4 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 23, 2002 OP/ED albe £kiiuu Jt til 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 daily.letters@umich.edu NOTABLE QUOTABLE li EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 V 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. t tt s amazing the insight that parliamentarians can gain from 5,000 miles away." I ccP O'VJO G.AT% O&l' NEO "!B!LUFI I+ AlIN'T 5SO BAI NIrus.I (.ICT ?Ku-e5 WEY, M T~ or ~S1E I \oV1u I UH oK CEY 0 - Defense Sec. Donald Rumsfeld in yesterday's New York Times on concerns expressed by British parliamentarians over the treatment of al-Qaida and Taliban detainees being held in Guantanamo Bay. CA CELI 1tPGgt' "Q°h o' 'M0. . eoM (.2,3. o;. 1'-- I don't care if God tells you it's wrong MANISH RAIJI NOTHING CATCHY he biblically- inspired Spanish Inquisition ought to have convinced the k; world that justifying one.'s actions through ..religious channels is unsound. Since the hor- rors of the Inquisition failed, perhaps the politi- cal and philosophical thought of the Enlight- enment and post-Enlightenment ought to have convinced the world that justifying one's actions through religious channels is unsound. Since political and philosophical thought has failed, perhaps the presence of religious theocracies in the Arab world that breed terrorists ought to have shown the world that justifying one's actions through religious channels is unsound. Perhaps the next round of political and philosophical thought will convince the world that justifying one's actions through religious channels is unsound. Pardon rie for not holding my breath. If there's one salient lesson to be learned from human history - from Greek child sacrifice to Hindu widow burning to Islamic veils - it is this: Whatever good has come from actions motivated by religion pales in comparison to the egregious offenses afflict- ed upon humanity by religion. The bad out- weighs the good - by an incredibly large margin. One can argue about the boldness of that statement, but take the following example: The American Life League has recently decided that The Washington Times caters to "a group of liberal anti-Catholic bigots," according to ALL's illustriously uninformed president, Judie Brown. The hilarity of this statement, as anyone who has read The Washington Times knows, is that the news- paper is anything but liberal. So the question is this: What has Brown's chastity belt in a tangle? ALL funded a libelous advertisement in the Times (which can be viewed at http://www.all.org/news/cffcad.pdf) which attacked Frances Kissling of Catholics For a Free Choice. CFFC has committed the cardi- nal sin of (brace yourself) suggesting that there ought to be condoms in Africa. Con- doms and Catholicism don't mix very well, since the "go forth and procreate" tenet con- flicts pretty soundly with the "safe sex can stop the spread of AIDS" tenet. Essentially, CFFC is suggesting that Catholic beliefs are in conflict with African realities - and therefore, ought to be scrapped. My religion shouldn't make you die. The "sins" of CFFC don't stop there. They support abortion (on non-religious grounds), they support stem-cell research (on non-religious grounds) - they essential- ly wave the banner of Catholics who realize that religious dogma and political primacy are like beer before liquor: A really bad idea. ALL's response has been to martyr itself on every possible level. Political martyrdom is nothing new; Cornel West martyred him- self to the white upper class when Harvard President Lawrence Summers had the audac- ity to suggest that he live up to academic standards, former President Bill Clinton martyred himself to the "vast right-wing conspiracy" when his blowjobs became a political issue and Mumia Abu Jamal mar- tyred (and continues to martyr) himself to racism when he killed a police officer. But political martyrdom is particularly funny when a conservative majority (reli- gious white people) martyr themselves to "liberal bias" - especially when the liberal bias comes in the form of The Washington Times. The Washington Times!" I ought not even write this column because of the ridiculousness of these claims: The Washington Times is roughly as "liberally biased" as Dick "the heart attack" Cheney. yo why does Judie Brown get so worked up about the elimination of an uncre- ative advertisement that calls Frances Kissling "Con-Dumber." (Get it? Condom ... Con-dumber ... it's fiumy!) The problem is that the abortion debate (and the larger reproductive freedoms debate) is being railroaded by religious dogma. Here's the facts: You can be opposed to abortion on secular grounds and (here's the kicker) you can make a better point if you do so. I, a non-Christian, don't particularly care if Jesus thinks abortion is wrong. I, an American, do care if abortion violates Constitutional precepts of human rights. Do you see where I'm going with this? Being religious is a personal thing; if you want to guide your life by the words of a carpenter's son turned prophet or a camel herder turned warrior, that's fine. But at least understand one thing: Just as my reli- gion means shit to you, your religion means shit to me. So let's not try to guide our mutual society by religious precepts that don't mean anything to everyone. I'm not being anti-religious per se. I understand the role of religion in giving peo- ple a philosophical grounding for their lives. Religious (and atheistic) beliefs might not stand up to every line of logical attack, but they are nonetheless important in giving people a philosophical basis for their lives. The key is individualism. If God tells you that sex before marriage is a sin, don't have sex before marriage. If God tells you not to have an abortion, don't have an abortion. If God tells you to shave your head and tattoo "The Ozzman Cometh" on your scalp, shave your head and tattoo "The Ozzman Cometh" on your scalp. But if you want to convince me, along with the rest of the world, that what your God tells you to do is right, you'll have to convince me, along with the rest of the world, using secular means. Because your God means shit to me, and my God means shit to you. al A Manish Raiji can be reached via e-mail at mraiji@umich.edu. Y LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Basford's comment clouded real issues of rape and victimhood TO THE DAILY: We'd like to address a specific com- ment made by Mike Basford, president of Beta Theta Pi, in an article in yesterday's Daily ("Inquiry of rapes at Beta dropped"). "It affects everyone of us. Being labeled as a rapist isn't anything anyone should have to go through." Here's a thought, Mike. Being raped isn't anything that anyone should ever have to go through. By pointing out that "being labeled as a rapist" is an experience that no one should have to endure, Basford is exemplifying the real nature of the problem - taking attention away from the victims of rape and placing it on those whose innocence has been called into question. It's a method used time and time again to ignore the crime and victimize the criminal. The "labels" are not the problem. Labels go away. I can guarantee that five years from now when most of us have left the University, no one is going to remember the event that allegedly occurred on Oct. 25 or the fraternity that it allegedly occurred at. The label will be gone. For the survivors of rape, it won't go away so quickly. Years don't erase the feelings and memories of humiliation, shame and viola- tion that are consequences of being raped. Five years from now, when your friends are no longer living with labels, whether or not they deserved them, the thousands of survivors of rape will still be living with the memories of what it was like to be raped. KATHARINE HEERINGA CLAIR MORRISSEY LSA sophomores Guantanamo detainees should 'rot in hell' TO THE DAILY: How naive is the Daily? In its impas- sioned complaints about the Taliban detainees ("Human Wrongs,"1/22/01), it misses the point that these monsters are dangerous terrorists. I feel really bad that we are inconveniencing them with so- called human rights violations. First of all, to have human rights, one has to be human, which I highly doubt these bar- barians are.' These prisoners are shackled, bound and hooded because they have proven in the past to be extremely dangerous, obeying no law and respecting no author- ity. In Afghanistan, they attempted a prison uprising more than once. The American soldiers and guards should be protected against them, even if that does mean restricting the detainees move- ments. As for housing them within the U.S.? Is the Daily insane? The security hazards of housing them anywhere besides their current prison are not worth moving them. Guantanamo Bay is the perfect alter- native. The detainees are being treated more fairly than they ever treated any- one. They are given clean clothes, mat- tresses and towels. They are given meals three times a day. They are not taken into full soccer stadiums where they are sum- marily executed with a gun shot to the back of the head. Where do we draw the line of who gets human rights? These Taliban and al- Qaida detainees are the worst scum ever known to human kind. They kill without reason, having an impassioned hate for you and me. Their goal in life is to kill innocents, whether they be Afghani, American or Israeli. They are without remorse and would rather die taking innocents with them. To grant them any luxuries that we associate with normal human rights would be a slap in the face of the memory of the Twin Towers. So, I say to the Daily, Amnesty Inter- national and other misguided liberalites who feel they have to fight for the detainees' human rights, shut up. We don't want to hear it; we disagree with you; we want these people to rot in hell. Or at least in Cuba. DAVID TAUB Alumnus a 6 4 proportionately large for the service they provide for society. Secondly, the blithe causative relationship that Jessica Cash ("B-school jobs important for all," 1/18/02) makes between the number of associates hired by an I-banking firm and the number of working class people hired in the country is laughable. I find repulsive the sentiment of entitle- ment for a disproportionately compensated and socially dubious job. Let us think about what investment bankers do: They, paid the same amount as any other hard working recent graduate. Cash tries to make the causative rela- tionship between the number of investment bank analysts and associates and the num- ber of people hired "at all levels," includ- ing the working class. This relationship is impossible to prove, and I would suggest the more likely opposite: That when there are more people working for a living - building houses, manufacturing cars, .i n; -; n-nn rs ar nlio dr i t nn 2.7'Y "i1:o: : CF.tf tfi'kfi2:;k'k3':E F: }::F:w N%3'$'L "{' : y. :2:::; .;:f. F' "' :F.7 . $: . 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