4 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 29, 2004 OPINION 0 + 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, Ml 48109 La a u 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 pieces do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. NOTABLE QUOTABLE I am asking you, I am demanding that you stay here until the end." - Ukrainian presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko, addressing a crowd of supporters demonstrating in the capital city of Kiev, as reported yesterday by The Associated Press. SAM BUTLER '.",c~v~ U nd r r ar ecesr4 v% a vk i two. 3yc? P~ ec tpn On e < t d c ar d - tn Sso gceoo C M 3 a 4 Mindless hatred, from one so young and privileged D.C. LEE BLACK DIAMONDS AND PEARLS f a liberal arts col- lege is supposed to prepare its students for comparative social and cultural discussions in the study of linguis- tic practices, perhaps the College of Literature, Science and the Arts has succeeded. One need only enroll in Cultural Anthropology 272: Language in Society to learn "how our lin- guistic perceptions influence the ways we recognize social differences ... based on ethnicity, race, class and gender." But if a liberal arts college is supposed to prepare its students for the real world, where employ- ers place a premium on reading comprehen- sion and analytic ability, perhaps LSA has failed. Two months ago, on Sept. 21, a couple of honors students in LSA responded to a column of mine with a viewpoint in the Daily. In their viewpoint, these two bright individuals criticized my column for characterizing young Democrats as political fashionistas - those who supported Kerry not because they understood the issues, but because it was hip, cool and trendy to support the Democratic nominee. They then proceeded to list the reasons why many students support John Kerry. Score one for the College Demo- crats, right? Wrong. One need only read my Sept. 13 column, 'The problem with fad liberalism,' to understand I was not characterizing all college-aged sup- porters of Kerry as fad liberals. In fact, the point of the column was to offer "one possible explanation" for the voter gap among the 18- to-25-year-old-college-educated demographic. This one -possible explanation was that some students - emphasis on some - supported Kerry not because they understood the issues, but because it was hip, cool and trendy to sup- port the Democratic nominee. Of course there are many informed students who understand the issues and who had legitimate reasons for supporting Kerry, but they were not the focus of my analysis. The counterargument offered by the two honors students, which essentially lists the reasons why some informed college students supported Kerry, is thus inapposite. In a less rational, though equally irrele- vant, response to one of my columns, a Uni- versity Medical School administrator wrote that "It's a real pity to see one so young and privileged as you so filled with mind- less hatred. I hope you can stay enrolled at Michigan long enough to gain a respect for the facts, an ability to reason logically and perhaps even to gain a bit of compassion. Stop watching FOX. Start thinking." Score one for the University administration, right? Please. What we have here is a failure to com- municate. How can there be reasonable and intellectual discourse on campus if the most thought-provoking criticism of another's work relies on distorted premises and unsubstanti- ated name-calling? The University, for all its self-congratulato- ry acclaim as a bastion of intellectual debate, is partially to blame for this failure. Consider the requirements for an LSA degree: first-year writing, upper-level writing, foreign language, race and ethnicity and distributional require- ments. What is astonishingly absent from this list is a logic class or its equivalent. Quanti- tative reasoning, a distributional requirement that by definition involves numbers, not words, is no substitute for a class in formal logic or the art of persuasion. In fact, the first-year writing requirement is the only requirement that comes close to prepar- ing students for the real world, where employers place a premium on reading comprehension and analytic ability. According to the LSA website, "The goal of the First-Year Writing Requirement is to teach students the discipline and skills needed for college writing. Without these skills, college students can find it difficult to master the art of argument and to achieve the academic sophistication that University of Michigan courses demand." But based on the countless e-mails I receive that either ignore the text, distort words or flat- out call me names, only one conclusion can be drawn: Either the University demands unsophisticated academic analysis and low mastery of the art of argument or it has failed in its goal of teaching students the discipline and skills needed for college writ- ing. Ultimately, the University is responsible for its students' educational development. If it's going to parade its Marshall and Rhodes Scholars in front of everyone, it should also acknowledge its failure to teach many stu- dents the basic skills necessary for life out- side of Ann Arbor. S Lee can be reached at leedc@umich.edu. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Live and let live, have some pie! To THE DAILY: After hearing a host of views on Proposal 2, for purposes of clarity, I'd like to rephrase the question. To those who said that according to their religion, homosexuality is a sin, I'd couch the proposal like so: Do we wish to abandon the pluralistic 'live and let live' spirit of our soci- ety by dictating that rather than each of us fol- lowing our own deepest beliefs, we all must adopt a singular fundamentalist vision of what is true and good? Without this spirit of toler- ance, how will we keep from devolving into another Taliban or Nazi Germany? To those who said that same-sex unions make them ill-at-ease, I'd pose this: How much should we ask other people to sacrifice on the altar of our discomfort? Should two women in a loving, committed relationship separate out of deference to our traditional view of family? Should children forgo medical care because one of their parents - the one with health insurance - isn't a legally recognized guard- ian? Should a man whose lifelong partner lies dying in an intensive care unit be barred from his lover's hospital room because their hold- ing hands just doesn't feel quite right to us?" A touch of cognitive dissonance seems a small price to pay for a great many people's happi- ness and well-being. Finally, to those who feel that homosex- ual unions threaten heterosexual ones, I'd say, "Fortify those girl-boy relationships!" Listen deeply. Relax and enjoy each other's company. I personally guarantee that XX- XY couples who follow a traditional fam- ily recipe of sharing their lives with love, laughter and lucidity won't even notice the lesbians kissing on their doorstep. They'll be too busy inside, eating apple pie and hav- ing their own fun! Jill Halpern Lecturer Croup leaders invite 'U to discuss Arab-Israeli conflict TO THE DAILY: As the leaders of the pro-Israel groups on campus, we would like to invite all those interested in a dialogue concerning the Pal- estinian-Israeli conflict to meet over some coffee .Latelv there has been much talk on appreciate differences in opinion, differenc- es in appearance and differences in culture. It is easy to be tolerant of such differences during classroom discussions and when socializing in the dorms. Why then is it so difficult to be tolerant of each other and find a common ground when dealing with the Palestinian-Israeli conflict? We all sweat before our exams, we all party when Michigan wins football games and we all love Ann Arbor. The pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian student groups on this campus have so much more in common than the Israelis and Palestinians in the Middle East; there must be a way for us to find some sort of middle ground. If we cannot find this middle ground, how can we expect leaders inn the Middle East to do so? Currently, no dialogue exists between Pal- estinians and Israelis. We are going to change that. On Tuesday, Dec. 2 at 8 p.m., we will be sitting in the basement of Espresso Royale on South University. We hope to meet many of you interested in creating discussion and an understanding between the Palestinians and the Israelis. Or Shotan Orrin Pail Jessica Risch Shotan is an LSA freshman and chair of the Israeli Students Organization. Pail is an LSA sophomore and a co-chair of the Union of Progressive Zionists. Risch is an LSA sophomore and co-chair of the American Movement for Israel. Fraudulent Ukrainian vote illustrates the importance of freedom, democracy To THE DALY: It is understandable that many Americans were disappointed in the results of the recent Bush/Kerry election. However, some of these disappointed voters may have found comfort in knowing that this election was generally fair. The recent fraudulent election results in Ukraine make me proud to live in the United States - a truly free country. It is important that we as Americans realize that the yearning for freedom and justice in people all over the world cannot be extinguished, be it in Venezu- ela, Iraq or Ukraine. Anna Koniuch Alum D -rri nila- !. -n \ l same thing today that it did when it was rati- fied. The Constitution is not a "living docu- ment" and as such it cannot be re-interpreted by each generation. He goes on to say that there really is no alternative to original- ism, as other paradigms for reaching court decisions are too subjective to be classified into a common idea. If the court were full of originalists, Scalia argues, there would be no conservative or liberal justices, only good lawyers who know how to read a document and apply it to cases without changing the original meaning. Although I now understand Scalia's beliefs (whereas before I just thought of him as an angry reactionary), I still strongly disagree with him. The framers' original meaning for the Constitution was for the document to serve as a protector of the people from the government. The Constitution was supposed to be a tool of freedom. The very reason the framers did not include a Bill of Rights in the original document was because they feared such articles would limit rights, mak- ing people's rights only the rights they put in writing and denying people the rights they forgot. However, Scalia uses the Constitution as a tool of oppression. He refuses to give any rights to the people unless there is explicit backing in the Constitution. He embodies the very fears the framers had about the Bill of Rights. Scalia argues that if people want abortion or gay marriage they should pass laws on it. However, Scalia never sig- naled whether or not a Supreme Court of his making would let such a law stand. If such laws were struck down, it would then take constitutional amendments to make these changes and any change to U.S. soci- ety which is not explicitly legalized in the Constitution. Ultimately, Scalia abolishes the prin- ciple of protecting the minority from the tyranny of the majority. He rests the only power to bring change in the hands of the legislature, a body largely run on majority control regardless of minority opposition. In cases where the majority refuses to pro- tect the minority, Scalia would not allow a Supreme Court to step in and bring change as it did in the past for segregated blacks and women. Originalism assumes that the found- ers never intended the Constitution to be a living document. Scalia argues that the concept of a living document was unheard of and simply never considered an option