAIN W / ~re IPACESllt 747 EU Sr/WGelSo~e* Al 1U5LP Ft o 4A &RoUP ThArS 6JELL . Lwe D APIP ~1'ccre7C-T sy ALL t4D'A7I UV P~CibDD UR~k ~"'/ fit f ^.N: &l W1 135 down, 455 to go: George Ws history of execution OP-ART BY GILLEs LABORDERIE Justice - desired by many but understood by few. What truly defines justice? Is it simply some sort of payback aimed at the satisfaction of the victim - and at what cost? Everyone speaks of how justice '_ must be served, but who is the justice really for - and how extreme must that justice be? Taking a life is arguably the harshestX punishment that can be handed down. The use of capital punish- Erin ment has more than McQulnn tripled since its re- instatement in 1976. As more and more brutal crimes are being committed, people are searching for some sort of justice, a repayment for the losses that they them- selves have suffered. And they ask for that repayment in the form of flesh and blood. separate cases that have brought the falsely accused off death row, the legal system does make mistakes. But the chilling reality of the situation is, just how many innocent people were not spared, and had to pay for the short- comings of an arrogant governor or a judge with a personal vende'tta? As Texas hails as the execution state, boasting 232 men and women sentenced to lethal injection since 1976, I am somewhat fearful for the future of the country if George W. Bush were to be elected president. This Republican candidate who refers to himself as the "law and order governor," exhibits a heartless attitude that would no doubt reflect in many other aspects of his attitudes towards poverty, foreign aid and the overall welfare of the country. But to Bush, who in his time served has seen more than 135 people to the cold, hard, executionary table says, "As far as I'm con- cerned, there has not been one innocent per- son executed since I've been the governor." That is simply flat-out ignorant, G.W. Even now, in the face of overwhelming evidence of DNA error and a faulty legal system, Bush sticks to his I'm-so-tough-on- nerve to mock Texas-executed Karla Faye Tucker in a formal interview, amusing the interviewer with an imitation of this now deceased inmate's final plea of, "I don't want to die." It was tastefully re-enacted by G.W. with pursed lips and a whimpering tone. Texas also executes the most juveniles and mentally retarded citizens. The first time Bush ever issued a temporary 30 day 0 reprieve for anyone sentenced to die was recently, after he was brought under the eye of public scrutiny for being a called a merci- less executioner. As the presidential race narrows, he surely doesn't want to be known for his previous track record of turning his back on possible innocence. The death penalty is only for those who don't have enough money to buy their inno- cence. It is the punishment for those who cannot afford the best lawyer. It is the pun- ishment for those who kill a white person (83 percent of all death-punished cr-imes were for the murder of a white man or woman). And finally, it is the punishment of an angry public, looking to place blame wherever they can. "NAM" 40W OUIO10 WN P1 I> : m