4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 19, 2004 OPINION , L AIlv.L420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 opinion. michigandaily.com tothedaily@michigandaily.com EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 JORDAN SCHRADER Editor in Chief JASON Z. PESICK Editorial Page Editor 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 It is clear that Iraqi forces will not be able, on their own, to deal with these threats by June 30 when an Iraqi government assumes sovereignty" - L. Paul Bremer III, the American administrator in Iraq, referring to the recent wave of violence in Iraq, as reported yesterday by The New York Times. SAM BUTLER CLASSIC SOAPBOX -1 y '" '1\ Fa shizzle dizzle, it's cultural appropriation-izzle JOEL HOARD Ou YEAHI? ver since the time that Adam and Eve snatched a few apples from God's tree of knowledge, one thing has been clear: White people love to steal. Although we often try to give it different names such as "colo- nization," "slavery" and "insider trading," in the end, it still amounts to theft. Every major white culture throughout human history was guilty of at least one large-scale theft. Some were sneaky about it, like the mighty British Empire, which once spanned the globe in search of eco- nomic gain. Others stole because they felt like it and didn't bother offering reasons for doing so, such as the ancient Romans, who established an expensive empire out of sheer boredom. Others claimed it was their right - nay, their destiny - to steal, such as the Americans of the mid-19th century, who expanded ever-westward under the slogan "manifest destiny," much to the chagrin of the indigenous peoples of the continent - it's not that we wanted to steal, per se; it's that we had to steal. But what of the modern white man? Certainly his lust for that which is not his has been checked by contemporary notions of property and civil rights. For the most part, it has. But you have to remember: The white man is crafty and should not be trusted. Take away his ability to steal land and freedom, and he'll just find something else to steal. And in the case of the modern white American, that something is culture. Cul- ture is not as easily defined as land or freedom, so it's not explicitly protected by any current laws. It all started with Elvis Presley, the one and only King of Rock 'N' Roll. No one can argue that Elvis wasn't a talented musician and an engaging performer, but by no means did he invent rock 'n' roll. Simply stated, what Elvis did was take an art form that was deeply rooted in black American culture and make it his own without acknowledging the source. He essentially passed on the opportunity to turn on his legions of young, white, subur- ban fans to the broader landscape of early rock music. Soon thereafter, the world of rock music came to be dominated by white per- formers. Many pundits claimed it was hap- pening all over again with hip-hop when Eminem first entered the rap scene five years ago. Like Elvis, Eminem indeed took an art form that was rooted in black cul- ture and made it his own, and like Elvis, most of his fans were white suburban youths without any real knowledge of hip- hop's origins. The key difference between the two, however, lies in Eminem's con- stant acknowledgement of his own race and his efforts to highlight his black influ- ences to sign several black rappers to his record label. Rather than outright appropriating the culture, Eminem at the same time shows an appreciation for it. In the process, Eminem garnered much respect from his black colleagues. It would be foolish to argue that Eminem has single-handedly opened the eyes of his white fans to black culture, but he has certainly provided the opportunity. The real danger lies in more lightheart- ed fare such as Justin Timberlake and films like 2003's "Malibu's Most Wanted," mass-produced appropriations that seek to capitalize on a trend while doing little to acknowledge their sources. Timberlake's transformation from boy band icon to a Michael Jackson-esque R&B star is a par- ticularly egregious example. Still other dangers come from some black artists themselves. Slang popularized by the likes of Snoop Dogg on MTV and now in America Online commercials seems made-to-appropriate. It wasn't long before white suburban youth began pep- pering their speech with random "izzles." In addition, much of today's hip-hop music is targeted at the affluent, white club-going crowd rather than yesteryear's hip-hop, which was entrenched in the urban experi- ence. Hook-laden, cookie-cutter "hip-pop" has replaced the once vibrant and socially- conscious genre. Nowadays, black artists with relevant messages and innovative approaches are forced to the underground by the likes of Nelly, Ludacris, J-Kwon and Chingy. In the end, it would appear that hip-hop is going the way of everything else the white man has interfered with. We take it, have our way with it, then cast it off when we get sick of it. 40 Hoard can be reached atj.ho@umich.edu. " ,. ~. . a . b w 1 ; yb x f f dk . LETTER TO THE EDITOR LSA-SG is not the same as MSA, has proven more effective for students TO THE DAILY: In your news article (Exec. board contro- versy occurs at MSA meeting, 04/14/04) about student governments, you represented LSA Student Government in the exact light that our executive board has deemed most detri- mental to the government of LSA. Under the stated headline, the Daily included a section on the LSA Judiciary and its intentions stat- ing, "The judiciary will help to distinguish LSA-SG from MSA." However, the reporters clearly missed the intent of the judiciary, implying that LSA-SG is not worthy of its own headline. The LSA judiciary was recreated - it has been as it stands in our constitution since 1996 - to further differentiate us from the Michigan Student Assembly and allow LSA- SG to hold a judiciary that would oversee its own matters instead of using MSA's Central Student Judiciary. Through this, we believe that we become a more effective government, worthy of its own article explaining the progress we are working toward. LSA-SG has done much in recent years to meet students' needs. Four years ago, LSA- SG established academic minors, which are now regularly used by students. Through its efforts this year, LSA-SG has successfully lobbied for two unique international relations minors - tentatively ready in Winter 2005 - with the construction of a major in the works. We have also worked hard for more representation on faculty committees, hold- ing seats on the admissions committee, cur- riculum committee and academic judiciary committee to represent student interests. Our student life committee was responsible for the new seats on which students sit when in the Angell Hall Fishbowl. We are not your over-political MSA that debates the occupation in Iraq. We don't appoint our executives based on party favors, nor do we allow the party system to infiltrate our government. Our intent lies with helping the student body, many times in the academic arena, allowing students to experience tangi- ble effects on their experience at the Univer- sity before graduating. Connected thoroughly to the student body, we are the only govern- ment that stands outside on the Diag regular- ly looking for suggestions as to how our government can help you. Simply put, we care about you, attempting to create active nonpartisan change on the campus. Our time and effort devoted equals, if not exceeds, that of MSA. As such, we believe we deserve better coverage than what we were afforded under an unrelated headline. We ask for recognition as a legitimate, sepa- rate government that is unique from MSA. And in return, we will continue to provide you with the progress that MSA continually has failed to provide. EXECUTIVE BOARD LSA Student Government 4 VIEWPOINT Removal of survivor services at SAPAC harms survivors BY MIA WHITE AND KATHRYN TURNOCK We realize that those without a thorough understanding of survivor services might over- look many of the devastating barriers the pro- posed changes to the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center have and will create for survivors seeking help. The discussion of the fragmentation of SAPAC's survivor services can become complicated, which is why it is impor- tant not only to include opinion but also fact in such discourse. We'd hope that as peer educa- tors, Sasha Achen and Stephanie Vitale would have educated themselves about the issue before publicly declaring their opinion in the viewpoint SAPAC changes will provide better services (04/08/04). We'd like to clear up some of the facts that were lost in the viewpoint. Counseling will no longer be available at SAPAC. The crisis line at SAPAC is being shut down. Outreaches will no longer be done through SAPAC-trained volunteers and profes- sionals. These are undeniable components of the proposal to change SAPAC. Is this a growth in services? Some would have you believe so. After speaking to the president of the Universi- er within the same organization. Achen and Vitale write, "CAPS has been providing services to sexual violence sur- vivors for over 20 years (longer than SAPAC has been in existence), and so staff is familiar with these issues." SAPAC was formed when an off-campus crisis line and CAPS existed as independent resources. It was the demand for specialized services on campus that led to the creation of SAPAC. Since then, SAPAC has become a national model for such resources. What this plan proposes is a return to what the University had almost 20 years ago and did not work. Is this what the administration would have stu- dents believe is a growth? The viewpoint claims that moving counsel- ing from SAPAC to CAPS is working toward "providing quality counseling to all University survivors." However, there is no reason to believe that this move will in any way increase the quality of counseling and many reasons to believe the quality will decrease. There are important barriers that exist for survivors at CAPS. Perpetrators are served at CAPS. That risk is not simply a barrier for Sevig, the director of CAPS, has confirmed that it will never be a long-term agency. Less than a year ago there were three crisis lines within Washtenaw County handling calls concerning issues of sexual violence. The Sexu- al Assault Crisis Center was shut down because of funding issues. Now, with the proposed plans to SAPAC, only one will remain. This is a part of the disturbing trend in decreasing resources for survivors in Washtenaw County. Services continue to be severed and disappear, only this time, it's a matter of bureaucracy and not budget as a source of the cuts. What we do know is that people have already expressed not feeling safe at CAPS. We know for a fact that many survivors have already been traumatized over the loss of a resource that has been a staple of this community. We know that long-term counseling services will no longer be available unless exceptions are made. We know that the counselors currently at SAPAC did not have the option to stay at SAPAC or participate in the design of such a "community coordinated response." We know that Our Voices Count is only one of many organizations outraged by such a blatant disregard for campus safety. We > t~ i x thii~ns 1ine a mv sunnon CurecuiO~ TCv. >