4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday. November 9, 2004 OPINION + ++li 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, Ml 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com x. 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 pieces do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. NOTABLE QUOTABLE You're in the ballpark." -Army Gen. George Casey, after being asked if the size of the U.S.-led offensive in Fal- luja was between 10,000 and 15,000 troops, as reported yesterday by Reuters. 0 0 CiOLIN DIiiALY ~b:N iA\~ When is a good time to start living? STEVE COTNER RED ALERT AN here is a tele- phone pole at State and Wash- ington that is all staples. The wooden trunk is like any other, except that there isn't any wood left to see. The tallest person got it above our heads, the smallest person got the bottom, and everyone else punished the middle with their staple guns. There aren't any fliers on it now - there isn't room for one more staple - so it just stands there, looking at you as you pass by. I looked back at it the other day. It must have been the peculiar mood I've been in lately. I didn't see a face in it or anything, but I do think I sensed something. I thought of all the fliers that must have covered it over the decades. A Free John Sinclair rally in 1971. A vigil for Che Guevara. No nukes. No war. Maybe the Ann Arbor Nazis posted on it in the early '80s. Maybe students posted against them. I think this pole said not to go to Iraq. I think it probably said a lot of things that people would not believe. But now it's just staples, and it looks like it's kaput. It was on the day after the election when I saw this. I had woken up that day on the Daily couch with a hangover. I imagine a lot of people needed something to help them sleep that night. When I woke up, it was like New Year's Day - messy hair, disoriented, wondering if I had missed anything - but it was what New Year's would be if we knew none of our resolutions would come true. On my walk home I stared at the tele- phone pole. I wondered what it meant. Are we done with politics? Have we used up everything the way we used up this pole? Most of us bottomed out in some way on Nov. 3, whether it was an alcoholic stupor or just a calm reassessment of how each of us is living life. The closer to the center a person was, the more devastating was Ker- ry's loss - Ann Arbor's liberal contingent held a vigil for Kerry that night. The radi- cals kept on trucking, meeting in the Union on Friday to discuss building a culture of resistance. Their ideas included a calendar and another meeting. It wasn't very excit- ing stuff, but I've learned that it never is. No one has any energy now. The would-be radicals lost it somewhere in the torpor of an anarchist potluck - about the same time their eyes took on that zombie-raccoon look - and the liberals lost it with Kerry. I think what the telephone pole really observed, in its silence, was the failure of words. Everyone on the left has been talk- ing for a very long time. If our president decides to kill people, the Left talks about it. The Left snaps its fingers when someone makes a good point. The left puts up neon fliers and says come to our meeting, so we can talk. The Left invites Noam Chomsky to campus and climbs outside on a window ledge, just to hear him. The Left sits cross- legged and drinks tea boiled from roots. The Left knits hats for each other. Then the Left pulls out a joint, listens to hybrid folk- pop music from the Andes mountains, and talks. I believe the Left is operating on the Dalai Lama principle. There is an admi- rable spirit in all of what it does, and if I've had a good breakfast, sometimes I join in. But I think the Left is working on the premise that all of its shuffling about will eventually flick a switch in some young person's head, and he will grow up to be the next Martin Luther King, Che Gue- vara, John Lennon, Nelson Mandela and so on. I call this the Dalai Lama principle because it is based on a kind of mystical faith in someone else's agency. The Left talks about things, plans things, organizes people in large groups. But no one is put- ting himself out there as the one - the one to do what needs to be done. In saying this, of course, I'm just talk- ing too. And perhaps people will complain about this whole premise, saying we don't want dominant personalities, we want coop- eration. But the Left needs to get back to some more basic traits. It needs someone who can cock a smile. It needs someone who can wink. It needs charisma - the thing that makes women want to dance with you, young boys want to be like you and old men be nostalgic. It needs to remember what life is for and then make living it irresistible. It needs to remember we're the only ones who can do it. 0 Cotner can be reached at cotners@umich.edu. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Columnist makes unfair attacks on the political values of the Right TO THE DAILY: I hesitate to call Sowmya Krishnamur- thy's most recent column An Open Letter to America (11/05/04) a waste of space, as I feel this would dignify her commentary.far too much. The sheer arrogance of her column, the assumption that a majority of the popu- lation didn't make an informed decision, but rather sunk into a collective stupor, reflects why Democrats continually fail to connect with the vast swaths of the electorate they need to win. What does Krishnamurthy do to insult voters who supported President Bush? Blame him for leading the nation into the war with Iraq. Certainly a terrible crime, one that merits a vote for change, except that John Kerry supported that same war. Oops. Unable to pin Bush down on the major policy issue of our day, Krishnamurthy resorts to the least sophisticated tools of political discourse: personal attacks. Bush is a former alcoholic who has a DUI and might have tried cocaine. The operative word there is "might." Never mind if the crime is alleged and that all of these errors in judgment occurred 20 years ago or more; they should still disqualify Bush from the presidency. The only recent misdeed that Krishnamurthy can cite is that Bush's daughters have gotten into some trouble with underage drinking. If Krishnamurthy truly believes this should delegitimize Bush's presidency, her next open letter should be to the undergraduates here at the University, telling them that their parents lack family values and are unfit for high office. If any- one lacks values, it is Krishnamurthy. Her evident frustration with her inability to win a policy argument causes her to flail about in desperation and hurl whatever insults she can throw at Bush in the hopes that some- thing will stick. Krishnamurthy's argument quickly degenerates into the ugliest of per- sonal attacks, reflecting poorly on her argu- mentative skills and even more poorly on her own morals. To justify her own complete lack of scruples Krishnamurthy argues that Bush's moral positions are hypocritical and that not inform political positions is completely ridiculous. Krishnamurthy's attack is based on her own morals. She doesn't like the president's values because they are based on a Judeo-Christian value system. Sorry, not good enough. As for the assertion that Bush is a hypo- crite who cannot honestly promote family values, if Krishnamurthy really wants to drag up 20-year mistakes and alleged mis- deeds, she can be my guest. See how many take her seriously when she shows the jour- nalistic integrity of a tabloid columnist. I know many good, intelligent, thoughtful, moral people who supported Bush in his re-election effort. If they did so because of "moral values," it was because they saw him as a man who kept to his word, who possessed the strength of will to defend Western liberalism against Islamist funda- mentalism, who would not suffer accommo- dation with a radical, totalitarian ideology that cannot coexist with our way of life. Those are values that any decent American can support. Krishnamurthy's casual dis- missal of this possibility demonstrates the hubris that has led to two straight Demo- cratic presidential losses against an oppo- nent that should have been easy to beat. Rather than confront inconvenient facts or assemble a thoughtful argument against Bush's policies, Krishnamurthy tries to prove her position by insulting Bush's char- acter, his intelligence, his morals - there is little Krishnamurthy won't tear down through her visceral need to attack Bush. As long as Democrats continue to disregard the fundamental goodness and intelligence of the millions of people who live between the ccasts and outside of university towns, they will continue to lose elections. To the editors of the Daily, I say that I have no problem with an anti-Bush writer being supported by University funds. What I do resent is the use of those funds for a writer with such a complete lack of intel- lectual honesty or rhetorical skill. Do your readers a favor and don't let junk journalism get past stage one of the editorial process. Editors note: The Daily is financially inde- pendent of the University, as it is funding by advertising revenue. Jay Rapaport LSA junior give more of their money to the govern- ment. I look forward to his column in support of abolishing the mortgage interest tax deduc- tion. This clearly discriminates against renters in favor of homeowners and thus must clearly represent the nation's hatred of apartment dwellers. What? Americans don't hate apartment dwellers you say? Perhaps society has sim- ply chosen to recognize the special societal benefits of high homeownership by giving it special legal recognition? On Tuesday, I believe that - Adams's caricature of hate-filled Republicans aside - many Americans went to the polls and decided that there is something uniquely special and worthy of legal recognition when a man and woman commit to mar- riage. I believe that many'Americans felt that the only way to prevent a handful of judges from rewriting the institution of marriage was by the people acting first to preserve it. Neither of these motivations is inherently unreasonable. And neither rep- resents the victory of "hate." Rather than denigrate those with differ- ing political views, we should all learn to listen to them. And we should all, especial- ly those on the Left, continue to believe in the goodness, and greatness, of the Ameri- can people. Zachary Emig MBA student Columnist jumps to extreme conclusions To THE DAILY: I'd like to address Daniel Adams's column (The anger of the drowning man 11/8/04). Dan, it would take too much space to address all the ways in which you've shown yourself to be closed minded, so I'm going to boil down my complaint to you in this way: You refuse to acknowledge that those on the Right who disagree with you may have legitimate viewpoints worthy of your respect. In fact, you don't seem to believe that intelligent people can reason- ably disagree (or maybe you don't think there are intelligent conservatives). While I too wanted President Bush out of the White House, I think it's really presumptuous and arrogant of you to assume that those who disagree with you did so on the grounds 0 U