0 4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 7, 2003 OP/ED able Sitchutwu maddIu 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 You are a minion and a lackey." -Iraqi Vice President Taha Yassin Ramadan, telling Saudi Arabian Foreign Minister Prince Saud al Faisal to "go to hell" after al Faisal called for Saddam Hussein to step down, as quoted yesterday by The Washington Post. SAM BUTLER THE soA mox Co~re . - ei 'S wo ctn"Frc'e~ndsL a ..cAl fe,% AJs p ~ e ~ r .rce . a , ecav v 'e u O r y 4} , e o ,{ 1 r 't r e r. s ~ 4 - y . Rewriting the laws of life JON SCHWARTZ Two SIDES TO EVERY SCHXwARTZ ver the course of many lunches in the past year or so, my-friend Michael enlightened me with his theories and philosophies on life. "Brooks' Laws," he calls them, and the numbered system has points applicable to just about any element of life and the world. One particularly impressed me, and while I don't remember its exact number or word- ing, I'll do my best to paraphrase: There's no learning without mistakes. As someone who's made more mistakes in three years than most people do in their lives, I can attest to the law's truth. But as I try to weigh my life's mistakes by his rule, I find two things lacking; call them "Schwartz's Laws" if you will: Life is about when and where you place your periods, and living is what comes after.. The most obvious (and certainly dumbest) mistake that I made at the University is undoubtedly the force that guided me since, helping me become who I am now. To put it delicately, my roommate and I didn't get along too well freshman year. It was rough from the start and got progressively worse as the year went along. After a particularly frus- trating experience, I did something pretty stu- pid. I sent an e-mail to a mailing list of friends that contained one particularly foolish line. Long story short, he saw it, got mad and got me kicked out of the lovely confines of Alice Lloyd Residence Hall. So you can say that my e-mail effectively put a period on my life as a dorm resident. Did I learn my lesson? Sort of - I recog- nize that it was a stupid thing to do, and though I'll contend that it was harmless and blown way out of proportion, I certainly never did it again. Michael's law does hold up to a degree. But where it falls short is a result of the. necessity to strive for learning. I didn't want to learn anything in the weeks following the incident - I just wanted to save my neck and go on with life. Like many people in similar situations, I was willing to bypass the lesson while running away from repercussions. The remaining weeks of freshman year found me living on a friend's couch and hav- ing the time of my life. It also strengthened my resolve to become a fixture at the Daily. For the first three-quarters of the year, being in my room was so miserable that I chose to live at the Daily. Without the first option, the Daily became an even bigger part of my life. People may choose colleges because of the academic reputation, but the real learning most of us do is seldom in classrooms or lec- ture halls. I grew up by working until 3 a.m. at 420 Maynard St. and followed it up with some extra credit at Fleetwood Diner. I'd say I'm a better; more complete and capable person since the e-mail incident, but not necessarily because of it. That brings me back to "Schwartz's Laws." When you make a potentially life-chang- ing mistake, you need to put a period on the incident to move on. The question, though, is what you do afterwards. As a response to being sent packing (literally), I chose positive living instead of negative rehashing and "learning." Like ' omany people, I'Ve" beeftsthrough' numerous stages in college. Each one ended with a period, placed with discrimination. In other words, essential to growing is knowing when a phase is really over, and not just throwing around periods willy-nilly. For example, each semester I put a period on each of that term's courses. Each April I said goodbye to friends who were graduating. In January 2002, I put a period on my time as a sportswriter at the Daily. I was done with it, and moved onto other things. But it's what comes next that's important. What you do with your education long after your final exam is what matters (that one's for you, Mom and Dad). My friendships have survived many graduations, and will surely thrive for years to come. A few paragraphs from now, when I put the last period on my tangible connection to the Daily, it won't sig- nal the end of my emotional tie to the most important institution at this university, and the place where I got nearly all of my educa- tion at Michigan. When I graduate in 19 days (knock on wood), my life, like it has so many times, will become a capital letter waiting to start a new sentence. That's when it gets excit- ing. That's living. Living is looking back while simultane- ously moving forward. Living is holding on to the things that will make the future brighter. Living is understanding that there is no learning until you make mistakes, but real- izing, to quote the movie, that "everything that is past is prologue to-this." Living is making your periods matter. Now, 21 years after my first capital letter, I'm ready to try it again. Jon Schwartz wants to thank everyone wh helped him live and learn over the pastfour years. Ike can be reached atjlsz@umich.edk LETTER TO THE EDITOR Reader deconstructs Second scary: North Korea will not hold rightly so). to deals made in diplomacy. Former President Fourth scary: The dictatorships that we Adams' viewpoint on Bill Clinton knew this and examined the supported during the Cold War were the option of a military operation there but the mechanisms by which we believed we could ractitcal case against war proximity of Seoul to the demilitarized zone stop Soviet-backed regimes from gaining limits this. We will eventually go back to control. We didn't do it out of pure sport. I do diplomacy with North Korea but we can not think we should learn from past actions and To THE DAILY: talk with a nation that is only issuing not support regimes such as those but I don't I feel that Dan Adams' viewpoint (A prac- demands via nuclear threats. That is not see how removing a dictator is related to that. tical case against the war, 04/04/03) lacked diplomacy. Last paragraph sans a scary: In Adams' basis. I have organized my response based on Third scary: "The mechanism that helped last paragraph, he makes it a foregone con- each of Adams' paragraphs. pull us through the Cold War." I don't know clusion that removing a brutal dictator will First scary: Anti-American sentiment is if Adams intended to give such credit to the leave Iraq and subsequently the world in ter- not a reason to go to war. It was present United Nations, but it is definitely not what rible shape. An Arab democracy in the Mid- before the war and will be present after the helped the United States win the Cold War. dle East is needed to stem the tide of militant war. The idea that it will fuel anti american The Cold War was won by large military Islamic groups (Wahabbism in Saudi Arabia, sentiment in the much vaunted "Arab street" spending and a capitalist system to back it up. mullahs in Iran, Syria with Hamas and is valid. However, the message it sends to the The U.N. was a place where we could talk to Hezbollah, to mention some major groups). governments of Arab countries like Syria and the Soviet Union and that is the reason we War is terrible, but I think that appeasing Iran is that we will take action. Since, it is the never dismissed it like we did the League of Saddam for a decade is a mistake that is best governments that have the power to supply Nations. As for not talking to anyone, we did corrected now. money/arms and not the people, we should a lot of diplomacy (10-12 years) that Clinton LUKE CARMICHAEL try to influence the governments. didn't do in Yugoslavia or Somalia (and LSA senior VIEWPOINT Operation Iraqi Freedom: an honorable mission 0 BY LATH ALATIAR As U.S. and coalition forces close in on Baghdad, Iraqis are becoming increasingly eager to see coalition forces rolling into their neighbor- hoods. Since the only media available to them is the propagandistic Iraqi state-run television, see- ing our troops in person is their only means of confirming that Operation Iraqi Freedom is indeed underway. For the time being, however, they must suppress their feelings of joy and relief, for they know too well that they cannot celebrate until Saddam Hussein and his regime of terrorism are gone for good. Please allow me, as an American who has lived in Iraq for many years, to share a per- spective held not only by the United States and the coalition of the willing, but also by the Iraqi people themselves, in and outside Iraq. Simply put, the Iraqis want this war. They are waiting for us to liberate them, and fortunately, we are doing just that. There is not a better indication of this libera- tion than the plea of the Iraqis themselves, who have endured many years of oppression, and are now counting the hours and minutes that sepa- rate them from their promised freedom. The Iraqi people are waiting for American and coali- willing nations to liberate Iraq and rid the world of Saddam and his weapons of mass destruction. In case anyone still doubts the danger and brutality of Saddam, here are a few of the count- less atrocities that crowd his record. It is not pos- sible to gather a comprehensive catalog of his atrocities, not only because they are unbeliev- ably numerous, but also because most are unbe- lievably graphic and obscene. Some crimes have finally found their way to various media outlets, as is the case with the 1988 gassing of 5,000 Kurds and deportation of 500,000 others in northern Iraq, and the sickening 1991 terror plot in which Saddam crushed another significant proportion of Shiite Iraqis following a post-Gulf War uprising in southern Iraq. The invasion of Kuwait is no secret either. But there are millions of other innocent people that have been raped, tortured and executed for nothing more than the most mundane misconducts. As would soon become evident, Saddam and his thugs were extremely creative in their methods of torture and terror. Take this scenario as an example: At a gathering of family and friends, someone makes a joke about Saddam and three others laugh; all four are executed within hours. Other punishments include rape, torture and physical disfiguration (cutting off tongues and ears is not uncommon). war was the opposite of peace. Those who claim to be speaking on behalf of the Iraqi chil- dren and allege that Operation Iraqi Freedom is a cause of the Iraqis' suffering know nothing about the Iraqi people and even less about their suffering. They are deluded pacifists who have unfortunately dismissed the fact that the number of civilians killed and tortured by the Iraqi dicta- torship in any given day far exceeds any casual- ties in Operation Iraqi Freedom. They march and sing for peace, not knowing that they are in effect propelling the continued suffering of Iraqis. Make no mistake about it, the Iraqi peo- ple do not appreciate those who opposed Opera- tion Iraqi Freedom, and will surely hold them accountable for their positions. I have great trust in our president and all the men and women who have stood together against the evils of terror. Today, more than ever, I am proud to be an American, and grateful for the virtues of our nation. We are affirming our leadership role as a beacon of liberty, justice and peace. As for the silenced Iraqis, allow me to speak for them once again and commend Bush for his commitment to their liberation, the result of which is sure to be an unprecedented alliance and friendship between the people and governments of the United States and Iraq. When Iraq is liberated, the United States will be 0 S THE BOONDOCKS A ARON AZGRUDER 7 b