4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 7, 2005 OPINION C gobmp-e M lirb tiitux tiiI JASON Z. PESICK Editor in Chief SUHAEL MOMIN SAM SINGER Editorial Page Editors ALIsON Go Managing Editor EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com NOTABLE QUOTABLE It's not going to end until there are two policemen dead." -Moussa Diallo, a resident of Clichy-sous- Bois, a low-income suburb of Paris, where the deaths of two immigrant teens fleeing police precipitated nationwide youth protests and riots, as reported yesterday by nytimes.com. THE THUMBS HAVE IT France Ethics Violent riots break out in Paris, Nice, Mar- seilles, Lille, Toulouse and Strasbourg, claiming 1,300 cars and injuring 10 police officers. France stayed out of Iraq, but Iraq came to France. President Bush is requiring his entire executive staff of 3,000 to take a refresher course on ethics and handling classified materials. But doesn't "refresher" imply you've already studied the subject? Sure, pirates off the coast of Africa were outrun by the cruise ship they were trying to attack. But Blackbeard never had a grenade launcher. 01 Pirates Rethinking Iraq three years later JASON Z. PESICK ONE SM. A VOICE lot of people were wrong about Amer- ica's experiment in Iraq. It's becoming more and more dif- ficult to find an inde- pendent observer who would say the war is going well, and it's no easier to figure out how anything's going to get better. When U.S. forces reached Baghdad and helped a few excited Iraqis knock over a statue of Sad- dam Hussein, I wrote an optimistic piece in the Daily. I quoted Paul Berman, who hinted in The New Republic that Abraham Lincoln would sup- port the war because Lincoln was willing to go to war in order to spread American ideals. I remember sitting in my dorm room in South Quad freshman year watching the U.S. invasion with my roommate. We were so confident. On TV, we saw American weaponry illuminate the sky in beautiful hues of red, white and orange. It was like watching fireworks; you couldn't see the Iraqis dying below. Watching the explosions on CNN was like watching a Fourth of July special on PBS, complete with John Williams conducting the "1812 Overture." Lincoln, John Williams, fire- works, loud explosions and ordinary Iraqis cheer- ing because America had freed them - is there a better way to motivate a young, liberal college student who has no chance of ever actually fight- ing in a war? Almost three years later, it may be time to revisit my selective interpretation of Lincoln. Lincoln supported war when necessary. Berman was right about that. But the Civil War was not a war that Lincoln could choose to avoid; the nation's survival w' at stake. Maybe Lincoln would have supported the war for the sole pur- pose of eliminating slavery, but I'm not so sure he would have attacked Canada if the Canadians decided to start buying and selling slaves. There is death in every war - and death is ter- rible in every one of those wars. Death, however, does not mean that we should never go to war. The Civil War and World War II were terrible, but they were also necessary. Our nation's sur- vival was at risk and, in both cases, the United States was fighting against evil ideologies. Almost everyone will agree that national security is a legitimate justification for war, but most of the people on the Left who have always opposed the war in Iraq will probably accept a broader justification for war than national security. Many of the people who have opposed the current war think that the United States sinned by not preventing the genocide in Rwanda. We failed in Somalia, and we're failing the people of Sudan now. Why would it be OK to use the U.S. military to save people in Sudan but not OK to use the U.S. military to save people in Iraq? And why isn't anybody talking about using the military to eliminate an evil autocrat in Zimbabwe? If the war in Iraq were going well, if it weren't reminding people of Vietnam, the dis- cussion surrounding the war would be very dif- ferent. If there had been adequate planning, if we had sent enough troops, if we had stopped the looting, if we had gotten the basic utilities up weeks earlier, if we had made it clear we weren't invading the country to set up a mili- tary presence in Iraq and to protect Israel, the experiment would seem more just. If the U.S. death toll were much lower, if the Iraqis were well on their way to setting up a viable democ- racy free from suicide and car bombs, support for the war would be high. But support for the war is not high, and that is because the war is not going well. The war in Iraq is starting to resemble the Viet- nam War on the ground because the two wars resembled each other from the start. The presi- dent launched both wars on false premises and without planning for and thinking through the likely consequences. The president claimed we were going to war in Iraq because of weapons of mass destruc- tion and connections with terrorism - claims I didn't buy at the time and claims some peo- ple in the administration apparently didn't buy because they had to hype the shaky informa- tion they did have. He probably chose this strategy because WMD and terrorism were the only ways to convince the American people to support the war. I supported the war for very different rea- sons than the president. It may not have been possible to garner public and congressional approval for a war based on my arguments about democratic ideals, and maybe the presi- dent would have lost that vote. But the embar- rassment of losing a vote in Congress pales in comparison to the nightmare of losing more than 2,000 American soldiers and many more Iraqis in an unsuccessful war. I don't know how you decide when a war is just and when it's not just, when losing thou- sands of Americans is worthwhile and when it's not worthwhile. Even hindsight is not always 20/20. But when you don't even lay out the facts, when you don't even have a debate based on the truth, you don't have a very good chance of distinguishing the noble wars from the misadventures. 01 Pesick can be reached at pesick@michigandaily.com. VIEWPOINT Bush's mulligan BY JOHN STIGLICH II President Bush made a mistake when he nomi- nated Harriet Miers to the U.S. Supreme Court. The nomination reeked of cronyism, incompetence and political weakness. Thankfully, the canons of executive privilege provided Bush with a mul- ligan. By nominating Sam Alito to the Supreme Court, Bush drove the green. The nomination not only pleases the conservative community but also puts Senate Democrats in a political rut. The Sen- ate twice confirmed Alito unanimously to federal benches and without ethical citations and repri- mands, Democrats will have difficulty convincing Americans he is not qualified. As hard as Democrats may try, elections mat- ter in this country, and it is time for them to learn they lost. Bush campaigned twice on nominating strict constructionist judges to federal benches and Republican senators share this policy goal. Bush resides in the White House and the Republicans control the Senate - they have an obligation to their constituents to fulfill campaign promises. In the early 1990s, President Clinton resided in the White House and Democrats controlled the Senate. Under those circumstances, Clinton nom- inated and the Senate confirmed living constitu- tionalists Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Steven Breyer without a peep from liberal interest groups about "ideological diversity" and "consensus nominees." Oh, how the debate changes when power is lost! If the Democrats want to debate judicial philoso- phies, bring it on. Republicans will take their case to the Ameri- can people and explain the dangers of judicial activism. They will educate Americans on how a judicial branch stocked with living constitutional- ists will gradually eliminate this country's core values by substituting our founders' meaning for a penumbra created by the personal policy prefer- ences of judges. They will explain realistic night- mare scenarios where it is alright to be religious just do not be religious in the public square. It is OK to celebrate Christmas, just not to celebrate it in public school. The definition of marriage approved by state citizens or state legislatures is unconstitutional because of a new right found in a 216-year-old document. Challenging Democrats on the proper role of the judiciary will highlight a fundamental disagreement - the courtroom is not an acceptable alternative to ballot boxes and legislative chambers. During Bush's first term, Senate Democrats uti- lized the filibuster to stall confirmation on Bush's federal judge nominees. The Democrats went to unprecedented lengths to protect the only branch of government they still control. Utilizing this tac- tic on Alito's nomination is political suicide. The odds of a filibuster being political suicide increase if Alito emerges from his confirmation hearing in the same regard with which John Roberts emerged from his. Democrats will contend they stand on principle, and the Republicans will label their opposition as obstructionists. America does not take kindly to obstructionism - just ask retired Sen. Tom Daschle (D-S.D.). If the Democrats want a more important role in selecting federal judges, I recommend they develop a plan to reclaim the Senate. Develop a campaign strategy and an agenda that will reso- nate with Americans. Quit blaming Republicans for your electoral losses and start listening to what the American people want instead of what you say they should want. The results could surprise you. Stiglich is an LSA junior and a member of the Daily editorial board. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Columnist provides news overload of his own To THE DAILY: Zack Denfeld's column (News that stays news, 11/04/2005) can essentially be summarized in his tag line: 500 or 600 words of shame. In the space carelessly allotted to him by the Daily, Denfeld fails to rise above the very information overload that he tries simultaneously to indict and characterize, losing any semblance of an argument in a mere wash of style and imag- ery, even committing a pointless typographical error along the way. Denfeld's point is not lost: Information and its media in this age are overwhelming, but he fails to acknowledge that it is only the self-selecting consumer of mass and diverse mate human beings with experiences, opin- ions, knowledge and perspectives. Although the Internet is stuffed with noise, for the most part it's where useless thoughts go to die. One should not dwell in graveyards. I suggest Denfeld ejaculate more poignantly in his future columns. Ryan Healy RC senior Daily fails at satire, hurts real progress in the process To THE DAILY: I hope that last Friday's editorial (In the name of God, 11/04/2005) was nothing more than the battles against the polio and smallpox vac- cines, millions of otherwise hideously scarred, immobile or dead individuals went on to use their lithe and unblemished limbs in ways God never intended." This argument is eerily remi- niscent of that Hitler used in promoting eugen- ics to preserve the "supreme Aryan race." Here we are at one of the country's lead- ing research universities, and dribble like this - which, through grand leaps of logic and arguments based on an assumed faith, seeks to discourage scientific progress in the name of some unnatural selection - gets printed in the Daily, from its very own editorial board, no less! I'm all for its editorial freedom, but I hope the Daily prints at least one of the slew of letters I expect its sensible readers to send in response to this nonsense. WWU J Y IIU. J. .: ;:: JJX' L) Li.-VIP' '..4LY ~.AJWJA C 1: r ,