-1 4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 15, 2003 OP/ED Ue £~td~ttn~ 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 "Osama bin Laden is the only one who knows exactly what I'm going through." - R & B artist R. Kelly on the fallout from his indictment on child pornography charges, as quoted by The Associated Press. SAM BUTLER DTiw SOAPBOX idLAv Itrabo - moske.~ . YS C~ral' gA- e. b a-? S deon' nucLhk-+ e 6 i del . uenV 6 0 He hit me ... it felt like akiss STEVE COTNER My BACK PAGES George Bush was talking a lot this past week, and skeptics listened hard for that moment of clarity - the revealing phrase, the Freudian slip, when we could see through all the muck about freedom and democracy to whatever is really at the bottom of this war. The president gave us two opportunities: first in an address to the nation on Sunday, Sept. 7, and then again when he spoke to the FBI Academy in Quantico, Va., three days later. For those convinced that something is awry, we listened to Bush with equal parts suspicion and hope, as if we suffered from a political form of battered wife syndrome: We wanted to hear the words of a monster, so we might reject him once and for all, but lacking that, it would be easy to give in to his sweet words of freedom and tolerance. It is an absurd way to live, but that's our lot in 2003, and if we want to change anything we have to look even harder - maybe between the lines, maybe outside the speeches themselves - for that clue to what's really going on. And sometimes, we fool ourselves into thinking we've found it. Was it when Bush said to the FBI, "We are working on Congress," and then cor- rected himself, "with Congress," letting us all know what is in the front of his mind? Perhaps we saw in that slip the true nature of his methods, a hard uncompromising stance that views Congress as a punching bag for the administration, giving our fair- ly elected legislators only as much infor- mation as they see fit, even when members of select committees have the highest level security clearances. It was reminiscent of the administration's attitude toward the United Nations - unilateral intent under the guise of collaboration. It was only a stutter, though, and we can't read too much into it. But what was all this civilization talk about? Do we all believe in "the will of the civilized world?" Do we have faith that this man in charge has a profound and nuanced sensitivity to the human condition? I remember when people used to think the "Clash of Civilizations" doctrine was con- troversial, but now we're faced with some- thing even more blatant: There is only one civilization and we're it. Holy shit! Civi- lization may be the antidote to terrorism, but we were steamrolled into invading Iraq and other places simply because the war train was already chugging. I'm not sure anymore if presidents are allowed to lie. I think the rule is if enough people believe it, it's not really a lie. Bush wants to make us think Iraq had something to do with Sept. 11, so last week he claimed success at "removing the tyrants who support terror" and lumped al-Qaida and Iraq together in the statement "we have captured or killed hundreds of Saddam loy- alists and terrorists." We know he is full of it, that Saddam and bin Laden never liked each other, but 70 percent of Americans now believe that the former Iraqi dictator was involved in that day's attacks. But knowing this brings us no closer to the kind of truth we are looking for - a question about why we persist in all this, giving our money and peace of mind to an administration big in action but opposed on principle to explaining itself. I wonder, though, if the whole search for answers might be flawed. Maybe expla- nations and ultimate motivations are super- fluous as long as we make progress. If the man of the house can make our world a safer place, even if it means slapping us around a bit on the domestic front, maybe we shouldn't ask too many questions. But I couldn't help finding one more thing to remark on, and it wasn't even something the president said. It was in the text crawl at the bottom of the screen that read "US threat level: Elevated" as he talked. Bush did not speak to how safe we are today except to say that we can no longer enjoy "false comfort in a dangerous world." About the same time, the Oxford Research Group issued a dire report - "The War on Terror: Winning or Losing?" - that showed al-Qaida's capabilities and range of activities to exceed those prior to the Sept. 11 attacks, meaning more explo- sions, if not more deaths. So if we give ourselves a little credit for once, we'll understand we've been duped, and maybe we'll see George for what he is: a lying, cheating, wife-beater. Not literally - it's a metaphor, remember? But most of us will still not be satisfied. We haven't found that word of truth we are looking for, and we feel a bit like the princess and the pea. We know it is somewhere under all that padded language; we can feel it as we squirm and moan. But we are stuck here, some 20 mattresses up, and we can't get to the bottom of it. As long as it's bugging me, though, I can't get any sleep. 0 6 Cotner can be reached at cotners@umich.edu. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Editorial on Coleman's mentorshp offreshmen insulting to Coleman, 'U To THE DAILY: The Daily's staff editorial on Universi- ty President Mary Sue Coleman's partici- pation in the University Mentorship Program (Kissing babies, 09/12/03) was a blatant insult not only to our University's president, but also to an incredibly effec- tive program this University offers that we are lucky to have. When the Daily stated that "The Men- torship Program may offer Coleman a chance to brush up on her Beer Pong skills, but cannot substitute for the intellectual experiences she should share with stu- dents," the Daily displayed that little time or effort was taken to research what the University Mentorship Program is all about, or the time and involvement that Coleman has chosen to commit to the pro- gram. Although the editorial made it seem that the sole purpose of the Mentorship Program is to help acclimate freshmen stu- dents to the University. Participating in the program as a peer mentor the past two years has been as rewarding, if not more so, than as participating in the program as a mentee my freshman year. The Menitorship Program focuses on helping incoming freshman with both the social and academic aspects of making the transition to life at the University. Cole- man will be doing just that for her group, and will be interacting with students at this University, just as the Daily is pushing her to do. Coleman has invited her entire group to her house for lunch, where they likely will be discussing academic issues (her peer mentor and mentees are all pre- med) as opposed to playing Beer Pong. Coleman has committed the little free time she has outside of her very demanding job in order to help four incoming fresh- man, and your staff has the nerve to insult her by telling her that she isn't doing enough and expecting her to teach a class she clearly does not have the time to teach. Instead of complaining about Coleman not spending enough time with the student Jason Tamaroff in their viewpoint, Roadmap to failure (09/12/03), showcase many of the misconceptions and narrow-minded thinking held by many supporters of Israel. As long as all the blame is placed on the Palestinian side of the conflict and the Israeli side refuses any type of self-evaluation, a viable peace plan will be impossible. The biggest problem with Singer and Tamaroff's piece is that they squared all the blame for the current violence on Yasser Arafat and Hamas, while never considering how the illegal Israeli occupation of Palestin- ian land contributes to the conflict. This is a conflict that has existed before the creation of Hamas and before the first suicide bombing, the only thing that has been continuous over the last 36 years is the Israeli occupation. Israel can evict Yasser Arafat and destroy Hamas, but the conflict would still continue. As long as Israel continues its military, politi- cal, and economic violence against the Pales- tinians, the cycle of violence will continue. As for the argument that President Bush should let Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon do whatever he would like with no U.S. restrictions in order to secure his people, this would be a disastrous decision that would only increase the violence. Israeli civilians will not find security until the occupation ends and the Palestinians are free to have self-determination. Ordinary Americans who value freedom and democracy also have an important role. Americans need to make their voices heard and tell our University to divest from Israel, due to its unethical treatment of the Palestin- ian people, much like how the University divested from apartheid South Africa for the same racist policies. MOHAMMED ELGHOUL LSA junior Vice Chair, StudentsAlliedforFreedom and Equaliy Reader: Is Navarre being sponsored? Does Taco Bell even count as restaurant? TO THE DAILY: I graduated from the University last winter and was among the millions watch- There was even a Taco Bell logo and grin- ning Chihuahua placed on screen next to Navarre's face. Taco Bell was one of ABC's sponsors of the games broadcast, with at least a dozen commercials from start to finish. I thought college athletes couldn't do product endorsements. Like- wise, I would hope there is a rule against using college athletes to endorse products. So the dilemma is the following: Is this just a coincidence, and Navarres favorite restaurant really is Taco Bell? If so, come on Navarre, I didn't even know that quali- fied as a restaurant. Or is there something more dubious at work here? Commercial- ism has long surrounded college football, and as a student, no doubt I benefited from the millions of dollars brought in to the University by our football team. But Navarre's taco jingle and its simultaneous broadcast alongside the Taco Bell logo are troublesome and disappointing. PETER WARREN Alum How MA.Y..SURREALWTS DOES IT TAKE TO.SCREW.IN A GULs? WRITE FOR THE DAILY. MAss MEETING THURSDAY, LETTERS POLICY The Michigan Daily welcomes letters from all of its readers. Letters from University stu- dents, faculty, staff and administrators will be given priority over others. Letters should include the writer's name, college and school year or other University affiliation. The Daily will not -- ,~.,4t y t~ ~ +g, 0~il~lil4 n' will1 be regarded winhm~re