4A -The Michigan Daily - Monday, December 6, 2004 T + 420 MAYNARD STREET je fr t l f ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 4 h 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. OPINION NOTABLE QUOTABLE ''The number of men who take Viagra is enormous. Why would women be any different? " - Steven Nissen, member of the FDA Advisory Committee for Reproductive Health Drugs, commenting on Intrinsa, the "female Viagra," as reported yester- day by Newsday.com. A0+ es's 4ions - 2 -- ,smoo \4M)4 05 Ll V s~ cn o SAM BUTLER TIE x Dirty little secret DANIEL ADAMS HO -RSE1 IES AND HANDRENADES T his October, the Boston Red Sox treated sports fans across the nation, winning a dramatic and improba- ble World Championship. Though not a Red Sox fan, it was hard for me not to get caught up in the magic of those games. I remem- bered for the first time in years the memories of a childhood spent with the game of baseball, watching from blue plas- tic seats heroes like Trammell, Whitaker and Gibson play on the immaculate lawn at the corner of Michigan and Trumbell. I grew up a baseball fan, but I don't watch baseball anymore. I became a fan because of players like Tram- mell, Whitaker and Gibson. I stopped because of players like Canseco, Caminiti, Sheffield and Bonds. These men, comically disproportioned freaks belting home runs out of ballparks at improbable rates, make the transgressions of Pete Rose look tame. On Friday, The San Francisco Chronicle released testimony implicating several of these names in the federal investigation of the Bay Area Laboratory Co-operative, or BALCO. Five current and former Major League Base- ball players - Jason and Jeremy Giambi, Armando Rios, Benito Santiago and Bobby Estalella - all admitted to investigators that they had taken steroids. Gary Sheffield, the current Yankees first baseman and American League most valuable player runner-up, testi- fied that he had taken steroids, but didn't know at the time what they were. Most notably, the article ran the testimony of Barry Bonds - the man on the verge of breaking the most coveted record in sports, the mark for career home runs. Not only does this testimony confirm the slugger's dubious ties to BALCO and a number of its most prominent clients, but Bonds makes a similar admission as Sheffield - that he unknowingly took steroids supplied to his trainer by BALCO. With that, what ESPN analyst Peter Gammons dubbed baseball's "dirty little secret," has turned into a full-blown scandal. Dirty little secret? Try dirty little reality. This, the knowledge that some of baseball's best were using illegal substances, is no secret. Over the years, insiders - coaches and team officials - have watched their 180-pound players bulk up to freakish proportions and said nothing, so long as they continued to produce at the plate. Over the years, an increasingly self-righteous and self-important sports media, with its insider access and sources, couldn't help but overhear the whispers of impropriety. Admissions from former players like Jose Canseco. Players like Jason Giambi, afflicted with mystery ailments sounding eerily similar to the side affects of ste- roid use. Players like Barry Bonds with hat sizes that had visibly increased several times over their playing careers. The media had to know some- thing was wrong, but either out of a lack of evi- dence or a lack of conviction, said little. And the fans knew. They knew that many of the men playing in their ballparks were cheat- ers of the lowest order. The fans knew, but still kept buying the tickets, hot dogs and boxes of crackerjack that fed the beast. Secrets are skeletons in the closet. This is an elephant in the room. Saturday, the teams, the media and the fans were quick to distance themselves pub- licly from the players implicated in the story. Newspapers nationwide were filled with the writings of outraged pundits, acting surprised even though little of the testimony in the report should have genuinely surprised them. The whole mess reminds me of a story I once heard about three umpires. Debating among themselves over what is the best way to tell the difference between a ball and a strike, the first umpire says "I call 'em as I see 'em." The sec- ond says, "I call 'em as they are." Admittedly, I've never thought it wise to be casual with the prescription of guilt and inno- cence. Bonds and all the others deserve due process, but in the court of my own opinion, I don't need sworn testimony and a mountain of circumstantial evidence to know a cheater when I see one. Call 'em as you see 'em. Call 'em what they are. Cheaters. Adams can be reached at dnadams@umich.edu. LETTER TO THE EDITOR Coleman, Granholm need to protect partnership benefits, families TO THE DAILY: I would like to thank the Daily and its reporter, Donn Fresard, for its coverage of the risk to the University's domestic partner benefits program (Same-sex benefits could lead to suit, 12/03/2004). It was enlightening to read that Patrick Gillen of the Thomas More Law Center believes that the amendment precludes the University from offer- ing domestic partner benefits to gay and lesbian families, and that his organization is determined to bring legal challenges to enforce this interpreta- tion of the amendment. This is in stark contrast to what the proponents of the amendment were stating prior to the vote. Marlene Elwell, chair of Citizens for Protection of Marriage, was quoted as stating, "This has nothing to do with taking ben- efits away." Similar assertions were attributed to Gary Glenn of the American Family Association in October, but he has recently changed his tune stating, "Benefits only to homosexuals are a for- mal recognition of a homosexual relationship as equal or similar to marriage, and the voters have said they don't want that." Itis particularly disturb- ing that Glenn used as part of his early assertions of the benign nature of the amendment statements by our very own university president. What I would like to add to this debate is a per- sonal account of what impact a move to limit ben- efits could have on my family and our loved ones. The most direct impact would be to deny my part- ner the ability to receive health benefits: Thiswould be a financial hardship for us because his employer is a local small business that does not offer such benefits. However, the larger impact on our life would be the effect it would have on our 3-year- old godson and his moms. Because our godson's birth mother is a stay-at-home parent and his other mother works for the University, they would lose coverage for our godson, his birth mother and his as-yet-unborn brother. This would make their cur- rent situation financially untenable and could very likely cause them to look for employment outside of Michigan. The likely result would be severing our close relationship with our godchild, for whom my partner has been an involved caregiver. It is hard for me to understand how people so vocally committed to family could systematically work to rain such hardships on gay and lesbian families who simply want to raise their children in an envi- ronment of love and safety. In recent days, we have heard reiterations by University President Mary Sue Coleman and Gov. Jennifer Granholm that they are commit- ted to preserving domestic partner benefits. But I urge the University community to look carefully at these statements. Coleman provides as the rea- son for her defense that "We do not believe that a state constitutional amendment regarding the definition of marriage would be relevant to our decisions about the benefits we offer ... " It was this statement that was used by Glenn to justify his assertion that the amendment would have no effect on gay and lesbian families currently receiv- ing benefits. Granholm stated just this week that she supports domestic partner benefits because they "have been recognized by Fortune 500 com- panies as critical tools for attracting and retain- ing a world-class workforce." She attempts to be reassuring when she states, "If and when a court finds these benefits lawful, we will move forward with their implementation," and she attributes the dismay of gay and lesbian Michigan citizens and their families and friends to "inaccurate news sto- ries." Neither acknowledges that in the interim, while court battles are fought, our families live from month to month not knowing if the support system we depend on will disappear. What I do not see in the statements of Coleman or Granholm is any unequivocal statement that providing pro- tection for all families, gay, straight, black, white, single or two-parent is a public good. By support- ing each other's families we make our commu- nities stronger. Political actors on the Michigan stage, including both the University president and the governor, need to understand that.by keep- ing their statements on this issue "value neutral," by not speaking to the importance of protecting all families, by not explaining that itis wrong to work actively to take health benefits away from children and Michigan workers, by not exhort- ing Americans to live up to their proud tradition of religious pluralism and tolerance of diversity, they cede the moral playing field to the forces of bigotry and ignorance. It is my family that will pay the price. Michael Falk Professor, College of Engineering VIEWPOINT You can't ignore the Palestinians BY FADI KIBLAWI, LISA BAKALE-WISE, NAGMEH SHARIATMADAR, SALAH HUSSEINI, BRITTANY MARINO, HUGO SHI, STEPHANIE CHANG, TAREK DIKA AND RAMA SALHI We found last Wednesday's viewpoint, Sup- port Israel to help 'U,' to be a fascinating piece of literature. Not only does it mischaracterize the divestment campaign, but the authors, including members of the American Movement for Israel, misrepresent the conflict as a whole. Absent from the viewpoint is any mention of the occupation! Are we to assume that this defin- ing characteristic of the conflict simply does not exist? Are we to ignore Israel's confiscation of Palestinian lands, demolition of houses, uproot- ing of olive trees, construction of Jewish-only settlements, checkpoints, roadblocks, etc.? Is this the foundation of the "constructive effort" for peace that AMI envisions? This is comparable to encouraging "collaborative dialogue" between whites and South Africans in the 1980s without making reference to apartheid. Whether they are ready to admit itor not,lthere is a rich history to this conflict thattranscends AMI's showcase of Israeli contributions in the medical sciences. In 1948, upon the founding of Israel on land that was almost entirely Palestinian-owned and inhabited, nearly one million Palestinianswere dispossessed of their homes and forced into exile. Over 400 Palestinian villages were destroyed, their inhabitants living as refugees for 56 years now and denied their inalienable right to return. Why? Because they're Christian and Muslim and, as indigenous Palestinians, not granted the rights assigned universally to all human beings. Since 1967, Israel has militarily occupied the West Bank and Gaza Strip while illegally transferring more than 400,000 of its citizens onto more land taken from native Palestinians. Let us disclaim here that we are not suggesting a pure Palestinian society; naturally, both sides of the violencehave their share of virtue and vice. However, itis essential to view the totality of these in a proper context. This is a backdrop of decades-long dispossession and occur pation, with one side being the dispossessors/occu- piers and the other the dispossessed/occupied. Furthermore, we are not suggesting that University students should just absorb what we write without question. On the contrary, we encourage readers to do your own investi- gation and discover the history of this conflict for yourselves; We're sure history professors at the University would be more than willing to offer recommendations of useful books and resources. Certainly, concentrating on "constructive efforts" to "achieve ... peace" is a noble objective, but is that possible by ignoring Palestinian suffer- ing under Israeli aggression? Will we get there by outweighing atrocious human rights abuses with a list of medical contributions, or must we acknowl- edge and address the potent history of atrocities and denial of rights? Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who struggled against apartheid for decades, seems to disagree with the authors of Wednesday's viewpoint. Tutu, one of many South Africans who have compared the Palestinian struggle-to that against their apart- heid regime, has proclaimed, "If Apartheid ended, so can the (Israeli) occupation, but the moral force and international pressure will have to be just as determined. The current divestment effort is the first, though certainly not the only, necessary move in that direction." Kiblawi, an alum, is thefounder and former chair of Students Alliedfor Freedom and Equality and former co-chair of the MSA Minority Affairs Commission. Bakale-Wise is an LSA junior and MSA representative. Shariatmadar is an LSA senior and a minority peer advisor at South Quad Residence Hall. Husseini is an LSA senior and co- founder of the Progressive Arab-Jewish Alliance. Marino is an LSA sophomore. Shi is an Engineer- ing graduate student. Chang is an LSA senior. Dika is an LSA senior, vice chair of SAFE and member of Critical Moment editorial collective. Salhi is an LSA sophomore and external affairs chair of SAFE. THE BOONDOCKS d 5, Q. PEIE TiN tests't XEI A fAX PPXRELY W STR Rv ,1 15 P 1RA 5.. 4'