4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, January 29, 2001 L71 id i unt & tflg 420 MAyNRuSmhEd ANN ARBOR~, MI 48109 daily. letter s@urnich. edu The world as viewed through a kaleidoscope e DUSTIN J. SEIBERT iH MAN FESTO EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 GEOFFREY GAGNON Editor in Chief MICHAEL GRASS NICHOLAS WOOMER Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. n Nov. 14, 2000, H.E.A.D.S., the black male group and Hillel, the Jewish com- munity organization, met for the first time in unity as H2. We viewed the histori- cal film, "From The Swastika to Jim Crow," and participated in a discus- sion following. Through this, we found that there exist many more simi- larities between blacks and Jews than previously imagined. We have since met again and will continue to assemble for future engagements. Only at Michigan. I happen to pride myself on the fact that I chose a university accredited with such an ethni- cally diverse environment to complete my colle- giate education. Sure ... some of the powers that be preferred for me to attend a historically black university, but I always had the impression that those universities did not represent the "real" world. On that note, I also refused to attend any small colleges, Catholic schools, or any other relatively non-diverse university whose student population I feel is not a substantial representa- tion of the global population. I find all of that in the University and I commend our generation of young people for being among the first in the country to be able to cross-culturally coexist peacefully and harmoniously as we do (break out into song here). Yet I wonder if it is only a peaceful coexis- tence and not much else. The truth regretfully remains that relations are not as solid as they can be, but my inquisitive nature forces me to pon- der on any possible extent of ethnic unification. Will there ever exist the unbridled unity that so many civil rights activists fought and often died for? Or is it just a massive pipe dream on the same virtually unreachable plane as world peace? I wish to dissect the issue of interracial relations in the United States in an attempt to gain a greater understanding. I don't believe that there is one intelligent mind on earth that does not harbor prejudices for another group of people. So many don't real- ize this and many refuse to accept it, but it is almost undeniable. The latency of prejudice in our country, however, is very beneficial, as they certainly don't exist on unhealthy levels for many people. Where do our prejudices form? Sometimes they are gained through bad person- al experiences with numerous people of the same ethnic group. Oftentimes, however, our prejudices are a result of our upbringing. If peo- ple are raised by or constantly in the presence of influential individuals who make attempts to teach them so-called "values" that are ethnically demeaning and antisocial, these ideas will become incorporated into their way of thinking at an early age. The latter describes my beef with some par- ents and certain other elders with influence. I notice that far too many members of the older generation still possess the "old-school" mental- ity: That which refuses to let go of the social standard that existed many years ago. These are people who carry the belief that folks should only date within their "race," and also have a natural contempt for some other ethnic group. I do understand that, with many people, such a negative attitude that may never reside can remain within people for a lifetime. Regardless, parents who claim to ingrain positive values into their children and at the same time breed ethnic contempt into them, are doing their children an ultimate injustice, contradicting their hopes to raise their children with a proper outlook of the world. Cultural differences play the most vital role in the difficulty. As long as different ethnic groups with different lifestyles coexist on the same plot of soil, there are bound to be compli- cations. The psychological idea of ethnocen- trism - the belief that one's ethnic group or religion is superior to all others - is the ulti- mate issue, as most of the world's population carries this idea. The close-mindedness of humans allows us to believe that our way is the right way and the next man is wrong because he isn't doing it my way. For example, when I was younger, I was "taught" by a close white person that the way I spoke was "ignorant," and that it had nothing to do with my ethnicity or the cul- tural norms with which I was born and raise The latter example is trivial, yet the same co cept works on such a wider scale and it leads to often ill results. To spite someone automatically on sight of skin color is entirely absurd; unfortu- nately it is an all too common ritual, even in our so - called "civilized" society. Another related problem is frequent mis- judging of other cultures. Stereotypes are a dis- tortion of cultural differences that people often get hung up on; many of them are ludicrous nevertheless. I witness such ridiculousness every time a white person tells me that they scared or nervous to go to my hometown Detroit. Every time a young black person expresses a "natural" distrust of all white peo- ple. Or for every other ridiculous assumption about a group of people that has no true merit. Many of us do it jokingly, but it often becomes ingrained, leading to trouble. I'm not saying that I have the answer ... I don't think anyone does. Alleviating the situa- tion is a matter of the individual allowing his o herself to open up to new things and differeW people. Ignore what youmay have been raised to think about different people, throw all of your inhibitions out of the window and step out of the comfort zone that is comprised of those that look only like you do. And to Hades with the stereotypes -judge the character of the person, because in our society, not enough weight is put on the individual. Me, I don't discriminate: I trust no one. Knowledge. Dustin J Seibert 's column runs eveP other Tuesday. Give him feedback at www.michigandaily.com/forum or via e-mail at dseibert@umich.edu CSJ ruling prevents Election Board from running a clean race TO THE DAILY: I cannot sit quietly after reading the arti- cle about Central Student Judiciary ruling to reinstate all candidates that were disqualified from the Michigan Student Assembly elec- tions ("Dowdell, Curtin allowed to return," 3/12/01). CSJ says that the MSA Election Board has "overstepped" its powers. This is incor- rect. The Board's function is to state rules for the elections and enforce them. A crucial moment in MSA elections is the candidates meeting, in which the Election.Director dis- cusses all the important rules, as well as cer- tain areas the board wants to focus on enforcing. Because this is vital information for the candidates, it is of the utmost impor- tance that all candidates are present. The Election Board is a "living" group - each board interprets MSA Election Code and rules differently. So, a candidate claim- ing that he or she has been to the meeting before does not excuse him or her from atten- dance. CSJ has upheld this notion that the Board is not bound to previous interpreta- tions. As in the past, the candidates meeting has been mandatory. When I served as Election. Director, I made it clear that any candidate who was not present at the meeting would be disqualified, if he or she did not let me know in advance of the absence. All candidates who were not present did indeed let me know. From my understanding, all the candi- dates who were disqualified from the election did not inform Election Director Ryan Nor- folk of their absence. Defendants claimed they thought the rule wouldn't be enforced because it wasn't in the past. The truth is that or- Tn c -(O W ARV WF VER R N f4STAtt. 'Iw. .......... ...... ......_.... ... ... N Not 1'~~4s ke t4K SK sgRtcos.~ I6wqt- . X q 2t t _ 6 K. the rule hasn't needed to be enforced in the past. Also, to claim that the board was biased against the Defend Affirmative Action Party is wrong. The board disqualified several can- didates from all parties. It just so happens that one of DAAP's candidates was running for president. To call the board racist or biased is simply a way for DAAP to express disdain for a ruling that DAAP does not like in the hopes that it will cause a change in their favor. Unfortunately, CSJ has affirmed this by not allowing the board to exercise its powers, even though the board did this with- out regard to party. In sum, I think Alok Agrawal is right in that "MSA elections are slowly going down the tube," and what makes it worse is that the board in charge of keeping things clean has been stripped of its power. One final note, I must commend DAAP for representing all parties in this case, not just itself. STEPHEN LUND LSA sophomore The letter writer served as election director during the Fall 2000 Michigan Student Assembly elections. NAACP's accusation may hurt the next basketball coach 1 To THE DAILY: I found the story "Martin to decide on Ellerbe's future: Some call firing of coach racial discrimination" (3/12/01) to be very depressing. This is not because I can, with- out a doubt, say that the firing has no raciaL motivation. I can however, say tha Brian Ellerbe is not a competent coach. When Ellerbe is fired, and a new head c.oach is hired, if this new coach is black, his appointment will somehow be tarnished as a "racially motivated" hiring. There are several excellent black coaches who could be given this job. It is unfortu- nate that the representatives from the NAACP cannot have the foresight to se what these accusations will do to the ne head coach. FRANK SANT Alumnus The class politics of 'objective' journalism NICK WOOMER BACK TO THE WOOM here is no such thing as "objective" journalism now and there never has been. Objectivity in reporting is a value that never should have existed and certainly f' shouldn't any more. These are not the angry ramblings of a leftist react- ing to the success of the blatantly ideological Fox News network, whose anchors and reporters have a curious tendency to confuse conservative rhetoric with empirical facts and then tell their viewers "we report, you decide." Rupert Mur- doch's right-wing propaganda machine is far less insidious than this ossifying value among liberal elites that "reporting with integrity" equals "objective reporting." Journalism, like every other communicative medium, is necessarily subiective but the imoli- is quoteworthy or whether it ought to be para- phrased. It is here that the reporter's personal psychology and value system comes into play. Clearly, a number of factors shape the way an individual views (and reports) the world, not the least of which is his or her socioeconomic class. As with just about every other professional career, a college degree is basically a prerequi- site for getting any type of reporting job in the mainstream media. It ought to come as no sur- prise, then, that the people who bring us the news every day are almost exclusively white and almost exclusively hail from upper and upper middle class backgrounds. But if this is true, then the American news media is run almost exclusively by a very specif- ic class - the same class that controls the vast majority of the world's capital. Naturally, what is important to a typical person might not be nearly as important to a rich capitalist. Despite this, the overwhelming majority of stories in the ues framing the way news is presented is the recent conflict between Northwest Airlines and the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Associatiol the mechanics' union, where coverage is primar- ily focused on how the strike affects "you" ("you" meaning upper or upper-middle class professionals who fly frequently). I suppose a potential strike is more "objectively" important than the mechanics' complaints about wages and their pension benefits - assuming you have enough money to fly in the first place. It could probably be argued that we need not worry about these types of "objective" presen tions. If a reporter is good, he or she will be abl to divorce himself or herself as much as possible from his or her class biases and decide what is "worth reporting" from a neutral standpoint. But while there might be degrees of objectivity reporters can attain, the modem value ofjournal- istic objectivity, even when it is acknowledged to be a mere ideal, breeds popular complacency Vvwrc~. lliyoJuz; Lid uvvt (v r J a v4A a.Y' Zi.AIZAttI..wt u