. 4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 10, 2003 OP/ED dbe Altditgau aid 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 letters@michigandaily.com EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 LOUIE MEIZLISH Editor in Chief AUBREY HENRETTY ZAC PESKOWITZ 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 The audience is actually laughing more, but the tension behind their laughs has grown. People are scared." - Nicholas Burns,.an actor in the British satirical play, "The Madness of George Dubya, " which features a pyjama-clad president holding a teddy bear and advocating war against Iraq. As reported yesterday by Reuters. SAM BUTLER CLAssic SOAPBOX 6 .s d m-Uc11 400 } ' 4e~-l tr j*y he '*~d +o a re. w Jo-'s l'~Alo LwJOS Rhyme doesn't make right at anti-war raffles JOHANNA HANINK PARLANCE OF OUR TIMES ho usa n d s, rally against war," the headline in yesterday's Ann Arbor News informed the few of us who missed it. On Sat- urday, 2,000 protestors filled the Diag and the streets to demonstrate against a pre-emptive strike on Iraq; the critical mass disturbed traffic and won rel- atively significant media attention. Between last month's "Stop the War" conference and this weekend's action, the events revolving around the "anti-war" movement have been fairly frequent and, in terms of the personalities they have drawn, surprisingly credible. So maybe it's now the case that there's finally enough action happening on this campus and in this city to appease that group of people who constantly call on the commu- nity to live up to its own image. Maybe we're on a road to deserving something to the tune of that old Students for a Democ- ratic Society, Vietnam-era etc. etc. etc. reputation - a reputation that is, under- standably, both an inspiration and a bur- den to the new generation of self-proclaimed activists. During the first few months of the fall semester, I had wondered, along with not a few others, why we hadn't yet felt any real rumblings of what I had thought would be an inevitable and instant movement in reaction to Bush's unveiling of tentative plans for war. I spoke with Prof. Michael Nagler, who founded the Peace and Conflict Studies at 'iheUniversity of California at"Berkeley, and was disappointed (for Michigan, not for Berkeley) to hear that, already by early October, Berkeley's movement was full fledged and driving forward. Maybe the University was too locked in narcissistic contemplation of its own legacy - and too busy fighting the easy and empty fights - to do anything with the scariest issue on the national table. Back in October, as cynical as I felt that I'd become, there was still a part of me that wanted to see University activist glory days replay themselves when I could have a chance to watch. As the old caveat goes, be careful what you wish for. The essence of yesterday's article in the Ann Arbor News was a glaring com- parison between what took place on Satur- day and the hackneyed, rose-colored cultural memory of 1960s activism. A great majority of the 2,000 people who attended that rally and the day's other events were people genuinely concerned about our nation's and our president's for- eign policy. But sadly, judging from the media attention, first-hand accounts and what I have learned from my own experi- mentation with tie-dye activism, it was a minority of those couple thousand who expressed their concern in a respectful and intellectual way - recognizing both the importance of exercising a right to assem- bly and of approaching that assembly with the due accord that the potential loss of so many human lives deserves. Too many of the quotations from that article show the activist growing into a caricature. When a participant from Saline was asked what possible alternative he could see to war, his best answer happened to rhyme: "might doesn't make right." A woman from the organization Zeitouna declared, "I'm a Palestinian American and I'm here to call for an end to Israeli occu- pation and an end to bombing." Where. is respect for the issue at the heart of the day, the safety and dignity of the Iraqi people - the one common thread through the platforms of 2,000 different individu- als - in a statement like that? I'm not sure where the line should be - I'm not sure how much fun we're sup- posed to be having speaking out agaiisf death and destruction, I'm not sure where our own agendas can fit in. It's possible that the "Radical Cheerleaders" have it right, that the dancing and the drumming and the clever chants are the best way to rally a community and send a message to our decisionmakers. But somewhere, on the gut level that I, at least, need to listen to more often, it seems that the message is strangled in the festivity. There are plenty of lessons to take from the teach-ins, organization, and voic- es of Michigan's activist forebears. But it's important that we don't romanticize their legacy and only try to replicate in ourselves the things we know about from documentaries and books. There's a con- stant opportunity to improve the tactics and build a more credible voice; to hold a demonstration and not a party. A group of very thoughtful people has helped to turn room 307 of the- Michigan League into a room for quiet reflection. There are a lot of scary things happening right now that deserve our attention and our emotion, but maybe the best way to channel that best begins withsometiiing quiet. 9 Hanink can bereadhed atjhanink@umichedu. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Smith's column ignored benefits of space program To THE DAILY: In his article NASA, we have a problem (02/06/03), Luke Smith's judgment of NASA's manned spaceflight program was incorrect. He asserted that there have been no returns or development from the manned spaceflight pro- gram. He continued to say that manned space- flight serves only to fulfill fantasies and that money spent on the program is wasted. On the contrary, manned spaceflight has produced many tangible benefits, particularly in the medical field. For example, special light- ing technology used in shuttle experiments has been adapted with amazing success to treat cancerous brain tumors in children. Shuttle technology has also been used to develop a new rescue extrication tool used in car crashes that is easier to use and 70 percent cheaper than previous tools. Other developments include miniaturized heart pumps, improved cell culture devices, stronger and lighter pros- thesis material and faster breast cancer detec- tion devices. These are just a few of the many developments produced using technology from the space shuttle program. Smith also presents the fact that we have not yet sent humans to Mars as if it is a reason to abandon the program entirely. There are two main reasons why we have not yet sent people to Mars: a lack of understanding about the effects of long-duration spaceflight on humans and insufficient propulsion technology. NASA and others are working on both of these issues, but we must realize that they will take time. Research in any area does not produce instant gratification and we would be mistaken to abandon projects that did not produce immedi- ate results. Furthermore, the only way to under- stand the effects of long-duration spaceflight on humans is through experience, which we are gaining with the space station program. Smith is also mistaken in saying that robots could per- form all the duties of humans in space. Robots, though valuable and often appropriate tools, do not have the same ability to react and adapt to situations in real time, nor can they serve as medical research subjects as the astronauts do. Finally, Smith points out that manned spaceflight is expensive and suggests NASA's budget be redirected to schools. To clarify, NASA's overall budget accounts for less than would be more than happy to assist in finding the answers to questions about NASA or space- flight. For readers who are interested in leam- ing more about NASA and how their tax dollars are used, check out www.nasa.gov for all of the above information and more. ASHLEY MILNE ADAM VAN STAVEREN MICHELLE WOLOSZYN Engineering seniors Skepticism like Smith's 'contributes to society with no vision' TO THE DAILY: Luke Smith's column, NASA, we have a problem, (02/06/03) displays just the atti- tude and skepticism that contributes to a society with no vision. Smith perpetuates the ignorance that keeps humans from tak- ing one of the most exciting adventures of our time. To discuss the selfishness of cer- tain "astrophysicists wanting desperately to capitalize on childhood dreams" only four days after seven astronauts died in the pursuit of scientific knowledge is more than ironic. Manned spaceflight has brought incred- ible development to the NASA program. The benefits to our society are countless. Cancer research, improved computer tech- nology, optics for deep space research, safer and quicker manufacturing tech- niques, faster and expansive commercial air travel, aerodynamic automobiles, DNA protein crystal growth, improved material strength, increased food production, Vel- cro, plastics, cell phones, sunglasses, ergonomics and (of course) Tang; these are only a few of the many improvements effected by technology directly resulting from humans in space. American tax dollars do not serve NASA fantasies. In fact, President Bush recently cut funding to all next-generation reusable launch vehicle programs, the International Space Station and all future Mars missions. NASA hasn't put people on Mars largely because of politics and a lack of funding, not a lack of technology or capability. NASA's total human space- motivated by a small group of engineers and scientists trying to get themselves into space. To look at the Columbia tragedy as a reason to cut funding to NASA or discontinue human space travel is to truly make a mis- take in ideology. Every astronaut on STS- 107 must have believed the adventure they were on was worthwhile, worthy of the loss of human life, as they paid for it with their own. I certainly don't believe that these astronauts risked their lives simply for the -chance to see the Earth from space. They believed it's much more important than that, not something to be reduced to "tax dollars serving fantasies." LINDSAY MILLARD Rackham Rahim's column shows events reached target audience To THE DAILY: As a member of Campus Crusade for Christ, one of the organizations that helped to organize the God on Trial events earlier in the week, I was glad to see Hussain Rahim's col- umn (My deity can defeat your deity, 02/07/03) because it tells me that we reached our target audience - people who want to believe but, as Anthony Burgess said, "find their intellect get- ting in the way." And many of Rahim's ques- tions are common ones that people (including the most devout Christians) have been strug- gling with for centuries. Without getting into a deep theological debate, I wanted to answer some of the objec- tions that Rahim had so that people who may have been unable to attend the lectures will know that Christians do have a response to these arguments. First, as C.S Lewis argued, it is important to not think of God as being able to predict the future, because for God there is no future. For him, it is always 1920, 2003 and 2060, or any other time you could want. Therefore, although God may know the things we will do in our future, he cannot stop us from doing anything without removing our free will (which raises all sorts of theological uh-oh's). It is impossible to see the world as God sees it, and so as much as we would like concrete answers to some of our questions (myself at least as much as anyone else. THE BOONDOCKS A ARON MCGXRUTDER