4 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 26, 2003 OP/ED Ulbe L wchigmi k 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 Unfortunately, we do not believe them." - Adnan Hamid, an Iraqi refugee in Jordan, on the idea of the Americans being "liberators, "as quoted yesterday by the BBC. SAM BUTLER Tiirm S3APB::X T ihe. waJA~ C E 1' UrO\ BA cD,4.& The absent logic of sheep JESS PISKOR THIs SPACE NOT FOR SALE have respect for peo- ple who support this war for logical rea- sons. While I disagree, there are people on this campus and around our country who have decent reasons for being, as the media calls them, "pro- war." However, I have no respect for those who question the appro- priateness of opposition to the war. I am embarrassed that people take the position that in times of war, we must reduce our protest and stand in unity behind our troops. In Jon Schwartz's column in Monday's Daily, Give intercession a chance, Schwartz fol- lows the lead of our president and gives us a choice roughly parallel to "you're either with us or against us: You either support our troops or you are anti-war." This false dichotomy is painfully common. The apolitical statement of support for soldiers' wellbeing reveals nothing about an individual's opinion about war. People who are anti-war can support troops as well - the two are not mutually exclusive. The underlying assumption behind this logic is that people who argue against the war once it has started are unappreciative of the common soldier, unappreciative of their own freedom and secretly wish for the triumph of Saddam Hus- sein. Somehow, protest against war has become equated with disrespect for he sacrifice of sol- diers and anti-Americanism. The start of war isn't the death knell for protest. The day war begins demands com- ment from anti-war coalition forces. People who swung from opposition to the war to full- hearted support once soldiers were in battle display their moral relativism. These fickle people had their opinions changed from one day to the next by the simple action of starting a war. Think about the awful precedent this sets. According to this logic, all a president must do to gain approval for a war is to start fighting. This specious logic is readily apparent in much of the superficial analysis of the current protest movement. People find fault with those who protest war as the first bombs fall. Instead of protesting an event as it happens, apparently it would be better if everyone stays silent until the war is over, then we can all look back and say, "Oh yeah, I was opposed to that war." Instead of immediate action and attempts to end this war while still in its infancy, some people would rather wait four or five years until it becomes painfully obvious that we should have been fighting against this war from day one. Schwartz wonders, "why are we so unwilling to give this intercession (war) a chance?" He argues that is wasn't until 1970 that major protests were held to end the Viet- nam War, claiming that it took that long to find out for sure it was "hopeless and wrong." I wonder why people are willing to wait six years before we begin to wonder if war is the correct action. After all, there are kids our age dying over there right now. The comparison to our parents' protest is understandable, though misguided. The anti-war movement today might appear to follow in the footsteps of our parents. After all, many anti- war activists fit the stereotypes that media and popular culture associate with protest. Some bang drums, sing songs, wear hemp and carry signs urging the government to decrease defense spending, but people who are anti-war today aren't your parents' protesters. Today's move- ment is far more inclusive, far broader and far more focused. It is an international group of everyday people from every walk of life and every nationality, ethnicity, race and class. Some might be trying 'to live up to their parents, but unlike our parents who primarily opposed the war because they were personally fearful of the draft, the movement today is against the war for moral, political, humanitarian, environmen- tal and a full spectrum of other reasons. Certainly, some anti-war arguments are reductionist and maybe some of the protest is centered too much on dislike of George W. Bush. But people on both sides are guilty of these lapses. Within a coalition as wide and inclusive as the anti-war movement, one should expect differing opinions on the reasons to oppose war. Here on our elite campus, anti-war coalition forces are following the goings on of the war and its ramifications far closer than most. Schwartz misses the mark completely when he says, "the anti-war protesters on this campus, though, are too caught up in organizing their ral- lies and making their signs to examine the way that issues change." Instead, it seems Schwartz, and others like him who blindly follow our lead- ership in times of war, are too caught up in drinking at the bar and following their basket- ball brackets to examine the way issues change. Piskor can be reached atjpiskor@umich&edu, 0 S We hold these truths to be self-evident Humanism 2.0 DAVID HORN HORNOGRAPHY esterday on this page, my col- league Aubrey Henretty considered the symbolic and psycho- logical effects of mater- ial damage in the American-Iraqi war. Her points were impor- tant ones: The build- ings we destroy are metaphysical extensions of the people we are seeking to "liberate," and can at times be as psychologically devastating to a defending soldier as the death of a com- rade in another battle. But nothing - nothing - is more funda- mental to appreciating the sobering effects of war than a tempered and objective understand- ing of the destruction of individual life. When we wage war we are not waging war on an army, but on a collection of individuals. An army is an arbitrary, political body; the indi- vidual's body - her flesh and blood and mind and spirit - is unconditionally sacred. So when we listen to the news broadcasts and read the papers, we must be careful not to allow our- selves to be pacified by the benign language and convenient euphemisms that make war more palatable to a skeptical American public. From less than five minutes of CNN's broadcast early Tuesday morning: "The Brits took a combat fatality there today ... The city is in some kind of humanitarian crisis ... At the risk of harming civilians ... More evi- dence of fierce shelling, involving Marines ... We had good results on this mission. It's the start of grinding down one of the key Republican Guard divisions ..." Think. What does "grinding down" entail on the micro level? A lot of blood and ruptured flesh and suffering. CNN, of course, is not in a position where it can describe the horrific per- sonal experiences of our enemies, or increasing- ly our own soldiers, without sickening and alienating its audience. I would argue though, that unless Osama bin Laden was correct in his estimation that Americans haven't the stomach for war, news outlets have an obligation to hon- estly report the horrible reality of war. Many of my friends in the peace camp, and many friends who are vehemently pro-war, have told me that they have a hard time even hearing those rela- tively gentle reports. I ask them to watch and read and take it all in, and seek out more detailed descriptions of our army's.actions: This is what our country is doing and this is what war means. Regardless of how you feel about the war, understand that the destruction of individ- ual life is its necessary component. The major media outlets have realized that their audiences may not have the "stomach for war." But if Americans do not really want to see what our armies are doing in the desert, then Americans do not really want to support Presi- dent Bush and his means of disarming Iraq. And "good results?" Good results in war are a tricky thing to gauge. I had hoped, and now believe, that our nation's military is making an earnest effort to strike precisely and to avoid civilian casualties. Thus far it seems as if that effort has been moderately successful. But the distinction between a civilian Iraqi life and that of an Iraqi "soldier" is frighteningly arbitrary, and is created for the sake of justifying the vio- lence that necessarily accompanies warfare. And as we near Baghdad and face increased paramilitary and guerrilla opposition, doesn't the distinction between one of Saddam's foot soldiers and an anti-American nationalist become dangerously blurred? I watched one of CNN's correspondents tell a story of the American cavalry division with which he is embedded, in which the division returned fire on a civilian home because an Iraqi soldier or paramilitary resistor fired upon their tanks from inside the house. The result was the house's destruction, and the death of its inhabi- tants, which included two Iraqi children. Iraq reports that there have been 78 civilian deaths, and though I do not trust the information report- ed by the Iraqi government, I sense that if the number isn't that high yet it certainly will be before our conquest of Baghdad is complete. The horror of war - the deliberate infliction of pain, suffering and death upon other human beings - is happening in Iraq. Our media is sugarcoating it, as our media tends to do. The Pentagon and others have observed that the overwhelmingly comprehensive coverage that the war receives highlights the minute, and fails to offer a larger context to this captive American audience. And while they are correct in their observation, it is important to realize that every shot fired, every injury and casualty suffered and every instance of material or human destruction is vital to appreciating and under- standing what our army is accomplishing in Iraq. That said, American needs to take owner- ship of this war and the destruction of life that accompanies it. Keep watching. Horn can be reached at hornd@umich.edu. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR DAily business stffs decision to suspend ads is 'censorship' To THE DAILY: In the article, Campustruth.org ads spark controversy (03/24/03), the Daily's Jeff Valuck is quoted as saying, "We must reconsider run- ning the ads if the community does not want them." Mr. Valuck, we do not live in Egypt, and you are not a dictator. We cannot suppress free speech in advertisements simply because the message may not be in accordance with our own. Furthermore, there is a constituency of students on this campus who agree with the advertisements, and Valuck has no authority to determine that "the community does not want ads is both ironic and offensive. They seek to silence free speech in advertisements that highlight the moral difference between legiti- mate Israeli acts of self defense, and the wan- ton, murderous acts of Arab terrorists. How ironic that under the guise of "academic free- dom," these same people invited Islamic Jihad terrorist Sami Al-Arian and Holocaust revi- sionist Norman Finkelstein to campus this year. It is nothing shy of revolting that they support the rights of such vitriolic anti-Semi- tes to speak on campus, but refuse the right of campustruth to tell it like it is: The Palestinian Arabs celebrated Sept. 11, and make national heroes out of murderers of Jews. The root of the Arab-Israeli conflict is the concerted, organized and intentional campaign in Pales- tinian government-controlled mosques, Daily business staff should discontinue publication of 'racist' ads altogether To THE DAILY: I just wanted to send a short note of appreciation for the Daily's decision to sus- pend publication of the racist advertise- ments from a non-University organization that were promoting prejudice against the Palestinian people in the paper. Everyone I've spoken with who saw the ads was surprised to see them in the first place, particularly with the allegations of racism leveled against the Daily last term. 6 0 THE BOONDOCKS AARON MCGRU:D1:ER Ms. Latifah , 1.- 1 Recent accusations of a less-than- ThAT DOESN'T MEAN WE