4A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 4, 2001 OP/ED albe ltchMirbiguu Ijl 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 dailyletters@umich.edu 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. NOTABLE QUOTABLE ... Much of what is passing for pacifism in this instance is not pacifism at all but only the latest tedious manifestation of a well-known pre-existing condition: the largely reactionary, largely incoherent,- largely silly muddle of anti-American, anti-corporatist, anti-globalist sentiments that passes for the politics of the left these days." --- Michael Kelly, in his column in yesterday's Washington Post. 6 j~ C I f; N ----- I I 4 A C"AA$?icg o t'it wEs MKoYUE Asrt... Bullets for the protesters! (and democra y) N ICK WOVOMER BACK TO THE W)OOM A ast week, the Left digested three delightfully contrari- an articles from two of its delightfully contrarian sons -journalist Christopher Hitchens (loves fetuses, hates Mother Teresa) and popular European.intellec- tual Slavoj Zizek (thinks Marxism could use some help from the Son of God). In two articles for The Nation (available at www thenation. com), Hitchens has convincingly argued that the best way for the United States to compensate for its genocidal Middle East poli- cies is for it to overthrow the Taliban regime - which he calls "fascism with an Islamic face." Zizek published his analysis of Sept. 11 on www.lacan. com and remarked that "whenever we encounter such a purely evil Outside (he's referring to the terrorists), we should gather the courage to endorse the Hegelian lesson: in this pure Outside, we should recognize the distilled version of our own essence." Could it be, then, that when we examine the evil zealots who murdered more than 6,000 peo- ple, we detect a kernal of good old American fascism? For various reasons, this is not such an easy question to answer, bit by inverting it - by looking for Taliban-esque elements emerging in American society - I think the frightening answer becomes pretty obvious. Consider the following information: Last week, the Associated Press reported that a poll by the Sienna College Research Insti- tute found that 34 percent of people in enlight- ened New York state think "individuals who authorities identify as being sympathetic to ter- rorist causes" should be put into internment camps. It's not hard to understand the popular appeal of such a plan if "terrorist causes" only refers to groups like al-Qaida. The problem is, our government's "terrorists" can be someone else's freedom fighters. For example, the United States government once labeled Nelson Man- dela's African National Congress a "terrorist organization (with) ... a number of interests that were fundamentally inimical to the U.S." That's what Dick Cheney said in July 2000 as he tried to explain-away his 1986 vote against a House resolution demanding Mandela's release from prison and recognition of the ANC. In a full-page advertisement that appeared in Friday's Daily, '60s radical turned conserva- tive self-promoter David Horowitz noted the similarities between the current anti-war hyste- ria movement and the protests against the Viet- nam war. "In the 1960s and 1970s, the tolerance of anti-American hatreds was so high, that the line between dissent and treason was eventually erased," Horowitz wrote, insinuating that protesting "America's New War" is tantamount to treason. The penalty for treason, of course, is death. It'sfa good thing Ann Arbor is close to rural areas - even right-thinking students might object to a mass grave on the Diag; besides, Reds stink more than people do when they decompose. Recently patriotic program directors at the radio conglomerate Clear Channel, concerned about maintaining national unity, began what the corporation called a "grassroots effort" to distribute amongst themselves a list of 150 songs that should not be played. Thanks to one of America's most treasured values - irrespon- sible, crass capitalism, "praise Jesus!" - Clear Channel owns 1,213 stations across the country; many of them are popular music and rock sta- tions. Naturally, the "grassroots" list is full of un-American devil music like Simon and Gar- funkel's "Bridge Over Troubled Water," Cat Stevens' "Peace Train," and John Lennon's "Imagine." An article in The New York Times even disputed Clear Channel's "grassroots" excuse and reported that the list had originated, at least in part, in the corporate office. But the list's actual origins don't matter. If the list was a "grassroots effort," then that's even scarier - it means that radio program directors from all over the country were pressuring each other into "self'-censorship. In the radical academic community, schol- ars are also being censored or frightened into just shutting-up. Zizek limself is a victim of this new "radical purge" - a journal that was sup- posed to publish an article of his about V.I. Lenin (of whom he has recently been doing a lot of original thinking) decided the day after the attacks that it was "inopportune" to proceed. Combine these lesser-known occurrences with the high-profile assaults on (at least) scores of Arab-, Muslim- and Sikh-Americans, as well as the smearing of "Politically Incorrect" host Bill Maher and the future political outlook gets even more dismal. Significantly, when George W. Bush char- acterized life in Afghanistan in his speech before a joint session of Congress, he did not mention or even imply that the Taliban regime outlaws free speech but he did mention that under the Taliban "you can be jailed for owning a television." An army of skilled speechwriters, arguing over every single word in the address, decided that the Talibanized dystopia Bush would describe to America would be one where it is illegal to watch the networks that have been so uncritical of his administration; not a place where people can actively protest their govern- ment's actions. Respect for the First Amend- ment was not what the Bush administiration wanted to communicate to the American peo- ple, nor is it what the American people wanted to hear, and that is very frightening. Nick Woomer can be reached via e-mail at nwoomer@umich.edu. I How our Monkey-rn-Chief won my respect JOSH WICKERHAM TiUS 0 . WORLD uesday night I had the distinct plea- sure of sitting down in an intimate media room on North Campus with renowned perfor- mance and visual artist Karen Finley. (She's also known for rolling around naked in honey, which she did last night at the Michi- gan Theater). What began as Karen's asking the small group of art faculty and students (and me, the lone social sciences guy) to assess the impact of the very emotional events of the I I" on our scholarly and artistic projects quickly turned into something much more personal. As we shared stories about loss and acknowledged inappropriate WTC humor, we tried to under- stand how to make what we do - something personal and at the same time very public - into something that would fit. It's hard. Admittedly, like most, I'm still confused, and think my procrastination in writ- ing this column has had something to do with the fact that I want to write about issues that are important to me, but that somehow feel unim- portant now that we Americans know how the rest of the world lives. I know I can't change you by writing any of this. I can only do my best to articulate thought. And what my thought tells me is we must start thinking about the consequences of our actions. And even more important than simple thought is the real. We must act. But some people, especially those in power, have little to say and even less still to act on. "Recognize," New York mayor Rudolph Giuliani said, "that there is no room for neutrali- ty on the issue of terrorism. You're either with civilization or you're with terrorism." Bullshit. I'm for neither civilization nor terrorism. There is no dichotomy here. People with small minds dissect issues into polarity like this. (My respects to my high school econ teacher who said thesis and antithesis was a rational way to look at the world). The problem is that humanity has organized itself much like a clan of chimpanzees. The dominant male climbs to the top of the social heap and acts as the arbiter of permissible social conduct. He bites the chimps who get out of line, keeps the enemy "Other" monkeys away and munches on the choicest jungle leaves. He has it good, while the rest of have to behave.- Humnans, on the other hand, though theoreti- cally having more advanced cognitive abilities than monkeys, have it much worse than the lower primates. Humans have to work at jobs. they hate (or soon will, college set) when all monkeys do is eat and fuck. Humans have delu- sions of grandeur like that pretentious idea of "civilization" - a notion that has so far only given our species dabbles of art and a middle class lifestyle.* We're still playing the same monkey political games that our distant ances- tors played. The guy with the biggest stick wins. Yet it doesn't make me feel any better to know that our Monkey in Chief has the biggest one of all. It scares me to death. Now that it's "us" and "them," "America" vetsus "those who hate freedom" and all this rhetoric of war, war, war, I even begin to doubt that we live in a postmodern world. Because, for living in a period-many characterize as being distinctly postmodern, we still have to deal with a lot of modern crap. And Bush is the epitome of this. As much as the rest of us are at face value disempowered by media representations and the blurring of boundaries that comes from living in postmodern times, our boy on top thrives on his illegitimate power. As any artist can attest, their craft has become increasingly complicated after the events of Sept. 11. Considering myself an artist of the printed word, my job has gotten extreme- ly difficult as well. Can a person of conscious- ness simply ignore the fundamental shift that has rifted our society? Can that person proceed on a set course? The answer, obviously, is no. And that's why Dubya's job, though he makes it look hard, is easy. He's not a person of consciousness. Though he's not gone as far in polarizing issues as his dinosauric Cold War cronies, he's still using rhetoric that will get a lot of people killed. And that's the modern in action, with its "I'm right, you're wrong mentality," hanging like a giant anvil over my head. Ever since I realized in a very real sense that my life could end tomorrow, I've been stopping to enjoy things like beauty a lot more. Beauty is a very easy to realize social value. But beauty doesn't cut it when I now know the terror that the rest of the world faces nearly every day. I now have a renewed sense of responsibility. I realize I have nothing to lose by acting. I have a renewed sense that this growing peace move-, ment on campus will raise student conscious- ness in a swath of white light that could easily envelop the world, if we let it. And though I'm confused, I'm chugging along. That's because I tend to side with the val- ues in Emerson's transcendentalist thoughts. We must become the light that we wish the world to become in order that others may learn from us. Jesus, if I'm not mistaken, made a similarstate- ment. In the Gospel of Thomas, when Jesus's disciples asked him where they should go, he said, "There is light within a man of light, and it lights up the whole world. If he does not shine, he is darkness." Our boy, though his light is dimly cast like a fog across the globe, is strong and that's some- thing to be respected, even if it's just out of fear., After all, he still carries the biggest stick. Josh Wickerham can be reached via e-mail atjwickerh@umich.edu. *Restrictions do apply. "Middle class lifestyle "granted only to Americans and other oppressors. V LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Clinton should be next 'U' president difficult to replace. However, when it comes down to it, Bill Clinton may be the greatest fundraiser our country has ever known. This would bode very well for campus expansion dents parade through his living room after Michigan beat Penn State in 1998, Bollinger made his home the students' home. 'Well at least Bill Clinton let 20 somethings into his A