4 -The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 25, 2002 OP/ED 01 hbe£ 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 daily. letters@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 Its early, yes, but it may already be time to award the Leaden-Footed Lobbyist award for the year. - Washington Post columnist Mary McGrotyin this week's column, on former US. Chief ofStaffJohn Sununu's attempts to convince the state of Nevada to store other states' nuclear waste. AT LASrJ1i T f, IALtiNl Ivy. ovtD 96LY R~tL 1 'IME ML ISPOSS1,F- r/"(=) / Y ax WOW!ATL~ Rs POLECow AN PE9 PACETN mss xIST U N PARING4OT! a V" V VIEWPOINT The perils of corporate press By ADAM KUSHNER Occasionally, The New York Times Editor- ial Board - which authors the unsigned, offi- cial positions of the newspaper - editorializes on the Yankees, as it did in a piece called "The Likable Yankees" last October. But The New York Times Company, which owns the Boston Globe (and as of last week, a stake in the Red Sox), would never direct the Globe to run the same editorial; Red Sox fans in the Globe's readership COLUM would be scandalized. N Ew YORK Or worse, imagine if Knight-Ridder forced its 32 daily newspapers to run an unsigned staff editorial calling for normalized relations with Cuba to stimulate the economy. The proposition, however well-inten- tioned, would alienate Cuban expatriates in The Miami Herald's readership - no small con- stituency - because their positions are informed by experiences that writers in Knight- Ridder's San Jose office lack. As far as they're concerned, Cuba's socio-political ills outweigh its possible contribution to the GNP. The point, of course, is that newspapers - and especially editorial pages - should serve their readership rather than a centralized, corpo- rate entity. Not since the fledgling days of the gritty industry have major dailies been mouth- pieces for their owners; journalism of today purports an underlying philosophy of even- handedness and truth. Not so in Canada. The Southam newspaper chain, owned by the powerful Asper family's CanWest Global Communications Corp., has decided that its 14 major metropolitan dailies will run national editorials authored in the Win- nipeg corporate headquarters - as many as three each week. Moreover, Southam's editor- in-chief Murdoch Davis wrote that the newspa- pers "should not contradict the core position of the national pieces in editorials of their own," even if the national positions disregard the nuanced politics of the local readership. But each region of Canada has its own issues, opin- ions and voting blocs; that's why, as in the United States, it is divided into provinces rather than united as a single state. The decision has caused no dearth of agita- tion. Reporters at the Montreal Gazette - an important voice of Anglophone dissent in a majority Francophone province - withdrew their bylines to protest their diminished autono- my. They wrote in an open letter, "CanWest will be imposing editorial policy on its papers on all issues of national sig- B1A U. nificance. We believe this centralizing process will weaken the credibility of every Southam paper." And what value is there in journalism if it lacks credibility? An editorial in a Southam competitor, the Toronto Globe and Mail, asked, "What does that tell each newspaper's readers about how much stock Southam and CanWest, put in the people who produce the paper they have been buying?" The Quebec National Assembly unanimously passed a resolution condemning the editorial policy. Then began Southam's backlash. A Gazette sports columnist was briefly suspend- ed without pay for sending a critical compa- ny-wide e-mail. An internal memo threatened "suspension or termination, against those who persist in disregarding the obligations to the employer." A columnist's article was bowd- lerized and two more in Halifax quit when their pieces, critical of the Aspers, were spiked. A letter writer observed the "total blackout within the pages of the (Gazette) itself of any reporting on this story ... Suddenly, the lowly letters section ... has been elevated to the status of the sole site in which actual freedom of speech still exists within our paper." Southam had muzzled its dissidents. In a defense dubiously titled "Southam Edi- torials a Sign of Freedom," David Asper wrote, "Sometimes (the) local view is not always what is arguably best for the nation as a whole." The first national editorial announced that tax relief for private charities would be "best for the nation as a whole" without also noting that the Aspers control one such charity. That editorials should be delivered from on high is a perversion of legitimate journalism. Fortunately, it's also "an unwise business deci- sion, likely to backfire," wrote Fred Fiske, the outgoing president of the National Conference of Editorial Writers, in an open letter to David Asper. Readers expect their editorials to inter- pret issues in accordance with their local and regional concerns. Could such irresponsible journalism happen here? Some American media conglomerates provide unsigned editorials to be used at the editors' discretion, but none demand that they be run. The NCEW's current president, Phil Haslanger, told me that "American conglomer- ates will continue to respect local discretion," because successful newspapers are driven by profits, not ideologies. He said that readers will turn to newspapers that better represent them if they feel Southam dailies deliver opinions from a corporate-length remove. After all, why read the local newspaper's editorials if they take the same position as every other newspaper in the country? Of course, readers in Southam's single- paper markets will not have an alternative daily from which to seek divergent opinions, and the policy is most devastating for them. John Tay- lor, the NCEW's vice president, told me, "If you own the market, you can do what you want and it's not going to affect you tremendously." But if they "dismiss the corporate editorials as of no consequence, they begin to undermine their value - and the value of those newspa- pers," Haslanger reminded me. And irrele- vance, ultimately, will be the policy's undoing. An editorial voice whose agenda diverges from its readers' is a voice no reader wants to hear. Let it be silenced quickly. Kushner writes for the Columbia Daily Spectator. This viewpoint was distributed via U- WIRE. 0 Y LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Transgender bathrooms make life 'uncomfortable' TO THE DAILY: I should have seen it coming. The introduction of transgender bathrooms must be the next logical step in the advancement of the homosexual agenda. We have gay marriages, gay adoption, so why not have gay bathrooms? Allow me to answer this. The article in yesterday's Weekend, Etc. magazine ("Unisex bathroom creates alternative for people in need," 1/24/02) tells that these bathrooms came into existence (first in the Union and soon to be in the University Health Services building) so that those who don't ascribe themselves to a typical gender or sexual preference won't have to feel uncomfortable in a regular bathroom. Gay rights groups on this campus would certainly like you to believe these bath- rooms are normal, being that you are one of the few heterosexuals still wandering about the University's campus (picking up the sarcasm?). Big numbers proclaim about 10 percent of the population of the United States to be gay, while in reality that percentage is slightly less than 3 percent. So what's hap- pening with these bathrooms? The vast majority of people are put in an uncom- fortable situation so that a small group of people who have made a choice to live a certain lifestyle can feel comfortable with themselves. For me, this just doesn't add up. MIKE SALTSMAN LSA freshman Raiji's column too hard on God, Catholics appeal to universal human rights. But on what basis do human beings have rights? Every person has a different answer. My answer is Jesus Christ, God him- self, who dignified the human race with his presence, and showed us how much our lives are worth. If God exists, and if God is good, then there is no realm of human experience in which God is irrele- vant. I agree that it is expedient to leave God out of discussions of social impor- tance. I'm just not certain whether it's right. DANIEL PROPSON School of Education student Religious should 'promote views, shun mediocrity TO THE DAILY: Manish Raiji's column ("I don't care if God tells you it's wrong," 1/23/02) seemed to take a very unkind view of religious people. Of course people do a lot of really dumb things in the name of religion - and they do dumb things on their own, too. But if I profess to follow a religion, wouldn't I be a rather mediocre follower if I didn't think it was the true one? Most religions in America are hardly pluralistic. If I honestly believed that these were God's commands, I should take them seri- ously indeed, and I should promote my views to the best of my ability. Otherwise I'd be like the guy with the answer to the home- work in a room full of frustrated students who doesn't give out the answer (or at least the correct method). Now, it would be nice if people would use a little wisdom and consideration for oth- ers when they go about promoting their points of view, but I don't think we should fault them for doing it. If you don't want to be convinced, just don't listen. A TfrNA T QTrnwr exploitation," 1/24/02). He complains that a previous letter, which expresses hope that Taliban/al- Qaida prisoners "rot in hell," is a piece of "xenophobic trash." While I agree the "rot in hell" argument wasn't very sophisticat- ed, Caron's letter doesn't display a much more advanced arguement. It merely rehashes a bunch of overused anti-Ameri- can themes that fall apart under a little scrutiny. First, Caron said that you could claim "Americans kill without reason," just as the Taliban/al-Qaida do. There are 3,000 good reasons lying dead in New York and Washington. The Taliban/al-Qaeda kill because they hate Americans and our Western values of tolerance and plurality. We kill in order to prevent future innocent deaths and head off further terrorist atroci- ties. It is sheer blindness to call these aims morally equivalent. Second, Caron claims that "this country was built on blood and exploitation." That's a very trendy statement to throw around these days, but that doesn't mean it's true. The United States has a lot of warfare and racism in its past, and nobody is proud of that. But it also has a lot more hard work, ingenuity and statesmanship. Coun- tries that are truly founded on "blood and exploitation" - like, say, the Soviet Union or Third World dictatorships - don't end up doing very well. Our success has been despite, not because of, the ugly parts of our history. Third, Caron claims that Americans are only motivated by money, and that they will kill to make more money. Let's see, we're spending about $2 billion a month to fight terrorism, plus millions more to guard the peace in Kosovo, Bosnia, etc. Not to mention the millions in aid we recently promised to Afghanistan, and ongoing aid to dozens of other countries. Oh yeah, our foreign policy is just raking in the dough. Finally, Caron writes, "we have no right to damn n therc fn'r rdntihat Uwe 0I . A § ..2.....}.. ...:.:::.}:...::: :. .:.:.r..}a: :: ::.. ...... r:.........:...,..r ...............:... .................;.,: ;:.:;}}:::o}: rarer...... :NA : }Y..S{"hf{ :: .K....... J..... }... }.::..l. n:. ... n ... _ . _. ....:.<. ___.....< .:.... . . .....}?...:::.v.:::Y, :: "r".::y::...:. .. <:: ., a]